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Why Gen Y workers bypass IT usage policies

Why Gen Y workers bypass IT usage policies By:  Shane Schick On: 11 Jan 2009 For: CIO Canada Creator

An IT World Canada/Harris-Decima report looks at the generation gap and shows younger employees don't take the rules around office computing very seriously. Get the stats about the demographic shift



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Nearly half of Generation Y employees in Canada say they routinely bypass IT usage policies and a quarter of them face no repercussions for doing so, according to a national study conducted by IT World Canada and Harris/Decima.

In Freedom to Compute: The Empowerment of Generation Y, Toronto-based research firm Harris/Decima surveyed more than 1,000 workers between the ages of 18 and 29 about their attitudes towards technology. The results were presented to focus groups of CIOs and CEOs to explore the generation gap among older IT workers and future business leaders.

Of the 47 per cent of Gen Y workers who admitted to bypassing IT usage policies, 13 per cent said they do so on a daily basis. The most commonly used applications included instant messaging, music and online videos, according the report.

“Particularly disconcerting is the fact that 59 per cent of those respondents who work for companies that have usage restrictions say they believe employees generally do not follow these policies. It suggests that in many companies, usage policies are perhaps made to be broken,” the report says.

Harris/Decima vice-president Lise Dellazizzo said the report should be a wake-up call to CIOs. “This is primarily due to the lack of enforcement of policies compounded by little to no consequences when bypassing corporate policies,” she said. “We have also seen a ‘passing the buck’ attitude among senior leadership when it comes to who owns responsibility to enforce these policies between IT, HR and CEOs.”

Matt Elliot, a 25-year-old who runs a blog called YWorking.com, says the level of usage violations and social networking in the enterprise may be greater than the report indicates.

“Realistically it’s close to 100 per cent,” he said. “It’s not something they really think of against policy. It’s like picking up the phone and calling a friend in your office about getting together later. Because it’s on this new Web platform it scares off a lot of employers. In the minds of young people it’s no big deal.”

CIOs need to recognize the differences in Gen Y before usage policies become an issue, Dellazizzo said.

“The CIO is changing in large part because the demands being put on IT have changed as a result of a new breed of employee at an early stage of their career that are well equipped with advanced computing skills they bring to the workforce,” she said. “They’re independent, more willing to take risks and naturally inclined to almost anything technology based. They are hungry for information, highly mobile and globally connected. It is in CIOs’ best interest to understand that these employees are their clients.”

The worst thing CIOs can do, according to Elliot, is to start banning social networking and other popular online tools, as the Ontario Public Service and the City of Toronto, among others, have done.


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Shane Schick Shane Schick is the Editor-in-Chief of IT World Canada, a media company that brings together communities of technology professionals.     Shane joined the IT Business Group in 1997 as a sta... more

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Comments (1)

Consultant
1/12/2009 12:00:00 AMI see such policies as part of the last gasp of command-and-control thinking in organizations. The centrally-planned economies of Communism lost out to economies newly powered by smaller and more nimble organizations who made use of computing and communications technology. Similarly, companies that are Big Brother-ish to their employees will lose out to those that aren't. And the economic recession/depression will hugely accelerate the process of separating the men from the boys. (Except, of course, in governments, which as monopolies are not subject to such factors.) Leaders who are truly concerned about their organization's future should empower their staff, not hobble them. And alienating all of Gen Y is a sure ticket to decline, as the older part of the population shrinks over time.
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