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Blackberrys, Laptops Upset Work/Home Balance
NewsMax.com Wires
Friday, April 6, 2007

NEW YORK -- Staying in touch constantly by using laptops, BlackBerrys and other wireless devices has blurred the line between a person's professional and personal life, according to a new survey.

Seventy five percent of people questioned in a survey by Yahoo! HotJobs said they used their wireless devices equally for work and personal reasons.

Nearly 30 percent were so attached to them they only switched them off while sleeping.

"Wireless devices are powerful communications tools," Susan Vobejda, vice president of marketing at Yahoo! HotJobs, said in a statement.

"While they were intended to provide convenience and flexibility for workers' lives, they have changed the physical parameters of the workplace and extended the work day. Professionals can work from anywhere and connect at any time."

The online survey of 900 professionals revealed that 81 percent stay connected with a mobile phone, 65 percent use a laptop to keep in touch and 19 percent have adopted smartphones, cell phones with computer-like functions.

Most of the people who responded to the poll had favorable reactions to wireless devices but slightly more than a quarter think they are kept on a permanent corporate leash.

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Vobejda said the wireless devices are a professional reality and people must set limits.

"With 67 percent of respondents admitting to having used a wireless device to connect to work while on vacation, signs indicated that the American workforce may be facing burnout," she added.

People who can't turn off the devices are advised to speak up if they feel they are being overworked, and to learn to say 'no' if work is encroaching too much on personal time.

Instead of using wireless devices to arrange meetings and business appointments, they should use them to schedule some free time.

"It's important for people to set limits on when and how to disengage in order to maintain work-life balance," Vobejda added.

© Reuters 2007. All rights reserved. Republication or redistribution of Reuters content, including by caching, framing or similar means, is expressly prohibited without the prior written consent of Reuters.

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