Commentary & Opinion
By Jon Hyman
Jun. 29, 2016
A recent survey conducted by the Pew Research Center confirmed what I have long thought. Your employees are using social media at work — 77 percent of them. And I believe even that number is low.
![]() |
Meanwhile, another recent survey, this one by CareerBuilder (h/t Ragan.com) attributes smartphones to the fact that 20 percent of full-time workers say they work less than five hours per day.
It’s not all bad news for employers. The same study found that evidence that workplace social media policies concerning impact on-the-job use. Workers whose companies have policies regulating social media use at work are less likely to use social media in certain ways:
What does all this mean? Despite the help that social media policies provide, employers that try regulate personal social media use out of the workplace are fighting a losing battle. I call it the iPhone-ification of the American workforce. No matter your policy, if your employees can take their smartphones out of their pockets to circumvent the policy, how can you possibly police workplace social media access? Why have a policy you cannot police and enforce? And, don’t forget, the NLRB is watching, too.
Schedule, engage, and pay your staff in one system with Workforce.com.