Posted on 07/18/2014 4:04:37 PM PDT by nickcarraway
An employee at an insurance agency in central Sweden will lose 15 days of pay as punishment for surfing the web on the job, spending over 40 hours this summer mainly using social media.
Multiple employees at a branch of Försäkringskassan (Swedish Social Insurance Agency) in Gävle face serious repercussions for browsing the web instead of helping customers.
In one case, the employee spent about 50 hours of work time during one month visiting 350 websites - including plenty of shopping, weight-loss sites, and blogs. Over a period of seven months the woman had worked 51 hours overtime, but over the summer alone she had also spent 47 hours wasting time - mostly on Facebook.
Another employee was "inactive" in the work system for 69 of her 474 clocked hours. She had visited 112 different websites not related to her work, in addition to leaving the office during work hours.
The agency concluded that the woman had been "disloyal to the employer" by being inactive at work both in paid overtime and scheduled work.
The woman retained her job but was punished by losing half of her pay for the month.
If they did this with Federal government employees, we would get rid of our deficit in very short order!
http://www.forbes.com/sites/cherylsnappconner/2013/09/07/who-wastes-the-most-time-at-work/
Sixty four percent of employees visit non-work related websites each day. In this category, the amount of time wasted per week on non-work related websites is as follows:
Time Wasted Pct of Employees
<1 hour 39%
1-2 hours 29%
2-5 hours 21%
6-10 hours 8%
10+ hours 3%
Contributing to these percentages are social media networks. The winners for the time-loss warp are Tumblr (57%), Facebook (52%), Twitter (17%), Instagram (11%) and SnapChat (4%).
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