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Features

November 2008


Viewpoint

Block MySpace?

Here’s a news flash: There are still challenges facing widespread use of social networking sites within an office setting. That’s the gist of a recent survey by Steelcase on the use of social networking, but the tone of the press release announcing the survey results suggests companies should be more willing to let their employees visit MySpace and Facebook during the workday, as a way of somehow improving collaboration and fostering business connections.

We’re not talking here about an organization’s intranet. This is about employees using their bosses’ computers to go to outside Web sites, such as YouTube, that are unrelated to work. What is surprising is not that 50 percent of the companies surveyed discourage or block access to such sites; what is surprising is that 100 percent do not block these sites.

Ken AnderbergWhy do employees need to go to MySpace during the workday? According to the Steelcase survey, the majority of respondents sign onto social networking sites to reconnect with family or friends (82 percent). The most popular social networking sites among these workers include: MySpace (66 percent), Facebook (46 percent) and LinkedIn (22 percent).

Social networking within the workplace is a long-standing tradition (think the water cooler before everyone stocked cases of bottled water in their offices). Sure, mingling with employees just to chat can hurt productivity a bit, but it is also a valuable team-building and morale-building activity. Can the same be said for visiting family and friends on Facebook, or MySpace friends you’ve never actually met?

Intranets also can be problematic as they relate to productivity issues, but greater control over their use can be maintained by employers. Intranets also are work related, not a diversion to watch a funny video or chat with strangers across the country.

Steelcase suggests that companies need "to think out of the box and ask themselves if rather than blocking these sites, what their takeaways can be. The workplace is as much virtual as it is physical and organizations that embrace this new reality will reap its rewards."

Perhaps, but IT directors worry about their networks being compromised from a security standpoint, or about the bandwidth issues related to downloading YouTube videos. Business unit managers worry about productivity. These are real concerns, and the best way to address them is to block such sites.

Ken Anderberg
kanderberg@comnews.com


Comments
Posted by: Tina Matthews on Thursday, January 15, 2009
Thanks for your advice Giel. I use Nortel and am not convinced of their future now so I think I'd like to see what Avaya can do. Any idea as to where I can start?

Posted by: Giel Oberholster on Wednesday, November 19, 2008
Although better functionality is available with IPT I personally do not think it is cheaper on the long run. Where you previously had 3 or 4 varaibles that could go faulty in a TDM solution per phone, you now have at least 13 to 15. Smaller companies do not have the network expertise to fault find problems related to QOS. We still see a trend where the "IT" and the "PABX" divisions are devided in a converged communication environment which leads to inability to propperly manage and control the infrastructure leading to unforseen failures.


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