“In 2005, Employees Will Waste 551,000 Years Reading them (blogs),” says Advertising Age, based on a ‘study’ of
551-thousand years “wasted.” This is the equivalent of trillions-of-dollars in lost revenue.
“35 million workers -- one in four people in the labor force -- visit blogs and on average spend 3.5 hours, or 9%, of the work week engaged with them, according to Advertising Age’s analysis,” writes Bradley Johnson in Advertising Age (see What blogs cost american business). “Time spent in the office on non-work blogs this year will take up the equivalent of 2.3 million jobs. Forget lunch breaks -- blog readers essentially take a daily 40-minute blog break.”
What?! You’re reading my blog, as we speak, at work?! How dare you waste company time and money!! For shame!!
Yes, that hollow squishing sound is resonating from my firmly planted tongue in the side of my cheek. It’s drilling a hole powered by sarcasm and incredulity. Incredulous as I have lost my faith in Ad Age if that’s the type of ‘infotainment’ they’re passing as journalism. No offense Bradley, you’re a fine writer and I’m sure a great guy, but this story is flawed.
In short, this is not a real study – and certainly not scientific – and the findings are flawed. For example, an important point that I strongly question:
"Based on ComScore
This is a massive assumption that would cost a professional researcher his
or her job. Just because 75% of blog categories are not related to jobs
doesn
It
Another finding:
"Count all business blog traffic, half of tech and media blogs and
one-fourth of political/news blogs as directly related to work."
Haha – an incredible leap of faith! Even if it was true how does anyone know which
half of tech blogs people are actually visiting during the work day? What if
it is the half that is work related? Who decides which tech blogs are
work-related or not? What is a work day?
My work day typically begins at
I was just researching digital video cameras online. On the surface that could easily be assumed as "non-work". However, I
Finally, the Advertising Age survey – like many other surveys conducted by magazines today has a questionable sample size and methodology. I’ve not gotten a firm answer on this, but I believe it was an online survey of subscribers – a self-select survey and only a sample of niche readers, mostly tech heads, not a sample of the total working population of the
I asked the writer, Bradley Johnson, Editor-At-Large for Ad Age, about the study and challenged him on the validity. Johnson says “that Advertising Age
Of course, that the ‘study’ is not in-fact a study at all but a best-guess is completely glossed-over and hidden in the story.
Don’t believe the hype. Be careful of what you read and don’t feel guilty about reading worthwhile blogs that build your knowledge and intelligence for your job. Use a grain of salt with every blog – including this one (www.IntranetBlog.com) – and always dig deeper to understand the methodology of any study that makes outlandish claims that seem excessive or too good to be true.
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