8 Ways American Information Workers Remain Luddites

Nine out of 10 never use social networking or videoconferencing for work, according to a survey conducted by Forrester Research.

By Eric Lai
Mon, October 12, 2009

Computerworld — A Forrester Research study is showing that what is a hit in Silicon Valley or among the virtual "Twitterati" has yet to be picked up by most U.S. information workers.

According to the results of an online survey of U.S. information workers at medium-to-large organizations and their technology usage, American 'iWorkers' remain stuck on old-school technologies like desktop PCs, Microsoft Office and e-mail.

Much of the blame goes to their employers, which are failing to satisfy "pent up demand for smartphones" and "squashing" younger Gen Y employees' love of social networking technologies, wrote primary author, Ted Schadler.

The 2,001 employees, all of whom use a computer and the Internet at work, were surveyed this spring. All were at companies with 100 or more employees; 44 percent worked at organizations with 5,000 or more employees.

Some of the data from the study was released last month. Forrester released the full report late last week. Some of the major themes:

The widely predicted shift to the mobile enterprise hasn't occurred yet, according to Forrester's data. Only one in three information workers use a laptop for work, while one in nine uses a smartphone. Seventy-six percent use a desktop PC most of the time. One in five shares a PC with a co-worker. Managers are the most likely (50 percent) to get a notebook or smartphone (20 percent). Manufacturing and retail employees are the least likely to be issued a laptop or smartphone (less than 20 percent and 10 percent, respectively).

E-mail remains king over instant messaging. Almost 60 percent of information workers say they e-mail hourly; 87 percent use it at least occasionally. Meanwhile, 74 percent say they never use instant messaging at work. The biggest reasons: One-third blamed lack of corporate support. For others, physical proximity to co-workers and greater comfort with e-mail and phone were the reasons they didn't use IM.

Other communication tools remain on the bench. Seventy-six percent never use Web conferencing tools such as Cisco System's WebEx. Others that are mostly ignored include business-reporting tools (78 percent), team document-sharing sites such as Microsoft SharePoint (80 percent), social networking sites (89 percent) and videoconferencing (91 percent). "Real-time collaboration tools have stalled out," Schadler wrote.

One reason is dissatisfaction. Only about 20 percent of those using team document-sharing sites said they were very satisfied. Another is their apparent difficulty. Less than 20 percent of users of Web conferencing applications claimed to feel "highly expert" in them. Still another reason is that many workers are involved in multi-company teams. Real-time tools such as corporate IM require some IT setup, compared to e-mail, which requires none.

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