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RACER X
11-03-2011, 02:55 PM
http://www.fastcompany.com/1792349/cisco-report-half-of-young-professionals-value-social-media-access-over-salary?partner=gnews


For a whole new generation of tech-savvy young professionals, having access to social media or the right smartphone in the workplace is at times more important than earning a higher salary. For businesses, that means adapting to this change in priorities rather than resisting it--if the Mad Men-era job force expected noon whiskeys and female secretaries, then our modern-day equivalent demands Facebook and iPhones.

The findings come thanks to Cisco's second annual Connected World Technology Report, a study released today that says attracting and maintaining Millennial talent takes more than the number of zeroes attached to a weekly paycheck. The company surveyed 1,400 college students aged 18 to 23 and 1,400 young professionals under the age of 30 across 14 countries. HR and IT managers take note: "The growing use of the Internet and mobile devices in the workplace is creating a significant impact on job decisions, hiring and work-life balance," the report concluded. "The ability to use social media, mobile devices, and the Internet more freely in the workplace is strong enough to influence job choice, sometimes more than salary."
Cisco's findings are telling of a generation that's been glued to LCD screens and wired to social networks from an early age. According to the report, 40% of college students and 45% of young professionals would accept lower-paying jobs if they had more access to social media, more choice in the devices they could use at work, and more flexibility in working remotely. More than half of the college students surveyed indicated that if an employer banned access to networks like Facebook at work, "they would either not accept a job offer from them or would join and find a way to circumvent."
This technology addiction represents a major opportunity for employers looking to add to their bottom lines while recruiting top talent. For just a few simple workplace concessions (say, allowing employees to choose an iPhone over a BlackBerry, and opening up access to social networks), recruits could be more likely to accept job offers--and at a lower salary. One in four college students, according to the report, said issues like these--while likely baffling to older generations--would represent key factors in their decision to accept a job offer. (To demonstrate just how obsessed Millennials are with their precious tech, Cisco also discovered that more than half of respondents said they'd rather lose their wallets or purses before losing their smartphones or mobile devices.)

At Cisco, the company is exploring internal opportunities to take advantage of the report's findings, which continue to show an increased melding between one's professional and personal life. Employees more and more show an interest in working from home, using a work-issued mobile device for personal purposes, and connect to social networks while on the job. (There's a reason why services such as Yammer, the enterprise version of Facebook, are becoming so popular.) In fact, seven out of 10 college students said company-issued devices should be allowed for personal use. That's why Cisco, for example, is internally testing what's called BYOD, or Bring Your Own Device, meaning employees can come to work with whatever technology they prefer--be it an Android smartphone, an iPad, or a Windows-based laptop.

If that's what it takes to recruit top talent these days--especially at a potentially lower price--how can you complain?

shmike
11-03-2011, 02:59 PM
Damn kids.

RACER X
11-03-2011, 03:25 PM
this is the first co. that i've worked at that has access to FB, also alot of young people working here.......maybe to co. is progressive.........dunno

pauldun170
11-03-2011, 03:30 PM
me loves me some entitlement...

Me also loves me some Cisco sponsored reports that tries to push Cisco product and services.

Call me old and skeptical but I just don't buy what this report is selling

pauldun170
11-03-2011, 03:39 PM
http://www.cisco.com/en/US/solutions/ns341/ns525/ns537/ns705/ns1120/CCWTR-Chapter1-Report.pdf

Red flags

More than half of Students (55%) and an even larger proportion of End Users (62%) indicate they could not live without the Internet, it is an integral part of their daily life
Wait wut?

About One-Third (32%) of College Students Indicate the Internet Is as Important to Them as Water, Food, Air and Shelter; and Roughly Half (49%) Indicate the Internet Is Bot as Important—but that It‘s Pretty Close.

Given a choice between the Internet and social activities such as dating and going out with friends, the largest proportion of College Students (40%) consider the Internet to be most important in their daily life.
About two-thirds (64%) of Students would prefer to have access to the Internet versus a car—driven by significantly large proportions of Students in China, Japan, India, and Germany.

If anyone were to come to my desk citing this report I would fire them immediately then sue them for sexually religious racial harassment.

OneSickPsycho
11-03-2011, 04:00 PM
My last job had zero access to the internet... wasn't a big deal... you find other was to slack off.

Homeslice
11-03-2011, 04:48 PM
Like people are going to die if they go 8 hours w/o checking FB

OneSickPsycho
11-03-2011, 04:51 PM
Like people are going to die if they go 8 hours w/o checking FB

http://www.mytravelcompanions.com/public/images/facebook-like-button.jpg

Homeslice
11-03-2011, 04:53 PM
This technology addiction represents a major opportunity for employers looking to add to their bottom lines while recruiting top talent. For just a few simple workplace concessions (say, allowing employees to choose an iPhone over a BlackBerry, and opening up access to social networks), recruits could be more likely to accept job offers--and at a lower salary.

OK, if the company TELLS them they allow social media, I could maybe see that working in their favor.

But unless the company says so, the person being interviewed isn't going to ask. I mean get real --- How stupid would you have to be, to ask "Do you allow social media at work" during your interview. You would look like a total dipshit, focused on unimportant things, rather than what it takes to succeed on the job.

pauldun170
11-03-2011, 04:59 PM
Like people are going to die if they go 8 hours w/o checking FB

http://www.mytravelcompanions.com/public/images/facebook-like-button.jpg

http://www.mytravelcompanions.com/public/images/facebook-like-button.jpg

pauldun170
11-03-2011, 05:02 PM
OK, if the company TELLS them they allow social media, I could maybe see that working in their favor.

But unless the company says so, the person being interviewed isn't going to ask. I mean get real --- How stupid would you have to be, to ask "Do you allow social media at work" during your interview. You would look like a total dipshit, focused on unimportant things, rather than what it takes to succeed on the job.

You would be surprised at how stupid...er I mean naive some of these kids are.
Not all...not the entire generation...just some.

Smittie61984
11-03-2011, 05:04 PM
My last job had zero access to the internet... wasn't a big deal... you find other was to slack off.

That reminded me of I think a Far Side comic where you see this secretary saying "computers are down and we have to do things manually" and it shows her playing solitairy with real cards.

No interwebz on my work computer but I can play one mean game of solitaire on it. Being a toughbook with a touch screen, it makes playing it more fun.

I'd love for my school to do a FB block. I bet class attendence would drop significantly.

pauldun170
11-03-2011, 05:08 PM
I love it when the interwebz are down.
I get so much done at work that the sense of accomplishment overwhelms me.
Makes the ladies swoon.
Correction...makes me hungry for twix bars

Particle Man
11-03-2011, 08:55 PM
Like people are going to die if they go 8 hours w/o checking FB

http://www.mytravelcompanions.com/public/images/facebook-like-button.jpg

http://www.mytravelcompanions.com/public/images/facebook-like-button.jpg

http://www.mytravelcompanions.com/public/images/facebook-like-button.jpg

LeeNetworX
11-08-2011, 10:57 AM
You would be surprised at how stupid...er I mean naive some of these kids are.
Not all...not the entire generation...just some.

:/

pauldun170
11-08-2011, 12:26 PM
:/

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