The video includes synchronized dance routines that mimic construction activities, such as using a jackhammer or driller. 3. Chart Performance and Achievements

The official music video, directed by , played a crucial role in the song's global success.

The collaboration was highly decorated during the 2016–2017 awards season: Won Best Collaboration .

The lyrics use "work" as a consistent euphemism for sex , with the group members encouraging their partners to skip their actual shifts to stay home with them.

The song peaked at No. 4 , making it Fifth Harmony's highest-charting single and the first top-five hit by a girl group in the U.S. in nearly a decade (since The Pussycat Dolls' "Buttons" in 2006).