Glossary
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The Two-Shift System: Earlies & Lates Done Properly

The two-shift system runs an operation across two consecutive shifts — typically an early (06:00-14:00) and a late (14:00-22:00) — with two crews alternating between them weekly. It doubles operating hours over a single-shift setup without touching night work.

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Pick a start date to map the rotation onto real weeks. Team A starts the cycle on day 1; the other teams are staggered so cover never drops.

MonTueWedThuFriSatSunMonTueWedThuFriSatSun
Team ADayDayDayDayDayOffOffEveningEveningEveningEveningEveningOffOff
Team BEveningEveningEveningEveningEveningOffOffDayDayDayDayDayOffOff
Day = Day shiftEvening = Evening shiftOff = Day off

The math

Cycle length14 days
Shift length8 hours
Average hours per week40 hours
Shifts per year (per person)261
Days off per year104

How the rotation works

Two shifts is the natural first expansion of a day operation: sixteen staffed hours instead of eight, no night premiums, no sleeping-pattern damage, and the whole operation still sleeps at night. The classic implementation — known as 'earlies and lates' across UK manufacturing, 2x8 in France, doble turno in Spanish plants — alternates two crews weekly so both share the pleasant and unpleasant edges (early starts vs late finishes).

The weekly swap is the gentlest rotation in shift work: both shifts keep normal night-time sleep, so the changeover costs convenience rather than circadian health. The design details that matter: the mid-afternoon handover lands inside the working day (keep it structured); the late crew's transport and childcare logistics differ from the early crew's; and demand rarely splits evenly across both shifts, so size cross-shift overlap staffing deliberately rather than by tradition.

Who uses it

  • Manufacturing & assembly — sixteen production hours without night premiums
  • Automotive suppliers — the standard European two-team day/late structure
  • Food prep & commissary kitchens — early production + late service-and-clean shifts
  • Customer service teams — covering 7am-11pm demand windows across two crews

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • Doubles operating hours with zero night work
  • Weekly alternation is the gentlest rotation there is
  • Everyone sleeps at night — no circadian cost
  • Simple two-crew administration with weekends off

Cons

  • Late shift consumes family evenings half of all weeks
  • The 14:00 handover sits mid-production and needs discipline
  • No coverage 22:00-06:00 — growth beyond 16 hours forces a bigger redesign
  • Demand asymmetry between earlies and lates needs explicit staffing answers

Variations & alternatives

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Frequently asked questions

What is a two-shift system?
An operation staffed across two consecutive shifts — early and late — usually by two crews who alternate weekly: earlies one week, lates the next.
What are typical two-shift hours?
Common cuts are 06:00-14:00 and 14:00-22:00, or 07:00-15:00 and 15:00-23:00 — sixteen staffed hours with a single mid-afternoon handover.
How many hours do employees work?
A standard 40-hour week: five 8-hour shifts, weekends off, alternating between the two shift times.
When should a two-shift system become three shifts?
When demand fills the 22:00-06:00 window or equipment economics demand continuous running — at which point you're choosing a three-shift system and everything that comes with night work.

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