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Study: IT is the most stressful profession there is

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May 29, 2006

New research done e-learning provider Skillsof reveals that information technology (IT) is THE most stressful profession, well ahead of engineering, finance, sales and human resources.

The study surveyed 3,000 IT workers and found that 97.1 percent of IT professionals are irritated by daily stress from user complaints, managers and deadlines.

Common negative comments included stress due to taking on other people’s work, lack of job satisfaction, lack of control over daily duties and managerial pressure, interruptions and bullying among various IT departments.

How could IT be the most stressful occupation? What happened to air traffic controllers? Brain surgeons? Prison guards, cops and firefighters?

After a little digging, it turns out that over the years studies have come out claiming that any one of dozens of occupations is “the most stressful” — including bookkeepers, librarians, and even bartenders. In fact, according to the American Institute of Stress, the “most stressful occupation” survey has long been used as a tool by unions to get better wages or by vendors to promote a product, such as deodorant.

A couple points, however, are clear on stress:

1) It’s all about the individual’s expectations and temperament. 2) Unchallenging and repetitive work can be more stressful than tumultuous jobs.

That never-a-dull-moment gig might be good for your ticker.

So what do some IT professionals do these days to de-stress? Well, according to a recent Wall Street Journal article, some of them participate in a worldwide online simulation of — of all things — the air traffic control system. Called Vatsim, the system has 109,000 registered users (both pilots and controllers) and is so realistic that some commercial airlines are starting to use it to train pilots.

Begun in 1996 as a way to bring Microsoft flight-simulator programs to life, Vatsim includes written certification tests, extensive training, and the occasional harrowing near miss on an LAX runway.

I mentioned this to a group of IT managers over lunch, and a couple of them said they felt sure some of their employees were spending a lot of time in virtual worlds such as this, both at home and (probably) on the job. And they’d even heard you can pay people in China to keep playing your game for you if you need to be away from your machine for an extended period.

So let’s see … stressed-out professionals trying to de-stress by simulating another highly stressful profession and then offshoring that stress temporarily so they can take a break. Make sense?

According to a recent Gartner report, it might. “Playing the Collaboration Game” asserts that MMOGs (Massively Multiuser Online Games) such as Vatsim, Everquest, Entropia, and World of Warcraft provide immersive and compelling collaboration environments “superior to anything corporations have ever deployed.”

Gartner Vice President Nick Jones claims that although MMOGs are nowhere close to being potential platforms for enterprise collaboration, they are extremely comprehensive reflections of our complex society.

“Subscribe to an MMOG to gain knowledge and see the future of collaboration,” Jones advises. Or maybe just work off a little stress.

Source: Info World




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