Slashdot Log In
British Report Details the Stress of Email Communication
Posted by
Zonk
on Tue Aug 14, 2007 10:04 AM
from the yeah-way-rougher-than-construction-work dept.
from the yeah-way-rougher-than-construction-work dept.
WaltonNews writes "British researchers have found that pressures from handling emails throughout the work day cause stress and frustration with workers. Researchers from a pair of collaborating universities have found that heavy email communication causes anxiety, with some workers thinking they checked their email as often as once every fifteen minutes. The reality was much worse. From the article: 'When researchers fitted monitors to their computers, workers were found to be viewing e-mails up to 40 times an hour. About 33 per cent said they felt stressed by the volume of e-mails and the need to reply quickly. A further 28 per cent said they felt "driven" when they checked messages because of the pressure to respond. Just 38 per cent of workers were relaxed enough to wait a day or longer before replying.'"
Related Stories
This discussion has been archived.
No new comments can be posted.
The Fine Print: The following comments are owned by whoever posted them. We are not responsible for them in any way.
Full
Abbreviated
Hidden
Loading... please wait.
Personally (Score:3, Funny)
Frog with no legs becomes deaf. (Score:5, Funny)
Well, duh! I'm guessing that workers without monitors fitted to their computers not only rarely checked their e-mail, but could not do much of anything with their computers.
Parent
Re:Personally (Score:5, Insightful)
Parent
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
If I don't do it then, I forget (Score:2, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2)
I don't know about most of you, but if I don't respond to an email pretty much when I get it, then I'm much more likely to forget to reply to it.
If you keep your inbox largely clear, then this shouldn't happen. Turn email messages into "To-do" items on your To-Do list, or turn them into items on your calendar. Replying immediately is a good idea if you are able to, of course. Using your inbox as a To-Do list is not, generally, a good idea, although some may find it is OK.Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
It's funny to see how people manage their in-boxes. I do many of the suggestions you listed, and I have my email client only check my email once every 15 minutes (and even then, I have a set of carefully designed rules to filter out stuff I don't need to respond to in that time period). I don't have my Blackberry buzz me about new emails, so I only look at it when I've got time. I've found that this has helped me manage my work load quite
It depends a lot on your job and your company (Score:5, Insightful)
None of these are "to do" items, they are part of a conversation flow that has to take place between the team and the management in order to get things done. Some companies do this in group meetings, some do it in a top-down delegation approach. Mine does it with email. As such, I check my email around every 2-3 minutes at least, quickly scanning the inbox for messages that pertain to me.
I don't feel it "stressful" though - it is part of the job.
This is why I think stories like this are pointless. You can't take any group of people and generally classify them as checking email too often or too little unless you know the specifics of their job and company and how they use email in their day-to-day life. 150 emails in one day is nothign to me, but I know people in other jobs who would be freaked out if they had to deal with 5 per hour.
Parent
Re: (Score:2)
How do you have time to get any actual work done, or is your job checking email?
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2, Funny)
This item is actually on my TODO list. And that TODO list is also on a larger meta-TODO list. And that meta-list is stored in a binary format whose reader's code looks like
Re: (Score:2, Insightful)
A day? For an email? While you're in the office? (Score:5, Interesting)
A bigger question is: Who polls their email client at work anymore? All of the modern clients have some sort of pop-up that will notify you when you have new mail, often with a tiny excerpt from the mail right in the window so you know if you need to read it or not. The only time I actually check the client is when I've been away from the desk for awhile and want to see what I've missed. There is no reason to keep opening up the client and manually pressing refresh.
Also, in my experiance if someone who is in the office doesn't reply to your email within a few hours they probably never will.
Re:A day? For an email? While you're in the office (Score:2)
I was wondering the same thing. What is this "checking" they speak of? I don't even need to check Gmail. I can minimize the window and tell at a glance at the taskbar if there's a new message or not. and Outlook has the friendly pop up with summary. I can glance at the email and decide if I need to even read the whole thing or not.
I think this article is long on hysteria and short on common sense. Consider this:
About 33 per cent said they felt stressed by t
wait a day? unheard of! (Score:3, Interesting)
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
I am still obsessive about checking email so now I have taken to completely shutting down outlook and starting it once every hour.
Filters h
Re: (Score:3, Funny)
Who checks their email? (Score:2)
Re:Who checks their email? (Score:4, Insightful)
Personally, I find email the best form of communication by far for work related issues. I can point people back to what I said earlier when they can't remember it, I don't get interrupted as readily, and I can refer back to what others have said and remind them of it later.
Parent
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
I avoid IM at work whenever possible for this very reason: I have enough to concentrate on without seeing stupid pop-ups every 2 minutes. I tried to do some testing and my project manager was IMing me every 2 minutes asking if I was done yet and how it was going. How the hell are you supposed to do a proper test with that kind of interruption? Now I'm only on MSN when we'r
Not new (Score:2, Insightful)
Let me first forward this link (Score:2)
Stupid Newspaper Backlashes the Messenger (Score:3, Insightful)
Are they freaked out that people are "driven" to get into cars and trains every day, sometimes for hours, as part of our work?
Really, what is the baseline against which this "abnormal email stress" is being measured? I suspect that it's the usual imaginary baseline in "the good old days" that tabloid newspapers have been inventing since... the good old days.
Is ignorance bliss? (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
That's a good point, but I think the concern can be that being cc'ed on too many things can be overwhelming.
At my company (foreign owned by a country known for being hierarchical and process oriented), people are used to cc'ing their managers on even routine emails. In the U.S., this would be viewed as micromanagement and the opposite of delegating, but for them, it's a way for their managers to be confident that things are
Well, duh... (Score:2)
Of course they start checking their email frantically once the mean old researchers give the workers their monitors back.
If you treat e-mail (Score:4, Interesting)
Myself, if the e-mail has no subject, I delete it, it is is just a statement without a question, I delete it. After that, judge accordingly. People make their own stress. It's almost like a drug.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
I treat my phone as being there for my convenience, not someone else's.
Procrastination (Score:2)
Peter
Increasingly amazed (Score:2)
I will check my email if I am expecting something important. Everyone I deal with knows how to get in touch with me if something unexpected comes up. I once had an office mate that would email me a simple yes/no question if I was in the restroom at the time rather
Hey, that reminds, me, I gotta... (Score:2)
my old job (Score:4, Interesting)
Re: (Score:2)
Yet IME, 95% of people never even look at this filtering capability.
Only 40 times/hour? (Score:2)
researchers fitted monitors? (Score:2)
Brits worry too much (Score:3, Funny)
Re: (Score:2)
Email is a symptom, not a cause (Score:3, Insightful)
However, at my current job, my inbox is a 10 page mess. This isn't because I don't manage email properly - it's a symptom of the organization. Email doesn't cause stress any more than phone calls or postal mail. It becomes stressful if the job is stressful.
Bah! (Score:3, Funny)
I've got 4 mod points left and everytime I log onto
Re: (Score:2)
And worse yet, by replying to this article you've blocked a chance at using them!
"Relaxed enough"? (Score:2)
Seriously, is this all that bad? I check my mail whenever I have an idle cycle or three, and that often means that I get things done sooner rather than later. Similarly, probably the biggest single waste of time in my day is waiting on responses to things that I really wanted a response on soon.
Over-inflated sense of self-importance (Score:2)
These are the people that stress about email a
I also find email can be a stress reliever. (Score:2)
Not just email (Score:4, Insightful)
I've seen offices where you'd get an E-mail, and if you didn't respond within a few minutes, you'd get an I.M. and if you didn't respond to that within a few seconds, it's a telephone call, and if you don't answer, someone will breathlessly rush to your desk to ask you face-to-face what flavor of coffee should get brewed next in the break room.
No wonder people are getting stressed out. I think it's URGENT that we all take a break and realize that your business is not going to go up in flames if you relax and have normal paced communications.
Very odd (Score:2)
I prefer email precisely because i can respond at my leisure, as opposed to a phonecall where you really are on the spot and forced to reply immediately. I will often take my time responding to email, thinking of what to write and the best way to get my point across. On the phone you dont have such time to think, thats why a lot of aggressive people (headhunters, salesmen) prefer to call you.
Also, why bother checking email repeatedly, does your mail client not notify you in
It's me (Score:2)
This article is a lot about people like me.
I'm in a mildly technical role, no development or anything like that - essentially I'm a product manager. On a day between 9am and 6pm I will receive, on average, one email just under every 3 minutes (about 180+ a day). Of these, about 50% of them are directed at me which require a response. 10% are from members of my team which are outward communication that I need to know about because, as the product manager, if someone asks you a question, they expect you to
The monitors are the important part (Score:5, Funny)
Workers using computers without monitors checked their e-mail far less often.
U.K. nanny state will pass a law (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)