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Friday, March 26, 2010

Facebooking@Work

Hello readers!


It is easy to understand why some institutions will want to ban social networks during office hours. What many find hard to grasp is that social networks--like Facebook, Twitter, Multiply and others--are a good source of exposure to the blogosphere. It will not only promote their organization but also keep their employees sane while at work.


We have seen the tremendous impact of Facebook and Twitter during natural calamities. And if not for these networks, those who were still in their offices, hospitals, or clinics, may not have known that Metro Manila went under the waters in just a few hours. Regulatory policy instead of total blockade of social networks may be a better choice as the globe becomes smaller in the advent of Information of Age.

Nurses Shouldn’t Be Playing Farmville, but…
Josh McColough5 Mar 2010


I learned of our hospital’s plans to block employee access to Facebook rather casually, during a meeting with our department leader.
I showed her an ad we were running that had the Facebook, Twitter and YouTube’s logos at the bottom, and she says, “Should we be promoting these, since we’re going to be shutting down access in the hospital?”


“Whhhhhhhaaaaaaaaaaaaa?”


She showed me a colorful bar graph that our IT Director brought to a recent Exec Team meeting. In one month, more than 1,200 hours of “Browse Time” on our hospital’s network was spent on Facebook. The next closest was Play.It (streaming radio/media) at 820 minutes.


So, in the absence of a social media sympathizer at the meeting, the fate of Facebook was sealed: Block it. No exceptions.


But after much scrambling and pleading, social media was granted a temporary stay so that I could argue on its behalf. I did research and pulled together packets of other hospitals’ social media policies, articles and visual aids to help make my case.


What I learned through all of this research is this simple, obvious lesson: If you don't have an explicit policy, you can't hold anyone accountable.


Some of the fault lies with our department. We aggressively pushed our social media program out to the community, but we ignored our most important audience: Employees.


We never educated our employees about our hospital’s presence on the Web. We didn't show them how they could contribute to it or take part in it.


Lesson learned.


Now, with the help of our IT department, we're creating and shaping our own policy informed by common sense. For instance, when you're taking care of patients, you shouldn't be on Farmville or Facebook. We're making social media part of our new employee orientation, and engaging our internal audience to help contribute to it...responsibly.


Source: http://ow.ly/1qktm
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