IM=Interruption Management? Instant Messaging and Disruption in the Workplace
http://jcmc.indiana.edu/vol13/issue1/garrett.html
Abstract
Some scholars worry that Instant Messaging (IM), by
virtue of the ease with which users can initiate and participate in
online conversations, contributes to an increase in task interruption.
Others argue that workers use IM strategically, employing it in ways
that reduce interruption. This article examines the relationship
between IM and interruption, using data collected via a (U.S.) national
telephone survey of full-time workers who regularly use computers
(N=912). Analysis of these data indicates that IM use has no influence
on overall levels of work communication. However, people who utilize IM
at work report being interrupted less frequently than non-users, and
they engage in more frequent computer-mediated communication
than non-users, including both work-related and personal communication.
These results are consistent with claims that employees use IM in ways
that help them to manage interruption, such as quickly obtaining
task-relevant information and negotiating conversational availability.
Introduction
To make real progress in creative thinking,
problem solving, or other knowledge work, we need to keep out
interruptions and set our own agenda. IM, in contrast, lets your agenda
be controlled by anybody who has your screen name. - Nielsen (2003)
Instead of conversations taking place at the
convenience of the initiator, IM allows genuine social negotiation
about whether and when to talk. - Nardi et al. (2000)