
Karl Marx may never have
anticipated the contemporary corporate workplace or its Dilbert-esque conflicts, but I am going to invoke the Communist Manifesto nonetheless: workers of the world unite! You have nothing to lose but
your page views!
In the past I have written about the large proportion of office
workers who use social media at the workplace -- logging on to Facebook every five minutes, watching videos on YouTube, tinkering with their resumes on LinkedIn, etc. -- and the inevitable attempts by
employers to police (basically, limit or stop) this. The battle lines have been drawn, and I am pleased to report that the bosses are totally losing, according to the Cisco 2010 Midyear Security
Report, which includes the results of a survey of employees from around the world.
Most notably, fully 50% of the employees surveyed by Cisco said they ignored corporate policies which ban
social media in the workplace, and log into social network sites with their work computers at least once a week. Even better, over one quarter of the employees surveyed said they had changed the
security settings on their work computers so they can carry on their social media activities unhindered.
When one out of every two workers violates a rule, that is not an insignificant trend
-- it is an insurrection (albeit a passive, quiet one) and the fact that one out of four employees deliberately sabotages security measures provides further evidence of their will to use social media.
Indeed, a few months ago a survey by Clearswift, a software security company, found that 21% of young adults said they would turn down a job if it didn't allow them to access social network sites
or their personal email during work hours. Among employees ages 25-34, Clearswift found that 57% do personal tasks like checking social networks, emailing, and online shopping while in the workplace.
True, some companies bring a much more positive attitude to employees using social media, and some are creating their own proprietary social networks to encourage and enable collaboration.
But I'm guessing that for every forward-thinking boss there have got to be three stuffy codgers who think first of all that social media use is never productive, and second that they can (and
should) try to stop it, employees be damned. Luckily, they probably don't know anything about computers so it will be easy to circumvent their bans, and the sheer popularity of social network
sites means employees should have solidarity around this issue (at one of my previous jobs, management's attempt to regulate Internet use were derailed by members of the IT staff who actively
conspired with other employees to allow everyone to surf the Web).