Dear Growth Guru, is the ‘Right to Switch Off’ the death of the hungry sales culture?

Dear Growth Guru,

I’ve been watching the news about the UK’s proposed ‘Right to Switch Off’ laws potentially coming into effect this year.

In my professional services firm, we’ve always lived by the ‘first to respond wins’ rule. My top billers are worried that if we start enforcing ‘quiet hours,’ our global competitors will simply outpace us.

Is this new legislation a threat to our competitive edge, or am I just being a dinosaur?

Always On, London

Dear Always,

You aren’t a dinosaur, but you might be running on an outdated operating system.

For the last 20 years, we have conflated “Responsiveness” with “Productivity.” We’ve built a culture where “winning” means answering an email at 11:00 PM on a Saturday. But as we enter 2026, the data is telling a different story: the “always-on” culture doesn’t lead to more sales; it leads to Cognitive Drift.

When your team never switches off, they lose the ability to perform “Deep Work”—the kind of high-level strategy required to close complex, multi-million-pound deals. Here is how to navigate the new legal landscape without losing your “hunger”:

Scaling Credibility Through Energy Management

We’ve spent a lot of time recently talking about Scaling Credibility (especially with new tools like the Vidyard + Salesloft partnership). You cannot scale credibility if your team is burnt out. A tired rep makes “Desperation Moves”—they discount too early, they miss subtle cues in

Performance Over Persistence

In short, the “Right to Switch Off” isn’t a legal hurdle; it’s a performance hack. The firms that win in 2026 will be those that treat their humans like high-performance athletes: intense periods of “on” time, supported by absolute, protected “off” time.

Therefore, don’t fear the legislation. Use it to build a culture where “On” means focused, forensic, and fierce, and “Off” means recharging for the next win.

The ‘Availability’ Paradox

Being “always available” actually lowers your perceived value. In professional services, if a client knows they can reach you at any hour, you aren’t a strategic advisor; you’re a utility. High-growth firms are using the “Right to Switch Off” to re-establish boundaries that actually increase their authority.

Shift from ‘Presence’ to ‘Protocol’

The new legislation isn’t about doing less; it’s about structured execution. Instead of a chaotic culture where everyone feels they must be “on,” move to a protocol-based system.

The Routine: Standardise when updates are sent.

The Exception: Define what constitutes a “true emergency” that justifies an out-of-hours call. If everything is an emergency, then nothing is. By defining the “Red Alert” scenarios, you allow your team to truly recover during the “Green” times.

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