Skip navigation
advertisement

Vacationers can't disconnect from the job

1 in 5 brought laptops on trips, stayed in touch with work, poll says

  Top slideshows
Image: Deep powder at Heavenly Ski Resort
Courtesy of Heavenly Ski Resort
  Hit the lifts
Take a visual tour of some of the most popular ski and snowboard playgrounds in America — and beyond.
Image: Christmas Lights in Barcelona
EPA
  Let there be lights!
Cities and towns across the globe have illuminated and unveiled decorations in anticipation of the upcoming holidays.
  Photos of the year
All year long, you’ve been voting for your favorite travel photos sent in by msnbc.com readers. Here is a collection of the year’s very best.
updated 2:36 p.m. ET June 1, 2007

WASHINGTON - Sun block. Beach umbrella. Laptop.

One in five people toted laptop computers on their most recent vacations, an AP-Ipsos poll released Friday said. Along with the 80 percent who said they brought along their cell phones, the survey shows going on vacation no longer means being out of the electronic loop.

Sizable numbers are interrupting their unwinding time to check in at the office and, even more so, to keep up with the social buzz.

Story continues below ↓
advertisement | your ad here

About one in five said they did some work while vacationing, and about the same number checked office messages or called in to see how things were going, the poll showed. Twice as many checked their e-mail, while 50 percent kept up with other personal messages like voice mail.

The credit - or culprit, depending on one's view - is in part today's array of devices that can easily keep people digitally tethered to workplaces, friends and family. The electronic gear was most commonly brought along by younger people - one in four below age 40 brought laptops, compared to 15 percent of those 50 to 64 and even less for older people.

Reasons vacationers performed work-related tasks include an expectation that they be available; a worry about missing important information; or in some cases the enjoyment of staying involved, according to analysts and some of those surveyed.

"I'm the final guy, so I make sure my customers are happy," said Don Schneider, 43, a plumbing contractor from Buena Park, Calif., who also runs an online business that supplies video equipment for plumbers.

Schneider says he limits his holiday check-ins to about a half-hour daily and tries to do it unobtrusively so he won't annoy family and friends, making calls from his hotel room or car.

Nineteen percent said they worked on their vacation even though they were technically off. Twenty percent said they checked work messages like voice mail, and another 15 percent said they called to check in.

"It's like a cloud hanging over my head until I get it done," Lee Ann Harrison, 37, a third-grade teacher from Halls, Tenn., said of the work she did on a family trip to Southaven, Miss., for her young son's baseball team. She said she found herself grading papers "between games, somewhere in the shade."

Men - particularly white men - were the likeliest to have checked for messages or worked while on vacation. Higher educated and higher-earning people were also likelier to do work-related tasks, in part reflecting the demands of professional or managerial jobs.


Resource guide