A 5-minute clarity check for people who want meaningful work without full-time hours – and want to explore whether sharing one role could be a credible option.
You should not have to choose between doing serious work and having a life that actually works.
But for a lot of experienced professionals, that is exactly what the current model demands.
Full-time can feel unsustainable.
Part-time can mean reduced visibility or compressed workload.
Stepping back can feel like losing ground you worked hard to build.
PairShaped offers another path: redesigning one role so two people can share it properly.
This check will help you explore whether that path could be relevant for you.
There’s no single version of this. But most people considering a different way of working are carrying some version of the same tension.
This is where many people get stuck: either overworked and stretched at the seams, or underutilised because they’ve stepped out or stepped down to make things work.
And it’s not because they are incapable or lazy, or can’t hack it — it’s because the available options are too narrow.
Choose the option that feels closest.
Not in theory. In real life.
What would need to be true for work to feel sustainable, credible and worth continuing?
PairShaped means two people sharing one role – but not by awkwardly cutting it in half.
Done properly, it is designed around shared accountability, complementary strengths, clear handovers, communication rhythms and a role structure that makes sense to the employer as well as the people doing the work.
If it worked, what could it allow for you? Not in theory. In your actual week. Get clear on what you stand to gain.
Get clear on what matters to you. Because it’s this vision and this commitment to something better that is going to motivate you and help you drive change.
The idea of sharing a role can feel promising when you first hear about it. And then practicality creeps in. Questions and doubts start arising.
There is a reason why sharing roles is so rare, and it’s not just due to employers: it’s because people don’t know how to do it, don’t have the time to work it out, and don’t know how to address the concerns they have.
So it all stays in the too hard basket.
What gives you pause?
These answers matter because the next step is different depending on whether you need clarity, partner-readiness, role design or a proposal.
Time's up