One of the most confusing patterns inside Target Scheduling isn’t inconsistency — it’s fragmentation. You don’t just get fewer hours or different days. You get shifts that feel “cut up” into smaller pieces: a short morning block here, a mid-day gap, then another shift later in the week that could have logically been combined.
From a user perspective, this feels inefficient. Instead of one solid 8-hour shift, you might see two shorter ones across different days, or even within the same day structure depending on the context. The instinctive reaction is to assume something is wrong or poorly optimized.
But in reality, this fragmentation is not accidental — it’s a result of how scheduling balances coverage, demand, and constraints at a granular level.
What users expect vs how shifts are actually assigned
| Expectation | What users want | What actually happens |
|---|---|---|
| Long continuous shift | One block of consistent hours | Hours split to match demand windows |
| Efficient schedule | Fewer workdays, longer shifts | More days, shorter coverage segments |
| Predictable duration | Same shift length each time | Variable shift lengths |