From Deseret News archives:
Instant messaging invades the office
Faster and more casual than e-mail, it is beginning to gain companies' approval
Instant messaging is invading and changing the workplace. Employees started to sneak instant messaging into the office in the late 1990s, but now more companies are endorsing it. Faster and more casual than e-mail, instant messaging can foster broader collaboration among employees even as it further blurs the boundaries between work and life.
Instant-messaging programs allow users to organize contacts into "buddy lists" and see who is online and available to chat at any given moment, worldwide. With most IM programs, users can start real-time conversations with one or more contacts, including multiple participants simultaneously. Sending a message opens up small windows on the participants' screens where users can type their chats. Most programs also offer file-sharing, voice and video features. IM can be used on computers and on wireless devices like cell phones. Many employees use popular consumer-level IM applications, such as AOL Instant Messenger and Yahoo Messenger. But some companies have opted to buy more secure, customized systems that offer such features as archiving.
Unlike e-mail, instant messaging offers "presence" a snapshot of which colleagues are available at a given moment. Together with allied Internet technologies such as blogs and wikis, it is "changing the way people collaborate," says Andrew McAfee, an associate professor at Harvard Business School. Companies "increasingly react to situations and problems on the fly, not solely by hierarchy," he says.
Instant messaging can "scare managers who were taught they need to be in control," says Marty Anderson, a professor at the Olin Graduate School of Business at Babson College. But others embrace the technology.
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