Careers Ziff Davis Enterprise
Advertisement
Advertisement
Tuesday, March 04, 2008 1:46 PM/EST

Employees Fired for E-mail Abuse? Not So Fast

Think you can get away with abusing e-mail and Intenet policies at work? A new study says, "heck no."

More than a quarter of employers have fired workers for misusing e-mail and one-third have fired workers for misusing the Internet, according to the 2007 Electronic Monitoring & Surveillance Survey from the American Management Association and The ePolicy Institute in a survey of 304 U.S. companies.

Of the 28 percent of employers who have fired workers for e-mail misuse, they did so because it violated company policy (64 percent), contained inappropriate or offensive language (62 percent), it was used excessively by the employee (26 percent) or breached confidentiality rules (22 percent) according the study's results.

The 30 percent of bosses who fired workers for Internet misuse said they did so because inappropriate or offensive content had been viewed, downloaded or uploaded (84 percent), company policy had been violated (48 percent) or the Internet had been used excessively (34 percent).

However, at least one HR professional thinks this study is outdated, and that bosses are using these policies to passive-aggressively punish employees who are actually underperforming.

Kris Dunn, a human resources director who blogs at hrcapitalist.com argues that if a boss if terminating someone for excessive use of the Internet, they probably haven't done their job from a performance management perspective.

"My strong belief--excessive Internet use isn't a policy issue, it's a performance issue. There's a lot of variability across managers as to the definition of 'excessive'--Manage what's 'appropriate' in Internet use by managing performance," Dunn explains.

For more IT Careers and Workplace News, check out eWeek Careers

TrackBack

TrackBack

http://blogs.eweek.com/cgi-bin/mte/mt-tb.cgi/12900

Comments (2)

Bryan :

I've always found that when people get fired for misuse of the Internet or e-mail, there's something else there too. There's usually something about doing a really terrible job.
If you're a stellar performer, Management isn't going to mind if you have fantasy football or the stock ticker up in another window. On the other hand, if you're nothing but an annoyance and your boss is constantly having to cover for you, that miniclip.com window isn't going to make him or her want to go to bat for you.
And, of course, anything vaguely sex-related is right out. That's why I keep Google's safe search function pretty buttoned up on my work machine.

Morgan :

Then there are the companies who state to the media that they do not have forced redundancies for extra staff but have no problem in using policies such as this to clear out "extra" staff.

Post a Comment

 
 


Advertisement
Advertisement