7 Ways Your E-mail Can Get You Fired

By Candice Novak

Posted: August 4, 2008

It was a couple of telling E-mails that helped bring down Bear Stearns with the subprime loan mess crashing all around. It was also another reminder that E-mail at work, including personal E-mail, can not only get you fired; it can get you prosecuted.

Though many companies include E-mail rules in their employee contracts, workers continue to send nonwork-related E-mails on the job. Of those who took an msnbc.com survey that asked how often workers send or receive personal E-mails on the job, 14 percent said they do "constantly." An additional 31 percent said "very often." More than 50 percent said they "sometimes or occasionally" use personal E-mail at work, and only 9.3 percent said they "never do."

Even if most workers may get away with it, companies are using E-mail as grounds for firing. According to a survey by the American Management Association and the ePolicy Institute, over half of all employers fire workers for E-mail and Internet abuse. The survey also found that of the 43 percent of companies that monitor workers' E-mail, 73 percent use technology tools to automatically monitor it and 40 percent assign an individual to read and review the E-mail manually.

The rules of E-mail are still changing—a new etiquette is forming around the rights of E-mail at work. We now live and work in a world in which our electronic actions are easily monitored and sorted. But the battle between personal privacy and a company's right to monitor its computers and BlackBerrys is still violent; lawsuits are flying, and jobs are being slashed.

Here are some things to consider before logging on at work:

You don't own your E-mail. In some respects, technology has outgrown the law. "Dress code and lockers have changed slowly—office etiquette has been perfected over a long period of time—but E-mail has changed so fast," human resource attorney William Nolan of Squire, Sanders & Dempsey LLP says. But the basic rules of ownership still apply. "No—it's not personal when you're sitting in their building, at their desk, on their computer," Nolan says.

Freedom of...text? Some of us are just too loose with the notes we send at work. "People E-mail what they never would've put in a memo," Nolan says. When E-mail-related cases go to trial, it may be hard for an employer to make a case for its reasons for reading personal E-mails, because the "jury will be thinking, 'I don't want people looking at my stuff,' " Nolan says. But the law protects the employer, because the E-mail was sent using the company's equipment.

Working from home. If all the gray area of E-mail laws weren't enough, people working from home on a mix of equipment face a new set of problems. The use of, say, your own BlackBerry and the company's computer poses a strange problem of differentiating work E-mail from personal E-mail. Especially if you have both delivered to your hand-held device. Something to remember, says Laurent Duperval, president of the work and personal communications firm Duperval Consulting, is that no matter where you are, "before sending or opening an E-mail, ask yourself: 'If my boss was looking over my shoulder right now, would he or she approve?' This is the litmus test and can also be applied to anything an employee does during the course of a workday."

Just because you can... ...Doesn't mean you should or even need to. For Los Angeles-based Ken Siegel, a psychologist and president of the management consulting firm Impact Group, E-mail is the opposite of productivity. And being unproductive is often reason enough for firing. "You could have a phone conversation that would take three minutes to resolve an issue, but on E-mail it would take five or eight E-mails over a course of a couple days," Siegel says. He uses "No E-mail Fridays" in his office to promote more direct communication, because, Siegel says, "E-mail is a fabulous conflict-avoidance technique by which misunderstandings are created and promoted." Bottom line: E-mail (especially personal) at work doesn't get the job done.

re: hate_american_employer

Employers are taking time from employee's home-lives? We chose the careers we're in and accepted the salaries we make. If you don't want a salary position and the expectations that come with them, then don't take the job. I don't see you complaining about the weeks that you get to work less than 40 hours and still get paid the same. We're on their time, their rules. Personal life should always be left at the door when you're arriving at work, and if you work from home, well, then you're working within a luxury in itself and should be more appreciative of the extra spent comfortably at home and focus more on the work you're getting paid to do.

Zinch of GA @ Sep 26, 2008 15:09:38 PM

employers are taking time from employees homelifes

this is a joke, employers are taking time from employees home- lifes without thought, with zero respect for the employee. So why not use email at work. When you I get paid for overtime,or oncall or afterhours meetings, then I will stop sending emails at work.

Were exactly are the employees legal protections for any of this.

hate_american_employer of KS @ Sep 24, 2008 14:06:33 PM

Blackberry

Thats why I have the new blackberry with a full keypad and large screen; Or I just take my own laptop with me and use my air card. I have credit cards linked with one of my e-mail services so I don't want nosey nellies seing that either.

Emily of KS @ Aug 26, 2008 00:35:17 AM

Add Your Thoughts
About You

advertisement

U.S. News Rankings & Research

Best Places

Search for the perfect place for you and your family.

Best Careers

Careers that offer strong outlooks and high job satisfaction.

Car Rankings & Reviews

Make an informed choice when shopping for your next car.

advertisement

Slide Shows

The 10 Best Places to Find a Tech Job

IT service jobs—in engineering and in software services—have fared well in this economy.

advertisement

Subscribe

U.S. News Digital Weekly

A weekly insider's guide to politics and policy — in a multimedia, digital format. 52 issues for $19.95!

U.S. News & World Report

6 months of U.S. News & World Report's print edition for only $15. Save up to 67% off the cover price!