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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Examples  



1.1  Commercial business  





1.2  Emergency services and transport  





1.3  Industrial and utility services  





1.4  Nonprofit and charity services  







2 Methods  



2.1  Continuous operations  





2.2  Geographical alternation  







3 Service disruption  



3.1  Redundancy and hardening  





3.2  Long-term post-COVID disruption  







4 Criticism  





5 See also  





6 References  














24/7 service






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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


Businesses in Times Square, New York City, offer 24/7 service.
S-Market 24/7 grocery store in Klaukkala, Finland, 2022

Incommerce and industry, 24/7or24-7 service (usually pronounced "twenty-four seven") is service that is available at any time and usually, every day.[1] An alternate orthography for the numerical part includes 24×7 (usually pronounced "twenty-four by seven"). The numerals stand for "24 hours a day, 7 days a week". Less commonly used, 24/7/52 (adding "52 weeks") and 24/7/365 service (adding "365 days") make it clear that service is available every day of the year.

Synonyms include around-the-clock service (with/without hyphens) and all day every day, especially in British English,[2][3] and nonstop service, but the latter can also refer to other things, such as public transport services which go between two stations without stopping.

The Oxford English Dictionary (OED) defines the term as "twenty-four hours a day, seven days a week; constantly". It lists its first reference to 24/7 to be from a 1983 story in the US magazine Sports Illustrated in which Louisiana State University player Jerry Reynolds describes his jump shot in just such a way: 24-7-365.

Examples[edit]

Commercial business[edit]

24/7 service might be offered by a supermarket, convenience store, ATM, automated online assistant, filling station, restaurant, concierge services or a staffed datacenter, or a staffing company that specializes in providing nurses since often nurses cover shifts 24/7 at hospital which are open 24/7. 24/7 services may also include taxicabs, security services, and in densely populated urban areas, construction crews.

Emergency services and transport[edit]

Hospital in Hong Kong with 24-hour clinics

Public 24/7 services often include those provided by emergency medical providers, police, fire and emergency telephone numbers, such as 9-1-1 in North America.

Transport services like airports, airlines, and ferry services, and in some cases trains and buses, may provide 24-hour service. Examples of public transport services operating 24/7 include the New York City Subway, Staten Island Railway, PATH, PATCO, the Copenhagen Metro, and the Red Line and Blue Line of the Chicago "L".

Industrial and utility services[edit]

Industrial and manufacturing facilities—especially those that operate near or at capacity, or which depend upon processes (such as production lines) that are costly to suspend—often provide 24/7 services. Similarly, utilities generally must provide multiple 24/7 services. For instance, an electricity provider will handle outage reports 24/7 and dispatch emergency repair technicians 24/7, in addition to monitoring electrical infrastructure and producing electricity at all times. The same applies to telecommunications and internet service providers.

Nonprofit and charity services[edit]

Many crisis centers and crisis hotlines provide 24/7 services.

Methods[edit]

Continuous operations[edit]

Many 24/7 services operate continuously at all times with complete shift staff.

Geographical alternation[edit]

24/7 services that can utilize virtual offices, such as call centers, may employ daytime agents in alternating time zones.

Service disruption[edit]

In some cases, 24/7 services may be temporarily unavailable under certain circumstances. Such scenarios may include scheduled maintenance, upgradesorrenovation, emergency repair, and injunction. 24/7 services which depend upon the physical presence of employees at a given location may also be interrupted when a minimum number of employees cannot be present due to scenarios such as extreme weather, death threats, natural disasters, or mandatory evacuation.

Some 24/7 services close during major holidays.

Redundancy and hardening[edit]

24/7 services often employ complex schemes that ensure their resistance to potential disruption, resilience in the event of disruption, and minimum standards of overall reliability.

Critical infrastructure may be supported by failover systems, electric generators, and satellite communications. In the event of catastrophic disaster, some 24/7 services prepare entirely redundant, parallel infrastructures, often in other geographic regions.

Long-term post-COVID disruption[edit]

At the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020, many stores ended 24/7 operations, ostensibly on a temporary basis, in order to clean and sanitize their establishments.[4] After the widespread availability of vaccines, however, many such businesses have not returned to 24-hour service for a variety of reasons. Some proprietors in the United States originally blamed pandemic unemployment benefits for a lack of workers, yet employers still struggled to resume pre-pandemic hours after these programs were sunsetted, citing continued staff shortages and demands for better working conditions among jobseekers. Many businesses that were once broadly open for 24/7 operations only resumed such service across some of their establishments or have ended 24/7 operations altogether, as in the case of Walmart.[4][5]

Criticism[edit]

24/7 workplaces can put employees under conditions that limit their personal life choices and development. Calls for a rehumanisation of the 24/7 workplace have therefore been voiced.[6] Some have also remarked on the "collective mania" especially in the US that takes a sort of pride in the "work at all times" attitude exemplified by the 24/7 concept.[7]

In England, Wales, and Northern Ireland, the Sunday trading laws prevent many stores from truly opening 24/7, but they sometimes advertise as such. Some core services such as filling stations are exempt from the law requiring them to close. A campaign against changing the law was supported by many bodies, including the Church of England, the Church in Wales, and many secular bodies in an effort called Keep Sunday Special.

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Piasecki, David J. (15 March 2003), "Inventory Accuracy Glossary", Inventory Accuracy: People, Processes, & Technology, accuracybook.com (OPS Publishing), ISBN 0-9727631-0-4, retrieved 2009-05-04
  • ^ Gledhill, Ruth (26 March 2009), "Condoms to be advertised round-the-clock on TV", The Times
  • ^ Plunkett, John (1 April 2009), "Glastonbury to be covered round the clock by BBC 6Music", The Guardian
  • ^ a b Meisenzahl, Mary (16 May 2021). "Walmart, 7-Eleven, and McDonald's shortened hours during the COVID-19 pandemic, and 24 hour shopping might be slow to return". Business Insider. Archived from the original on 20 May 2021. Retrieved 16 February 2023.
  • ^ D'Innocenzio, Anne (11 December 2022). "Frustration mounts as customers want longer opening hours, stores can't fill positions, employees feel overworked: 'Nobody is winning'". Fortune. Associated Press. Archived from the original on 22 December 2022. Retrieved 16 February 2023.
  • ^ Piazza, Charles F. (23 January 2007), 24/7 Workplace Connectivity: A Hidden Ethical Dilemma (PDF), Santa Clara University, archived from the original (PDF) on 2009-01-07, retrieved 2009-05-04
  • ^ Kettle, Martin (3 August 2001), "So long, American work culture", The Guardian, retrieved 2012-09-03

  • Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=24/7_service&oldid=1218184850"

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