How to prepare your team, clients, and systems for extended shutdowns
Introduction
Every year, the same conversation happens in offices around the world: it's December 20th, the holiday shutdown starts in three days, and someone realizes the client SLA portal hasn't been updated, the support ticket queue has no coverage plan, and three critical invoices haven't been sent because the finance team assumed someone else would handle it.
Holiday office closures are entirely predictable. The planning gaps are not inevitable — they are a process failure. This guide provides a reusable framework for planning closures that actually work.
Six Weeks Out: Announce Dates Internally
Publish the full closure calendar — including any partial-day closures, Bank Holiday observances, and any days the office will be open with skeleton staff — at least six weeks before the first affected date. Employees need this lead time to book travel, arrange childcare, and plan their own workloads.
Clarify the Skeleton Staff Policy
If the office will operate with minimal staff during certain periods, be explicit about: who is expected to be reachable, in what capacity, for what types of issues. 'Skeleton staff' means very different things in different organizations. A written policy prevents both over-reliance (employees pinging the on-call person for non-urgent questions) and under-reliance (genuine emergencies going unanswered).
Four Weeks Out: Client and Vendor Communication
Notify clients and key vendors of your closure dates. This is especially important for professional services firms, where a client may be planning to submit work for review on a date when your team will be offline. Include your closure dates in email signatures, set auto-responders to activate on the correct dates, and update any client portal or ticketing system with expected response time adjustments.
For international clients, be explicit about which Public Holiday dates you observe — they may not be familiar with your country's holiday calendar, and they should not have to guess.
Two Weeks Out: Operational Handoffs
Two weeks before closure, begin systematic operational handoffs. Every function that handles time-sensitive work — finance, customer support, IT, legal — should complete a pre-closure checklist that includes: pending items that must be resolved before closure, items that can safely wait until return, and items that require monitoring during the closure period and the assigned owner.
Systems and Access
Verify that critical systems will be monitored during closure. This includes: security monitoring, payment processing, automated backups, and any SLA-governed services. Confirm that the people responsible for these systems during closure have the access they need and know the escalation path.
Return Planning
The first day back after an extended closure is consistently one of the least productive days of the year if not managed proactively. Prepare a return brief: what happened during the closure that the team needs to know, what the priority order is for clearing the queue, and what meetings are essential versus optional in the first week back.
Conclusion
Holiday closures reward planning. Treat the pre-closure timeline as a standard project with milestones and owners, and the chaos of underprepared shutdowns becomes a relic of the past. The investment is modest; the return — in reduced stress, client confidence, and team wellbeing — is substantial.