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A Gift of Fire Third edition Sara Baase

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1 A Gift of Fire Third edition Sara Baase
Chapter 6: Work Slides prepared by Cyndi Chie and Sarah Frye

2 What We Will Cover Fears and Questions The Impact on Employment
The Work Environment Employee Crime Employee Monitoring

3 Fears and Questions Computers free us from repetitious and boring aspects of jobs so that we can spend more time being creative and doing tasks that require human intelligence. However… The introduction of computers in the workplace generated many fears Mass unemployment due to increased efficiency The need for increased skill and training widens the earning gap

4 Fears and Questions New trends still generating fears
Offshoring of jobs will lead to mass unemployment Employers use of technology to monitor their employees

5 The Impact on Employment
Job Creation and destruction: Reduced the need for telephone operators, mid-level managers, bank tellers, etc. Ex: the number of bank tellers dropped by about 37% between 1983 and 1993. Some travel agencies closed, as consumers made travel reservations online. Kodak laid off thousands of employees. Hundreds of music stores closed.

6 The Impact on Employment
New industries arise A successful technology eliminates some jobs, but create others. Internet Cellular communications Lower prices increase demand and create jobs Music industry changed from serving the wealthy to serving the masses, employing more than just musicians New technologies and products create jobs in design, marketing, manufacture, sales, maintenance, etc.

7 The Impact on Employment (cont.)
Job Creation and destruction: Unemployment rates fluctuate Growth of computers has been steady, while unemployment has fluctuated widely Are we earning less? Since the 1970s, wages decreased , benefits increased People work fewer hours since the Industrial Revolution

8 The Impact on Employment (cont.)
Changing Skill Levels: The new jobs created from computers are different from the jobs eliminated New jobs such as computer engineer and system analyst jobs require a college degree, where jobs such as bank tellers, customer service representatives and clerks do not Companies are more willing to hire people without specific skills when they can train new people quickly and use automated support systems

9 The Impact on Employment (cont.)
A Global Workforce: Outsourcing – a company pays another company to build parts for its products or services instead of performing those tasks itself Offshoring - the practice of moving business processes or services to another country, especially overseas, to reduce costs Inshoring - when another company employs thousands of people in another country. (e.g. offshoring for a German company means inshoring for Jordan)

10 The Impact on Employment (cont.)
A Global Workforce (cont.): Problems and side effects of offshoring: Consumers complain about customer service representatives, because accents are difficult to understand. Employees in companies need new job skills (e.g., managing, working with foreign colleagues) Increased demand for high-skill workers in other countries forces salaries up Time difference cause extra difficulties.

11 The Impact on Employment (cont.)
Ethics of hiring a foreign worker - You are a manager at a software company about to begin a large software project. You will need t hire dozens of new programmers. Using the internet; you can hire programmers in another country at a lower salary. Should you do so?

12 The Impact on Employment (cont.)
Getting a Job: Learning about jobs and companies Online company histories and annual reports Job search and resume sites Online training Learning about applicants and employees Search online newsgroups and social networks Hire data-collection agencies such as ChoicePoint Prospective employees may craft an online profile trying to get the job they want

13 The Impact on Employment Discussion Questions
What jobs have been eliminated due to technology? What jobs that were once considered high-skill jobs are now low-skill due to technology? What new jobs have been created because of technology?

14 The Work Environment Job Dispersal and Telecommuting: Telecommuting
Working at home using a computer electronically linked to one's place of employment Mobile office using a laptop, working out of your car or at customer locations Fulltime and part-time telecommuting

15 The Work Environment (cont.)
Job Dispersal and Telecommuting (cont.): Benefits Reduces overhead for employers Reduces need for large offices Employees are more productive, satisfied, and loyal Reduces traffic congestion, pollution, gasoline use, and stress Reduces expenses for commuting and money spent on work clothes Allows work to continue after storms, hurricanes, etc.

16 The Work Environment (cont.)
Job Dispersal and Telecommuting (cont.): Problems Employers see resentment from those who have to work at the office For some telecommuting employees, corporation loyalty weakens Odd work hours Cost for office space has shifted to the employee Security risks when work and personal activities reside on the same computer

17 The Work Environment (cont.)
Job Dispersal and Telecommuting (cont.): Do you think there might be restrictions on telecommuting ?

18 The Work Environment (cont.)
Changing Structure of Business: Increase in smaller businesses and independent consultants (‘information entrepreneurs’) ‘Mom and pop multi-nationals’, small businesses on the Web Growth of large, multi-national corporations

19 The Work Environment (cont.)
Changing Structure of Business: Encourage workers to become self-employed The availability of IT enabled many businesses to give workers more information and more decision- making authority, thus “flattening hierarchies” and “empowering workers”. Not all changes due to technology

20 The Work Environment Discussion Questions
Would you want to telecommute? Why or why not? How has technology made entrepreneurship easier? Harder?

21 Employee Crime Embezzlement - fraudulent appropriation of property by a person to whom it has been entrusted Trusted employees have stolen millions of dollars Angry fired employees sabotage company systems Logic bomb - software that destroys critical files (payroll and inventory records) after employee leaves

22 Employee Crime Some employers steal data from their employer’s computers. What is the benefit of stealing data? Some employee secretly sabotaged a system in the hopes of earning extra money to fix it. Do you think sabotaging systems is a new or an old problem?

23 Employee Crime How to reduce the likelihood of large frauds?

24 Employee Crime How to reduce the likelihood of large frauds?
An employee’s access should be canceled immediately after he/she quits or gets fired. No one person should have responsibility for enough parts of a system to build and hide elaborate scams. Some systems provide records of transactions and the employee who authorized them. Security vs. convenience

25 Employee Monitoring Background:
Managers have always monitored their employees. The degree of details and frequency of monitoring has varied depending on the kind of work. Computers have made new kinds of monitoring possible and old kinds more efficient.

26 Employee Monitoring Background:
Early monitoring was mostly ‘blue-collar’ (factory) and ‘pink-collar’ (telephone and clerical) jobs Time-clocks and logs Output counts at the end of the day Bosses patrolled the hallways watching workers With computers monitoring can be constant , more detailed and unseen by workers.

27 Employee Monitoring (cont.)
Data Entry, Phone Work, and Retail: Data entry Key stroke quotas Encourage competition Beep when workers pause Phone work Number and duration of calls Idle time between calls Randomly listen in on calls Retail Surveillance to reduce theft by employees

28 Employee Monitoring (cont.)
Workers complain that constant and detailed surveillance diminishes their sense of dignity and independence and destroys their confidence.

29 Employee Monitoring (cont.)
Some argue that monitoring customer-service calls is a privacy issue: It infringes the privacy of employees and customers. Employers argue there is no privacy issue: the calls are not personal.

30 Employee Monitoring (cont.)
Location Monitoring: Cards and badges used as electronic keys increase security but track employee movements GPS tracks an employee's location Used in some hospitals to track nurse locations for emergency purposes, also shows where they are at lunch or when they use the bathroom Used to track long-haul trucks to reduce theft and optimize delivery schedules, also detects driving speeds and duration of rest breaks Employees often complain of loss of privacy

31 Employee Monitoring (cont.)
, Blogging, and Web Use: and voice mail at work Employees often assume passwords mean they are private Roughly half of major companies in the U.S. monitor or search employee , voice mail, or computer files Most companies monitor infrequently, some routinely intercept all

32 Employee Monitoring (cont.)
, Blogging, and Web Use: and voice mail at work Why do some employers monitor their employee’s messages and voic ?

33 Employee Monitoring (cont.)
, Blogging, and Web Use (cont.): Law and cases Electronic Communications Privacy Act (ECPA) prohibits interception of and reading stored without a court order, but makes an exception for business systems Courts put heavy weight on the fact that computers, mail, and phone systems are owned by the employer who provides them for business purposes

34 Employee Monitoring (cont.)
, Blogging, and Web Use (cont.): Law and cases (cont.) Courts have ruled against monitoring done to snoop on personal and union activities or to track down whistle blowers Many employers have privacy policies regarding and voice mail The National Labor Relation Board (NLRB) sets rules and decides cases about worker-employer relations

35 Employee Monitoring (cont.)
, Blogging, and Web Use (cont.): Some companies block specific sites (e.g. sports sites, job search sites, social-network sites) Employees spend time on non-work activities on the Web Concerns over security threats such as viruses and other malicious software

36 Employee Monitoring (cont.)
, Blogging, and Web Use (cont.): Concerns about inappropriate activities by employees (e.g., harassment, unprofessional comment)

37 Employee Monitoring Discussion Questions
How much privacy is reasonable for an employee to expect in the workplace? Under what circumstances is it appropriate for an employer to read an employee's ?


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