U.S. Vacationers Addicted To E-mail.

According to a Gartner, Inc. survey, 42 percent of users check their business e-mail while on vacation, while 23 percent check e-mail on the weekends.

On workdays, 53 percent of business users check e-mail six or more times a day, while 34 percent of users check e-mail constantly throughout the day. On average, business users spend 49 minutes per day managing e-mail accounts.

Gartner analysts warn that the “always on” syndrome for business users is redefining not only the workday, but also family weekends and vacations.

“Business use of cell phones, instant messaging and e-mail has crept into our lives on a 24 by 7 basis,” said Maurene Caplan Grey, Gartner senior research analyst. “The connected vacationer is always on the alert for business interruptions. For better or for worse, 42 percent of us go online to look for business e-mails during vacation.”

The Gartner survey revealed that business users receive an average of 22 e-mails per day. Results also showed that only 27 percent of these e-mails require immediate attention and 34 percent are occupational spam — a Gartner term denoting unnecessary e-mails from co-workers.

“E-mail has become the corporate security blanket of this decade,” continued Grey. “If executives don’t get their 22 e-mails per day, they actually miss them and begin to feel out of the loop.”

“We’ve become a country that thrives on being connected. The thought of communication happening without our knowledge keeps us tethered to the workplace,” concluded Grey.

For more information at http://www.gartner.com.

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