50% Check Work Email on Weekends
Sep 30 2008
I know that most of you are one of these “Tethered Workers”. Don’t be ashamed, as I am not better than any of you. We can form a 12 step group for internet addicted people. I bet in 10 minutes we could have a support group of hundreds of millions.
Do you think that if 50% do work email, what is the percentage of people that are checking personal email? Now once you digest this, think about how your campaigns can be targeted to these type of workers based on time of day, day of week, and by the type of behavioral interactions they have on the weekends.
Below is a snippet from the study found here in full.
Some 22 percent of employed email users say they are expected to read and respond to work-related emails, even when they are not at work. Blackberry and PDA owners are more than twice as likely to report that their employer expects that they will stay tuned in to email outside of the office. Fully 48 percent say they are required to read and respond to email when they are away from work.
50 percent of employed email users say they check their work-related email on the weekends.
22 percent of employed email users say they check their work email accounts “often” during weekend hours, compared with 16 percent who reported the same in 2002.
46 percent of employed email users say they check email when they have to take a sick day; 25 percent say they do so “often.”
34 percent of employed email users say they will at least occasionally check their email while on vacation; 11 percent say they do so “often.”
“Email is still the primary artery of workplace communications in many professions, and it has clearly started to spill over into personal life,” said Sydney Jones, coauthor and research assistant for the Pew Internet Project. “Over time, workers have become more likely to check their email outside of normal working hours, and many are expected to do so by their employer.”
Read the full study here.
Published in Behavioral Marketing, Best Practices, Case Study, Email News, Studies & Research on Tuesday, September 30th, 2008


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