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Facebook cuts workplace productivity – survey

Facebook cuts workplace productivity – survey

By:  Sharon Gaudin  On: 23 Jul 2009 For: Computerworld US(NA) Creator

Survey finds 77 per cent of Facebookers use the social networking site while on the job

Only a few months after one study found that Facebook users tend to get lower grades in college, another study has found that the social networking site might not be earning good grades in the workplace as well.

Companies that allow users to access Facebook in the workplace lose an average of 1.5 per cent in total employee productivity, according to a new report from Nucleus Research, an IT research company. The survey of 237 employees also showed that 77 per cent of workers who have a Facebook account use it during work hours. In Canada, the Ontario government is scrambling to deal with social networking and other Web 2.0 technologies  that are spreading like wildfire across the nation, particularly among the young.

And "some" employees use the social networking site as much as two hours a day at work, the study found. Nucleus Research did not say how many workers fit into that category, but did note that one in 33 workers surveyed only used Facebook at work.

Of those using Facebook at work, 87 per cent said they had no clear business reason for using the site.

 

"If your company is facing tight margins and low profitability, as many are now, then how can you accept any work distractions that drain your overall productivity?" asked Rebecca Wettemann, vice president of research for Nucleus Research, in a statement. "While it won't make you popular, restricting Facebook can reclaim lost productivity. If your profitability is say 2 per cent, this could be the difference between staying open or closing shop."

In April, a study released by Ohio State University shows that college students who use Facebook spend less time studying and have lower grades than students who don't use the popular social networking site. And which students were more likely to use Facebook? Well, they're the future systems administrators and CIOs.


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sharon gaudin Sharon Gaudin is a contributor to the International Data Group (IDG) News Service, which publishes global technology stories from bureaus around the world to more than 300 publications in more than 60 countries.
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