Time to fire men, and people with PhDs

An annual survey on time-wasting at work has revealed that more employees are wasting time on a daily basis this year than last year. Time to panic?

Time to fire men, and people with PhDs

An annual survey on time-wasting at work has revealed that more employees are wasting time on a daily basis this year than last year. While in 2012, 64% of respondents to the Salary.com survey admitted to slacking off a little each day, in 2013 an additional 5% did.*

Around a third of respondents (34%) owned up to wasting half an hour or less in the office, while about a quarter put the figure at between 30-60 minutes. Around one in ten of your employees, however, admitted to wasting several hours every day! (About the same number that said that they never wasted time at all.)

Chatting with co-workers stole the most time (43%), followed by surfing online (28%), and texting, using social media, or phone calls (4%), but the internet was the most common time time-waster.

Of the 80% of employees who wasted time on non-work-related websites, 37% identified reading the news online as their top time-waster, 14% nominated social media, and 12% did their online shopping. Of individual websites, Facebook is the most likely to suck up people’s time (15%), closely followed by Yahoo! (14%), and LinkedIn (10%).

Those who are most likely to waste time on a daily basis include men (73%) and people with doctorate degrees (76%). And the least likely? Divorcees (51%), apparently, and those with a high school diploma or less (59%).

So what should you do about this? Fire all your male employees, and those with PhDs? Nothing, actually. “While every second spent “not working” seems like lost money for the business, the reality is being on, constantly, for eight hours can be draining. You need time to recharge. Your employees need time to recharge,” wrote Suzanne Lucas, otherwise known as Evil HR Lady, in Inc.com.

She advised focusing on the end results – that is, what employees actually produce. ”If your employees aren’t getting their (reasonable) workloads done, then you start with the crackdowns – on an individual basis,” she suggested. However, she warned against succumbing to the ‘rookie mistake’ of creating a blanket ban that will only annoy productive workers.

*Survey recipients included more than 1,000 American workers.

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