Over 50 per cent of UK business users are unable to walk away from their
emails when on holiday or off sick, according to new research announced at the
Inbox/Outbox 2007 event.
More than half of the respondents to a survey by
Mesmo
Consultancy said that they check emails when out of the office, and 12 per
cent check them more than five times a day.
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Two-thirds of users admit to voluntarily checking their email, while a fifth
said that their company expects them to do so.
Coupled with the report last month by the
International
Labour Organisation that a quarter of Britons work longer than 48 hours a
week, the picture of a happy work/life balance is pretty bleak.
"The role that email plays in office politics, the fear of missing something
and being blamed for it, and the amount of personal email received at work
account for the lack of delegation and obsessive inbox scanning behaviour
contributing directly to the addiction," said Dr Monica Seeley, founder of Mesmo
Consultancy.
"Moreover, as the survey showed, the majority of users are expecting to
receive a reply to a business email in less than 24 hours. And if a reply is
sent immediately, that sets the expectation for the next round of
communications, fostering a reactive and unproductive way of working."
In a technology-enabled 'always-on' society, where people are connected to
their workplace 24/7, email addiction is rapidly becoming widespread,
highlighted by the mushrooming number of internet sites and blogs suggesting
rehab tips and techniques.
As the Mesmo survey reported, only 17 per cent of respondents give colleagues
permission to deal with their emails in their absence and over 80 per cent read
every single email in their inbox.
Even the survey itself highlighted the issue. The research, conducted by
email among 4,000 UK business users with 66 per cent of respondents at
managerial or director level, attracted approximately half of the responses
within the first hour of sending out the survey.
This indicates that the majority of business users are willing to be
distracted from the task in hand by emails landing in their inbox, breaking
concentration with obvious loss of productivity as a consequence.
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