When flexibility only flows one way, regulation follows
Zero-hours contracts pushed scheduling risk entirely onto workers. Governments are now moving to mandate guaranteed hours — the scheduling-app patches never fixed the income-guarantee gap.

The call, up front. Zero-hours contracts work for employers because they offload operational risk onto workers as unpredictable income. Scheduling apps optimized the flexibility without touching the guarantee — so the instability stayed. Now governments are moving to mandate guaranteed hours. The gap is the model that gives workers income security and keeps employers the flexibility they actually need.
The gap
The structural imbalance is bargaining power: employers set unpredictable schedules, workers absorb the income variance. Scheduling software made the rota efficient but left the guarantee untouched. The binding constraint is a model that delivers worker income stability without erasing the demand-matching employers rely on.
Source: GAPTIQ engine — challenge definition; UK guaranteed-hours policy analysis
Don't sell another rota optimizer. The opening is the income-guarantee layer that survives the incoming mandate — security without killing flexibility.
So what
Regulation is about to make income guarantees mandatory, not optional. Whoever builds the guaranteed-hours model — income floors, demand pooling, compliant flexibility — sells into every shift-based employer before the legislation forces a scramble.
Source: Guaranteed hours: what we know so far, Personnel Today. Surfaced by the GAPTIQ engine.
