The proliferation of collaboration and social tools designed to increase
productivity is actually costing businesses millions of dollars per year
in lost productivity, according to a survey of more than 500 employees
in U.S. businesses of all sizes conducted by online market research firm
uSamp (United Sample) and commissioned by social email software provider harmon.ie.
Nearly 60% of work interruptions now involve either using tools like
email, social networks, text messaging and IM, or switching windows
among disparate standalone tools and applications. In fact, 45% of
employees work only 15 minutes or less without getting interrupted, and
53% waste at least one hour a day due to all types of distractions.
That hour per day translates into $10,375 of wasted productivity per
person annually, assuming an average salary of $30/hour. That is more
than the average U.S. driver will spend this year to own and maintain a
car. For businesses with 1,000 employees, the cost of employee
interruptions exceeds $10 million per year.
“This survey paints a picture of a highly distracted workplace with a
particular irony: information technology that was designed at least in
part to save time is actually doing precisely the opposite. The very
tools we rely on to do our jobs are also interfering with that mission.
We’re clearly seeing what psychologists call ‘online compulsive
disorder’ spill over from our personal lives to the work environment ,”
said Yaacov Cohen, co-founder and CEO of harmon.ie. “For all of us, it’s
time to take back the Internet and find ways to control our digital
addiction.”
Among the survey findings:
MOST WORK DISRUPTIONS ARE ELECTRONIC
While traditional activities such as phone calls, talking with
coworkers, and ad hoc meetings account for 43% of work interruptions
today, the lion’s share of distractions are now electronically based.
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Users reported getting sidetracked in email processing (23%),
switching windows to complete tasks (10%), personal online activities
such as Facebook (9%), instant messaging (6%), text messaging (5%) and
Web search (3%).
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Multiple devices on the desktop contribute to the problem, with 65% of
respondents reporting that they utilize up to three additional
monitors and/or mobile devices simultaneously with their main computer
screen as they work.
DOCUMENT SEARCHES DRAIN PRODUCTIVITY
Users also spend an average of 2-1/2 hours per week trying to find the
documents they need in multiple local, corporate and cloud repositories.
That adds up to 16 work days annually, costing businesses $3,900 per
$30/hour employee per year to subsidize inefficient document management.
The problem is exacerbated by the use of email attachments instead of
posting documents to a central repository where they can be easily
located. The survey found that:
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The user’s email inbox is the #1 location searched, with 76% of
respondents reporting email as the first place they look. Other
locations include the desktop (69%), file server (52%), shared
workspace (34%), portable storage device (18%) and/or cloud storage
(9%).
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The average user emails two or more documents per day to an
average of five people for review, increasing email-based document
volume by up to 50 documents per week. The fact that these attachments
are stored on multiple local computers complicates the challenge of
finding the latest document versions as well as merging feedback from
multiple reviewers.
WORK OUTPUT & QUALITY SUFFER
The actual cost of distraction is even higher than $10,375 per person
per year in terms of the negative impact on work output, work quality
and even client relationships. Users report that the continuous
interruptions cause:
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Difficulty working/producing (33%)
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No time for deep or creative thinking (25%)
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Information overload (21%)
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Missed deadlines (10%)
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Lost clients/business (5%)
REFUSAL TO DISCONNECT LEADS TO RUDENESS
The perceived need to stay connected at all times has reduced civility
in the workplace as well as interfering with the ability to focus on the
task at hand. The survey found that:
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Two out of three users will interrupt a group meeting to communicate
with someone else digitally, either by answering email (48%),
answering a mobile phone (35%), chatting via IM (28%), updating their
status on a social network (12%) or tweeting (9%).
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Relatively few workers disconnect to focus on a task (32%) or during
virtual meetings or teleconferences (30%), webcasts (26%) or lunch
(12%).
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A majority of workers turn off their devices only
when their boss asks them to (85%) or during one-on-one meetings (63%).
MORE THAN 2/3 ADOPT STRATEGIES TO REDUCE DISTRACTIONS
Despite the attachment to their digital tools and devices, both
companies and end users recognize the productivity challenges created by
these technologies and have implemented a variety of tools and
strategies in an attempt to limit digital-related disruptions.
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68% of respondents reported that their employers have implemented
policies or technologies to minimize distractions, while 73% of end
users have adopted self-imposed techniques to help maintain focus.
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The #1 corporate strategy used to discourage digital diversion is
blocking access to public social networks such as Facebook and/or
other non-business websites (48%).
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Other corporate techniques used to promote digital efficiency include
tracking online usage patterns (29%), training (25%), deployment of an
enterprise collaboration and social platform that aggregates
information in a single window (13%), No Facebook Fridays (6%) and No
Email Fridays (3%).
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In the case of end users, 51% try to minimize distractions by reading
emails in batches, 28% by working outside the office, and 25% by
disconnecting from IM/email and phone a few hours a day.
Findings are based on a March 2011 uSamp survey of 515 email users
working in sales, marketing, human resources or legal departments for
U.S. companies of all sizes. A complete list of findings can be found at http://harmon.ie/news/i-cant-get-my-work-done-enormous-impact-distractions-workplace.
More information about the causes and impact of workplace distraction
can be found at http://distractedenterprise.com.
About harmon.ie
harmon.ie (pronounced ‘harmony’) is a provider of social email software
that brings document collaboration to every business user by
transforming the email client into a collaboration and social workspace.
Thousands of businesses already use harmon.ie social email to vastly
increase user adoption of Microsoft SharePoint or Google Docs for
document sharing, collaboration, and social networking. Formerly known
as Mainsoft, the company has been building cross-platform enterprise
software since 1993. For more information, visit http://harmon.ie.
