首页
外语
计算机
考研
公务员
职业资格
财经
工程
司法
医学
专升本
自考
实用职业技能
登录
外语
Young Workers Push Employers for Wider Web Access Ryan Tracy thought he’d entered the Dark Ages when he graduated college an
Young Workers Push Employers for Wider Web Access Ryan Tracy thought he’d entered the Dark Ages when he graduated college an
admin
2013-07-11
39
问题
Young Workers Push Employers for Wider Web Access
Ryan Tracy thought he’d entered the Dark Ages when he graduated college and arrived in the working world. His employer blocked access to Facebook, Gmail and other popular Internet sites. He had no wireless access for his laptop and often ran to a nearby cafe on work time so he could use its Wi-Fi connection to send large files.
Sure, the barriers did what his employer intended: They stopped him and his colleagues from using work time to mess about online. But Tracy says the rules also got in the way of reasonable work he needed to do as a scientific analyst for a health care services company.
"It was a constant battle between the people that saw technology as an advantage, and those that saw it as a hindrance," says the 27-year-old Chicagoan, who now works for a different company.
He was sure there had to be a better way. It’s a common complaint from young people who join the work force with the expectation that their bosses will embrace technology as much as they do. Then some discover that sites they’re supposed to be researching for work are blocked. Or they can’t take a little down time to read a news story online or check their personal e-mail or social networking accounts. In some cases, they end up using their own Internet-enabled smart phones to get to blocked sites, either for work or fun.
So some are wondering: Could companies take a different approach, without compromising security or workplace efficiency, that allows at least some of the online access that younger employees particularly long for?
"It’s no different than spending too much time around the water cooler or making too many personal phone calls. Do you take those away? No," says Gary Rudman, president of GTR Consulting, a market research firm that tracks the habits of young people. "These two worlds will continue to conflict until there’s a mutual understanding that performance, not Internet usage, is what really matters."
This is, after all, a generation of young people known for what University of Toronto sociologist Barry Wellman calls "media multiplexity(多重性)." College students he has studied tell him how they sleep with their smart phones and, in some cases, consider their electronic tools to be like a part of their bodies. They’re also less likely to fit the traditional 9-to-5 work mode and are willing to put in time after hours in exchange for flexibility, including online time.
So, Wellman and others argue, why not embrace that working style when possible, rather than fight it?
There is, of course, another side of the story—from employers who worry about everything from wasted time on the Internet to giving away secret information and liability for what their employees do online. Such concerns have to be taken especially seriously in such highly regulated fields as finance and health care, says Nancy Flynn, a corporate consultant who heads the Ohio-based ePolicy Institute.
From a survey Flynn did this year with the American Management Association, she believes nearly half of U.S. employers have a policy banning visits to personal social networking or video sharing sites during work hours. Many also ban personal text messaging during working days.
Flynn notes that the rising popularity of BlackBerrys, iPhones and other devices with Web access and messaging have made it much more difficult to enforce what’s being done on work time, particularly on an employee’s personal phone. Or often the staff uses unapproved software applications to get around the blocks.
As a result, more employers are experimenting with opening access.
That’s what Joe Dwyer decided to do when he started Chicago-based Brill Street & Co., a jobs site for young professionals. He lets his employees use social networking and has found that, while they might spend time chatting up their friends, sometimes they’re asking those same friends for advice for a work problem or looking for useful contacts.
"So what seems unproductive can be very productive," Dwyer says.
Kraft Foods Inc. recently opened access to everything from YouTube to Facebook and Hotmail, with the warning that personal use be reasonable and never interfere with job activities.
Broadening access does, of course, mean some employees will cross lines they aren’t supposed to.
Sapphire Technologies LP, an information-technology staffing firm based in Massachusetts, started allowing employees to use most Internet sites two years ago, because recruiters for the company were going on Facebook to find talent.
Martin Perry, the company’s chief information officer, says managers occasionally have to give employees a "slap on the wrist" for watching sports on streaming video or downloading movies on iTunes. And he says older managers sometimes raise eyebrows at their younger peers’ online judgment.
"If you saw some of the pictures that they’ve uploaded, even to pur internal directory, you’d question the maturity," Perry says.
It’s the price a company has to pay, he says, for attracting top young talent that’s willing to work at any hour. "Banning the Internet during work hours would be short-sighted on our part," Perry says.
But that also means many companies are still figuring out their online policies and how to deal with the unclear lines between work and personal time—including social networking, even with the boss.
"I think over time, an open embrace of these tools can become like an awkward embrace," says Mary Madden, a senior research specialist at the Pew internet & American Life Project. "It can get very messy."
One option is for companies to allow access to certain sites but limit what employees can do there. For instance, Palo Alto Networks, a computer security company, recently helped a furniture maker open up social networking for some employees, but limited such options as file-sharing, largely so that sensitive information isn’t transferred, even accidentally.
"Wide-open Internet access is the risky approach," says Chris King, Palo Alto Networks’ director of product marketing. However, "fully closed is increasingly unsustainable for cultural reasons and business reasons."
Flynn, at the ePolicy institute, says it’s important that employers have a clear online policy and then explain it. She believes not enough employers have conducted formal training on such matters as online liability and confidentiality(保密性).
Meantime, her advice to any employee is this: "Don’t start blogging. Don’t start chatting. Don’t even start; e-mailing until you read the company policy."
Kraft Foods Inc. opened web access to the employees on the condition that ______.
选项
A、they never make personal phone call
B、they improve their working performance
C、they use the web without interfering with work
D、they are being monitored while surfing the Internet
答案
C
解析
转载请注明原文地址:https://kaotiyun.com/show/DP07777K
0
大学英语四级
相关试题推荐
AdventuresinForeignLanguagesItcouldreasonablybearguedthat,forthoseofuswholiveintheUSAandspeakEnglishas
Modernmass-productionmethodslowerthecostofmakinggoods,andthusgiveusbettervalues.Atthesametime,Americaningenu
Parents________________(倾其所有)tosendtheirsonstouniversity,butconsideredthethoughtofeducatingtheirdaughtersextrem
A、Becausetheyarebusyservingfoodtotheirchildren.B、Becausetheyarebusykeepingorderatthedinnertable.C、Becausethe
Itcanbetemptingtomakeahastydecisionwhenakilleropportunitycomesalongorthethoughtofspendinganotherdayon
A、Hegotaticket.B、Hewasfined$35.C、Hehadhisdriver’slicensecanceled.D、Hehadtodotwoweeks’communityservice.A
A、Theirsimilarsocialstatus.B、Theirinterdependence.C、Theircommoninterest.D、Theiridenticalcharacter.C短文中提到,艾琳和帕特都喜欢去剧院
Anew【S1】______distinctspeciesofhammerheadshark,theninthrecognizedspeciesofhammerhead,hasbeendiscoveredofftheSo
筷子说到筷子的起源,中国是世界上第一个使用筷子的国家,用筷子吃饭已经有至少3000年的历史了。筷子看起来很简单,只有两根小细棒,但它有很多功能,比如挑选,移动,夹,搅拌或者挖。此外,它便于使用,价格便宜。而且筷子也是世界上独有的餐具。使用筷子的人
随机试题
杜某大学毕业后被某流通科技有限公司录用,双方约定好了工作岗位、工作内容和工资待遇等,但没有签订书面劳动合同,工作至今已3个月。该公司和杜某之间的劳动关系是()。
下列争议不适用《劳动法》的有:
监理机构对施工组织设计审查的内容包括()。
雨期填筑路堤时,路堤应分层填筑,每一层的表面应()。
根据道路对交通运输所起的作用把道路分为()。
资产评估的主体是指()。
用人单位应当建立职工名册备查,下列项目中,()不属于职工名册应当包括的内容。
十八世纪德国著名文学家歌德,早年创作的一部以青年男女恋爱为主题,并曾对我国“五四新文化运动”作家产生过影响的小说是()。
如果你要创建一家成功的公司,你必须在一件事情上做得最好,比如你的产品比别人做得好;别人也做得一样好时,你比别人快;别人也同样快时,你比别人成本低;别人的成本也一样低时,你比别人附加值高。下面哪项最不接近上面这段话的意思?
[*]
最新回复
(
0
)