By Tim Ferguson, 18 February 2008 13:04
NEWS
Working long hours is having a negative impact on many UK tech workers as it hits morale and cuts into valuable leisure time.
According to research by the Chartered Management Institute (CMI), 83 per cent of managers in the IT sector regularly work more than their contracted hours.
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On average, IT managers work one hour 18 minutes more than their contracted requirements per day, adding up to around 40 days per year.
Just over half of respondents (51 per cent) said the long-hours culture in the UK affects productivity and 42 per cent said excessive working hits morale.
The long hours are also eating into recreation time, with 66 per cent saying being stuck in the office limits their exercise time. More than half (58 per cent) said long hours means they also don't have the spare time to develop new skills.
Working long hours isn't out of choice either, with just a quarter of respondents saying they choose to and 49 per cent saying they work longer hours to meet deadlines or deal with their volume of work.
On the other hand, many workers said they aren't pressured to work extra hours by their bosses, with just two per cent saying they are and three per cent saying they work longer merely to get ahead with their work.
The report claims women are better at controlling their workloads with just 16 per cent of women working more than 48 hours per week compared to 35 per cent of men.
Jo Causon, marketing and corporate affairs director at the CMI, said organisations are being forced to use their staff more intensively but this will create longer-term problems if the long-hours culture isn't kept in check.

Comments
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1. Karen Challinor
not being actively pressured to work longer hours is not the same as there being no pressure
promotions and raises and avoidance of redundancy in times of crisis tend to go to the staff with the highest perceived value i.e. those that give up their free time and work longer hours for no extra reward
the pressure may not be overt but it's still there