Americans still positive about using email

Even though one in 12 now spending over four hours a day on it

By Lisa M Bowman, 19 June 2003 10:21

NEWS US workers spend nearly a quarter of their day dealing with email, according to a new study, far above levels recorded in the UK. The study, conducted by the American Management Association, along with communication management software company Clearswift and the ePolicy Institute, found that employees who use email spend an average of about an hour and 47 minutes handling messages every day at work. Eight percent said they spend more than four hours doing so. But that time doesn't seem to be going to waste. A full 86 percent of respondents said email has made them more efficient, with just more than half saying it's made them much more efficient. The study, titled 2003 E-Mail Survey, polled 1,100 US employers. Its findings buck the conventional wisdom that companies frequently monitor employee email. Although 90 per cent of the respondents said their companies had installed software that observes email on the corporate network, just 19 per cent said they are using it. The authors of 2003 E-Mail Survey urged businesses to better track and develop policies for employees' email use in order to avoid risking legal liability and the loss of productivity and confidential information. "Management's failure to check internal email is a potentially costly oversight," Ivan O'Sullivan, vice president of survey cosponsor Clearswift, said in a statement. "Off-the-cuff, casual email conversations among employees are exactly the type of messages that tend to trigger lawsuits, arm prosecutors with damaging evidence and provide the media with embarrassing real life disaster stories." The study found that email continues to be a source of potential liability for a company. According to the survey, 14 per cent said a court or regulatory body had ordered them to turn over email, up from 9 per cent two years ago. Surprisingly, spam wasn't a major focus of the study, despite its reputation as the scourge of internet users everywhere. Although unsolicited junk mail was listed by the survey as one of the negative effects of email, just 12 per cent of respondents said they wasted too much time on spam. More people - 19 per cent - felt they spent too much time reading and answering email. Lisa M Bowman writes for CNET News.com.

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