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Can You Legally and Ethically Monitor Your Employee’s Online Activities?

Monitor Employees Online

Monitoring employee behavior is nothing new, as supervisors have been stalking their staff for generations. What has changed is the degree to which employee behavior is transparent in the workplace, with sophisticated monitoring solutions in play one could argue that nothing is truly sacred when it comes to being monitored by your business. It is standard practice for all phone conversations to be recorded in a customer service setting, but this is expanding dramatically into detailed tracking of websites that are visited and even emails that are being sent and received. Employees may not often think about the fact that personal emails that are being checked on business-issued phones or laptops are fair game for tracking — but they are. Whether this tracking is meant to identify underperformers or to protect the IP and sensitive data of the organization, there are laws in place to protect both the employer and the employee.

What Are You Trying to Accomplish With Monitoring?

When you are considering monitoring your staff members or contractors, the most important question to ask yourself if what you’re trying to accomplish. Do you have some underperformers, and are trying to gather information about their work habits? Do you suspect corporate espionage? Do you simply want to protect your organization from the productivity drains that occur when staff members spend an inordinate amount of time on social media? Understanding the business driver will help you more fully define the legal reason for gathering this type of information from your employees. You might even have someone who seems to be absent — even though they are technically “at work” every day. Monitoring of their access badge would fall under these same rules for electronic monitoring. As you’re defining your monitoring program, also look at the success metrics. Are you attempting to reduce the time spent on social media? If so, you also need to have in place a way to communicate that employee behavior is outside the expected norms.

Employee Notification of Online Activity Tracking is Crucial

The majority of employees are simply going about their daily work, unconcerned that their employer could be potentially tapping into conversations on email or their phones. These individuals probably have nothing to hide, because they are being good stewards of time and resources and only doing a little light shopping at lunch, for instance. Others might be extremely concerned and secretive about their online behavior, going so far as to surf in incognito mode or clear out browser activities when they close down for the day — never realizing that these steps probably don’t make a bit of difference in whether their employer can still see their activities. If your organization plans to do any kind of monitoring at all, it should be detailed for employees as they are onboarded. A safer practice would include asking employees to sign the most recent version of the policy on an annual basis to indicate that they understand and agree with the monitoring that is being done.

Handling Second-Party Notifications of Recorded Activities

In many states, there are legal standards that require that both parties to a conversation must be notified and agree that the tracking may take place before the activity is deemed legal. There are some workarounds such as a conspicuous posting on your website or an email signature that warns all parties that continuing the conversation with a staff member is considered their agreement to recording the messages. However, this remains a legal challenge in many states. As the government begins to look more deeply at personally identifiable information (PII) and exactly who has access to that data, you might run into additional legal challenges due to the various data breach notification statutes that are currently in place in 48 states.

IoT in the Workforce

Perhaps on of the most controversial conversation around employee monitoring is around connected devices, such as wearables. These items can be capturing data that is extremely personal to the employee, much of which would be considered protected health information (PHI), including things such as heart rate, miles walked, calories consumed and more. Mobile phones that are provided by the company could easily contain apps that would record the information. If you’ve installed keystroke logging on these phones, are you capturing more personal information than you intended?

While you may feel as though you can list the key legal concerns with employee monitoring, the best course of action is to engage an attorney to ensure that you are staying clear of any legal implications of your actions. This is especially true before you take action based on your monitoring findings, such as a formal employee write-up or termination. While triggers can be written to turn monitoring into an effective tool to ward off data loss, there are still plenty of pitfalls to consider before creating a widespread online activity monitoring program.

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Hiring Tech: 2019 CEOs Tech Hiring Guide

CEO Hiring Managed Services

As your business operations evolve and expand, you’ll likely reach a critical point in your company’s growth where the tasks required will outnumber the staff you have available. Deciding to outsource work might be a difficult decision, partly because of budgeting and partly because onboarding new parties to your business’ processes is daunting—especially if you’re already stretched too thin. But as CEOs recently interviewed by McKinsey pointed out, “If you don’t [prioritize], you’ll sit in your office all day, read lots of reports, and end up being completely confused.”

In such situations, many CEOs choose to work with a managed service provider (MSP). Particularly for IT services, a managed provider can be a highly sensible solution.

What is a managed service provider?

A managed service provider, or MSP, is a company that remotely handles a specific set of processes for another company. At the center of this working relationship is the contract set between the two companies, which tends to be very strictly enforced to map out exactly what services the MSP will provide.

Why should my business hire a managed service provider?

Hiring an MSP translates into having a specialized agency handling your networks and users, in a way that not only aligns with your company’s processes but also optimizes security, efficiency, and industry best practices. As part of this, there are four key benefits to hiring an MSP as opposed to hiring employees to manage these tasks:

  • A managed service provider can do a better quality job. An MSP is dedicated to handling the processes it offers. It carries out its specialized offerings repeatedly and consistently for its clients. Its people are well-trained, highly skilled, and experienced at delivering the specific services outlined in its contracts because those tasks are at the core of its operation. An MSP has to invest in the best tools and processes in order to remain competitive, and so it is intrinsically driven to streamline its efforts in order to protect its bottom line. With such a strong focus and so many reasons to push for excellence, an MSP can sustainably deliver its services, stay on top of industry trends, and build sharp solutions that anticipate any potential issues and get ahead of them, all as part of its ongoing services—without requiring any additional input or cost from you.
  • A managed service provider guarantees their work. If an employee’s work is inadequate—so, for example, if your IT person fails to deliver a secure solution and your network is compromised—your main form of recourse is to fire them. That doesn’t bring you closer to completing the work you need, and it doesn’t account for any of the resources you lost as a result; any next steps you take will involve spending more in order to address the problem, and then to prevent it from reoccurring in the future. Given IT’s security implications, it’s also critical that whoever is handling it for you minimizes risks and addresses vulnerabilities long before anything can go wrong. As CEO of McAfee, Chris Young reminds us: “… From the earliest stages of product design to selecting vendor partners to write job descriptions — security needs to be top of mind for every critical decision, every new process, every rule.”In some industries such as health, legal, and finance, there are additional considerations such as confidentiality and government regulations for which your business is ultimately liable. Not only are managed service providers up-to-date on emerging threats and the latest regulation, but they guarantee their services. This delivers higher quality results to you and also protects your investment—and your business—when purchasing their services.
  • A managed service provider can save your business money. The typical MSP pricing structure involves an upfront fee and then an ongoing monthly retainer for recurring tasks. Here’s what you don’t have to pay for: recruiting and onboarding costs to hire dedicated personnel; technology and tools for these new employees; training and continuing education to make sure they stay up-to-date on industry developments; overtime costs that result from these employees having to juggle their regular duties with troubleshooting; and more. It’s not just money that you’re saving. Your team already doesn’t have the time to address the concerns for which you’re trying to hire or outsource; don’t replace one problem (managing IT) with another (managing those who manage your IT).
  • A managed service provider is always there. What happens if the employee you hired calls in sick, or if your internal IT team finds itself short-staffed for any measure of time? Something will have to get dropped as your people scramble to fill the gaps and keep critical processes going. Contrast this situation with having an MSP, which is built to accommodate fluctuations of internal team availability. The staffing at MSPs is built to overlap capabilities, and both internal documentation and communications protocols are constructed for maximum flexibility and accountability. This keeps your IT processes flowing, uninterrupted.

This is a high-level survey of ways in which MSPs commonly help businesses. Your specific industry, niche, and offering will likely benefit in additional ways that are not addressed here, and that are also affected by the specific options you choose from your MSP.

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