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The Collaborative Internet: Usage Trends, Employee Attitudes and IT Impacts
Fourth Annual Survey, October 2008
Archive and Retrieval of Electronically Stored Information
Almost all organizations will archive and store email communications within the
next 12 months. The majority (68 percent) already do so. Current and planned
archiving for other types of communication are less widespread: one in three
organizations now archive IM communications (31 percent), in spite of IMs
widespread use. All told, about half of IT respondents will have IM storage in
place within the next 12 months.
Large organizations are significantly more likely to have archiving and storage
policies in place for Email and IM/chat. They are slightly more likely to have
such policies for web conferencing. For audio conferencing archiving, company
size has no impact.
Across all company sizes, it seem that archiving may be a function of when the
communication method was rolled out across the network-hence email and IM are
most likely to be archived compared with relatively newer communications
methods.
| |
From 1 to 99 |
100 to 999 |
1000 to 4,999 |
5,000 or more |
| Email | 56% | 64% | 67% | 81% |
| IM & chat | 31% | 33% | 39% | 53% |
| Web conferencing | 28% | 24% | 24% | 34% |
| Audio conferences/voice calls | 33% | 27% | 32% | 37% |
Responsibility for archiving policies is typically a function of the CIO or the
IT department at smaller organizations, while the legal department is more
involved at larger companies. This raises a concern about the extent to which
corporate archiving polices at small organizations have been subject to legal
review.
| |
From 1 to 99 |
100 to 999 |
1000 to 4,999 |
5,000 or more |
| CIO/IT | 68% | 80% | 68% | 60% |
| CEO/other senior executive | 41% | 35% | 30% | 27% |
| Legal | 38% | 52% | 70% | 74% |
| Human Resources | 41% | 37% | 40% | 42% |
| Other (please specify) | 15% | 2% | 8% | 14% |
Smaller companies typically lack the resources or capacity to reproduce employee
communications if required to do so for legal reasons. Note for example that
67% of small companies (1 to 99 employees) cannot produce such communications.
| |
From 1 to 99 |
100 to 999 |
1000 to 4,999 |
5,000 or more |
| A few hours | 18% | 14% | 18% | 29% |
| About a day | 7% | 15% | 10% | 10% |
| Several days | 5% | 10% | 14% | 13% |
| More than one week | 3% | 2% | 3% | 11% |
| We could not produce the documents in a reasonable time frame | 16% | 16% | 11% | 10% |
| It would be impossible for us to produce the documents | 51% | 42% | 43% | 27% |
Corporate Policies and Network Monitoring
Not surprisingly, larger organizations are much more likely to have corporate
communications policies in place-although such policies are relatively
widespread at all companies. (Note that across all company sizes, one in four
companies - 23% - have no such policy).
| |
From 1 to 99 |
100 to 999 |
1000 to 4,999 |
5,000 or more |
| Yes, have policies and guidelines | 77% | 80% | 85% | 91% |
| No | 23% | 20% | 15% | 9% |
Base: IT Respondents
Larger organizations are more likely to actively monitor and track employee
communications and web usage, compared with the smallest companies. That said,
the largest organizations still have a ways to go to insure security: Only 45
percent monitor IM communications. That’s much better than the 25 percent of
the under-100 employee organizations that do so, but still leaves large
companies remarkably open to a communications vector for which 50 percent of
their employees identify IM as a risk.
| |
From 1 to 99 |
100 to 999 |
1000 to 4,999 |
5,000 or more |
| Corporate email | 72% | 76% | 77% | 84% |
| Instant messaging communications | 25% | 36% | 40% | 45% |
| Peer to peer file sharing | 28% | 41% | 44% | 40% |
| Web browsing/websites visited | 54% | 59% | 70% | 72% |
| Web 2.0 applications | 23% | 26% | 20% | 28% |
| Social networking | 30% | 30% | 36% | 42% |
| None of these | 21% | 18% | 15% | 8% |
Base: IT Respondents
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