The four weeks of the World Cup are certain to be the least productive of the year
The World Cup could affect companies' IT services, as fans eat up valuable bandwidth
R E L A T E D   C O N T E N T

Free email newsletters




ADVERTISEMENT

World Cup cyber-skiving gets red card

Productivity set to plummet during four weeks of the Fifa World Cup

Matt Chapman, vnunet.com 16 May 2006
ADVERTISEMENT

Fans playing web-based games and keeping up to date with scores and results online will make the four weeks of the Fifa World Cup tournament the least productive time during 2006 for businesses. 

The time wasted will cost the average UK business £8,400 in lost productivity for every 100 people it employs, according to web content filtering vendor Marshal

"Every major sporting event sees the same pattern and, because of the popularity of football, the four weeks of the World Cup are certain to be the least productive of the year," said Marshal chief executive Ed Macnair.

The majority of the UK's estimated 17 million football fans work in desk-based jobs, and internet access during working hours will be their prime source for the latest on the tournament.

Marshal said that the World Cup could also affect companies' IT services, as fans eat up valuable bandwidth by downloading videos and interactive scoreboards.

Macnair urged employers to set policies for acceptable internet use. "By implementing policies to limit internet access to certain sites to lunch time, and before and after working hours, companies are able to control productivity and corporate bandwidth issues," he said.

See also:

Repressive regimes are increasingly highlighting blogs and websites as a threat to be shut down or censoredReporters Without Borders names and shames repressive regimes  05 May 2006
Microsoft is looking at exploiting information from a user's friends and business contacts to deliver better search resultsWhat your friends like will get you better search results  03 May 2006
Employees are still the weakest link in the security chain, according to a DTI surveyStaff still logging on to 'inappropriate' websites, but companies are getting wiser  28 Mar 2006
Monitoring and filtering of instant messaging use becoming vital, warns analyst  20 Mar 2006
One in three employees are more ready to report illegal or inappropriate activity than they were three years agoLoyalty? They've heard of it …  10 Mar 2006
Lack of corporate policy reaches worrying proportions  12 Dec 2005

All IT Management

Like this story? Spread the news by clicking below:

Post this to Delicious del.icio.us    Post this to Digg Digg this    Post this to reddit reddit!

Permalink for this story
R E A D E R   C O M M E N T S

M A R K E T P L A C E
Sponsored links
F E A T U R E D   J O B S
| Greythorn IT
Leading Mobile Network vendore is currently seeking a Process consultant for a positions based either in the Middle east or Africa. We are looking for around 10 years experience with at least 5 years business ... more >
| Greythorn IT
Tier 1 Network solutions provider is currently seeking an experienced Telecommunications sales manager to work in their Abu Dhabi office. There is a brilliant benefits package as well as an attractive salary available for the ... more >
| Greythorn IT
Leading network solutions provider in Egypt is currently seeking and experienced Egyptian Network Operation /Supervision Engineer. There are competitive packages and attractive benefits package on offer for the right candidate. You will be responsible to ... more >
| Greythorn IT
A leading network Solutions vendor is currently seeking an Egyptian national to act as a Service Assurance manager out of their Egyptian office. Ideally we are looking for someone with Vendor based experience however other ... more >
More job opportunities