Techiquette: How to stay polite when dealing with technology in the workplace

Employees who wouldn’t use a certain tone of voice with a supervisor often don’t think twice about sending a snarky email, initiating a Facebook chat with a colleague, screaming on a cell phone, or over sharing personal photos online. And we have the increase of technology in the workplace to thank.

As business shifts overseas, and more and more workers take advantage of work-from-home arrangements, the rules of the workplace web experience are changing, and often affect workers’ behavior on the job as well. As The Independent reports, a recent recent study conducted by Robert Half Technology discovered that 64 percent of surveyed CIOs attributed the increased use of mobile devices (including cell phones and tablets) to a significant increase in breaches of workplace etiquette — and that percentage is up from the last study’s 51 percent, three years ago.

Long gone are the days when land lines were the only technological distraction office workers had to contend with. From Seattle Municipal Archives.

Washington’s The Protocol School established “Bring Your Manners to Work Day” on the first Friday of September to serve as a reminder of the importance of being polite in the workplace — both online and off the web. The Protocol School’s rules — as well as some of our own — include the following:

Other common courtesies that The Protocol School reminds employees and employers alike to follow include the following:

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