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The most searched excuses to miss work

New research into the volume of Google searches for excuses to miss work reveals that searches have risen dramatically over the course of the last two years.

With Fortune recently reporting that The Great Resignation is showing no signs of abating, and in the context of the return to office, it’s perhaps not too surprising that employees are searching for excuses they can give to skip work in larger and larger numbers. Across the top ten most popular different search terms, search volume has increased by 630% from 2018 to 2022.

Presenting new data along with original expert insight, Frank Recruitment Group has collated the ten most popular Google searches over the five year period alongside tips on how business can keep their employees meaningfully engaged so that they won’t want to seek excuses to miss work.

Search Terms

Total 2018

Total 2019

Total 2020

Total 2021

Total 2022

Total
Searches
2018-2022

calling in sick

59,400

73,200

33,000

261,530

385,780

812,910

best excuses for missing work

34,800

31,300

4,800

459,270

246,500

776,670

excuses to miss work

52,800

52,800

48,800

177,050

219,180

550,630

excuse to miss work

640

0

0

216,080

304,910

521,630

excuses for missing work

3,320

0

0

174,250

241,430

419,000

realistic excuses for missing work

0

0

0

173,910

234,870

408,780

good excuses to miss work

69,600

33,000

0

96,640

147,220

346,460

best excuses to miss work

17,540

31,300

4,800

104,950

153,320

311,910

believable excuses for missing work

5,910

0

0

111,740

168,730

286,380

calling out sick

61,580

19,800

21,000

88,760

128,300

319,440

Cumulative Totals

305,590

241,400

112,400

1,864,180

2,230,240

4,753,810

 

Frank Recruitment Group President of Americas Rowan O’Grady commented, “seeing search volumes jump so drastically across the board in 2021 is definitely interesting. It seems to coincide with the beginning of the return to office which tells us that this hasn’t been the easiest transition for everybody. The important thing, of course, is not to try and “go back to normal” but to go forwards to a healthier tomorrow”.

Discussing the reasons people might be searching for excuses they can give to miss work, wellness coach and organizational development strategist Dr. Shané P. Teran of SP Consulting spoke to the importance of communication and of de-stigmatizing absence in the workplace. She put it that those who are looking for excuses for missing work are likely “feeling that they do not have a supervisor or organization culture in which they can freely take time off without being met with ridicule or challenge”.

Dr. Teran also emphasized that the return to office requires care on the part of employers. “A number of people are not experiencing the grace and understanding from employers that they need; which leads to a resolve of faking it but escaping by any means necessary. People are needing to take more time off in order to manage the long-lasting stressors that come with readjustment”. It’s also true that employers are readjusting, often with the result that “workloads are higher, more deadlines are fixed, and the overall culture of self-care is spoken, yet not often enforced and supported”.

So what should employers be looking to do to better support employees so they won’t be looking for ways to miss work? Dr. Teran suggests that while many businesses have already taken strides “to create new operating procedures, engagement retargets, and redesigned work settings”, the key to long-term, meaningful change is balance. “Employers must find a balance,” she says, “amongst competing interests – revenue recovery and employee wellbeing”.

Practical suggestions to move towards this include hiring for more roles where possible so that workloads become more manageable across teams, pursuing digital transformation and automation in order to improve organizational workflow, and ensuring quality management of wellness support schemes. Involving staff in co-design processes for these kinds of measures is particularly worthwhile and effective. If employees can play a part in ideation and even implementation, they’re more likely to feel seen, heard, and therefore engaged.

Methodology

The search volume data comprising this dataset was collected through initial research using keywordtool.io and corresponds to searches conducted on Google within the US. A longlist of associated search terms was collected, analyzed and organized before further research was conducted via SEMrush to determine monthly search volumes from 2018 to 2022. Data analysis considered monthly, yearly, and cumulative search volume totals.

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