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E-mail user wrath scares IT managers

Carel Alberts
By Carel Alberts, ITWeb contributor
Johannesburg, 10 Jul 2003

Independent research conducted by Dynamic Markets on behalf of Veritas has revealed that 58% of South African IT managers are fearful that their jobs would not be secure in the event of their e-mail system experiencing unplanned downtime.

User dependency on e-mail means that as little as one minute without access causes 26% of South African users within medium to large enterprises to become irate. After one hour, 84% throw their toys - one of the highest rates among all countries surveyed, the study declares.

Only 42% of the IT managers surveyed are confident that their jobs would not be on the line following any period of e-mail downtime.

The survey, carried out across the US as well as Europe, Middle-East and Africa (EMEA), shows that in SA, actual use of e-mail for contractual reasons exceeds the permitted levels set by the individual companies surveyed.

While only 38% are permitted to use e-mail for contracts with suppliers, in reality 44% are actually using it in this way. Other examples of e-mail use that exceeds permission levels include contractual agreements with customers (36% permitted, 44% actual), reprimanding employees (14% permitted, 26% actual), pay rise allocations (38% permitted, 46% actual) and announcements of layoffs (36% permitted, 40% actual).

"Despite e-mail being used for contractual agreements with suppliers and customers in more than half the companies surveyed, with 8% already having had e-mail used in their defence or against them in a legal situation, the research reveals that only 24% can retrieve e-mails further than a year," says Dave Reddy, country manager of Veritas Software SA, a storage management company.

"In fact, 22% are only able to recover back as far as one month, 8% can only recover from the previous week and a further 2% only as far back as the previous day. This leaves companies exposed to potential legal ."

Can`t find it, sorry

About 4% of SA IT managers surveyed said that if a manager asked them to locate a particular e-mail it would be impossible to recover it on the system, and a further 36% perceive "some level of difficulty" in locating e-mails.

Despite user tolerance levels being so low, 52% of SA IT managers surveyed did not know how long it would take to restore their e-mail system in the event of an unplanned incident. For 46% of IT managers, this would take one hour or more.

Among SA users to become irate, the quickest are top management (42%), IT staff (31%) and middle management (27%).

Stress seems to take its toll on South African IT managers, with 30% believing that a week without e-mail would be more stressful for them than one of a number of events including a minor car accident (6%), moving house (12%) and an announcement of potential layoffs (6%).

The cross-industry sample covered 850 IT managers tasked with the responsibility of maintaining the back-office e-mail environment. The research was conducted in the following countries (sample size): US (100), UK (100), France (100), Germany (100), Benelux (50), Spain (50), Sweden (50), Switzerland (50), SA (50), Austria (50), Poland (50), Middle East (50) and Italy (50).

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