Dating app Bumble gives workers the week off to recover from burnout
Bumble CEO Whitney Wolfe Herd has given the dating app's 700 employees this week off as paid vacation in an effort to help with burnout.
A spokeswoman for Bumble told CNBC that the week off is in addition to the company's normal vacation allowance.
In a statement Bumble said that like most people, "our global team has had a very challenging time during the pandemic."
"As vaccination rates have increased and restriction have begun to ease, we wanted to give our teams around the world and opportunity to shut off and focus on themselves for a week," it added.
In a tweet, which is no longer available, Bumble's Head of Editorial Content Clare O'Connor said Wolfe Herd had "correctly intuited our collective burnout."
"In the U.S. especially, where vacation days are notoriously scarce, it feels like a big deal," O'Connor added in the widely reported tweet on Monday.
Bumble had already announced its plans to give all staff the "fully offline" week-long vacation on Twitter in April.
It's been a busy year so far for female-focused dating app Bumble, which listed on the New York Stock Exchange in February, raising $2.2 billion in its initial public offering.
Social media management platform Hootsuite made a similar announcement last month, introducing a company-wide "Wellness Week" in July, to help support employees' mental health.
However, Hootsuite's global corporate communications strategist Sabrina Jensen said that those in customer-facing roles or with "critical coverage needs" would be on staggered schedules to ensure that Hootsuite's customers didn't experience interruptions in its service.
Check out: Matthew McConaughey explains how time off actually helped relaunch his career
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