Holidays cause major headaches for the IT service desk with demanding employees and security at the top of the list, according to Hornbill's latest survey
August 18th, 2009 -- Most 'memorable' holiday-related IT requests reveal dedication of service desk staff when faced with users' outrageous demands
Almost one third (32%) of IT executives say most of their users choose to stay connected to the workplace during their well-earned break, which can create significant issues for the IT service desk. The following holiday-related headaches topped the list:
1. Keeping company information secure (47%)
2. Wasted time that could be spent on larger organisational or business issues (24%)
3. Replacing lost equipment quickly (22%)
4. Insurance claims (7%)
When IT executives were asked for their most memorable holiday-related IT request, their answers revealed the high expectations that employees have of the service desk and the patience of the IT department when supporting often outrageous demands or technically incompetent colleagues.
One IT executive recalled having to visit an employee, while abroad on holiday himself, to install software for a digital camera that the employee had bought in a duty-free shop, for personal use, on a company laptop.
Another employee expected the IT department to loan his son a company mobile phone and laptop during the annual family get-away.
Other stories involve employees asking the IT department to:
• improve the mobile network coverage in mountainous areas or on tropical islands;
• translate error messages from international service providers;
• come up with miracle cures for equipment run over by airport buses.
More outrageous demands include people crashing their hard disk drives by storing hundreds of holiday pictures on company laptops and even asking the IT department to download their holiday snaps for them!
The most common requests received by the IT service desk during the holiday period fall into four distinct categories:
• Forgetfulness: more than one quarter (27%) of respondents commonly receive requests relating to users forgetting passwords or forgetting to set their email 'out-of-office' notification before they go away (20%);
• Remote access: 18% of enquiries concern the use of mobile phones abroad or how to access email if employees don't have their laptops with them (9%) with a further 15% of requests coming from employees left behind in the office who require access to their colleagues' email while they are on holiday;
• Carelessness: 6% of IT related requests result from employees dropping mobile phones or PDAs in swimming pools/in the sea or leaving equipment on aeroplanes/trains;
• Organisation: the remaining 5% of incidents revolve around employees' requests to hire temporary staff to cover them in their absence or for the IT department to provide employees with a power adaptor suitable to their end destination.
According to the respondents of the survey, the majority of employees (79%) favour either a mobile phone or a PDA such as a BlackBerry as their favourite means of keeping in touch, followed by 21% who rely on their laptop or another device.
Gerry Sweeney, CEO of Hornbill Systems commented: "Our survey highlights some interesting trends in employee behaviour. The minority of employees who are desperate to stay in touch with the workplace more than compensate for their more chilled out colleagues by adding to the burdens of the service desk. Our respondents cited several extreme requests that reveal the high expectations that employees have of their IT department, for example, having someone to fly over just to install a printer or shipping out a brand new BlackBerry to Kenya just because the employee forgot the charger. The survey also demonstrated the dedication of the IT department to supporting employees all the time, whether during work or personal time, at home and abroad. One might have expected the number of IT executives who would prefer employees to leave company equipment behind them (55%) to be a lot higher, especially when the second biggest challenge they cited was wasting the IT department's time that could be spent on larger organisational or business issues."
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About Hornbill
Hornbill develops and markets Supportworks: platform technology and applications for IT Service Management and business helpdesks. Supportworks' service desk software is designed for rapid deployment within any IT or business support environment, including ITIL-compatible IT Service Management (ITSM), IT Helpdesk, Customer Service & Support, Human Resources and Facilities Management with the flexibility to build additional service desks at minimal extra cost.
Customers including Atos Origin, Toyota Motorsport, Buckinghamshire Hospitals NHS Trust, Kent County Council, Greggs, London School of Economics, Natural History Museum, Knight Frank, Comet, The National Archives, and Camelot benefit from Hornbill's unique 'Human Touch' approach to Service Management.
Hornbill was founded in 1995 and has offices in London, UK and Dallas, Texas. For more information about Hornbill's solutions please visit www.hornbill.com
Public Relations Contacts
Catherine Staite
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E. catherine.staite@hornbill.com


