Company staff are hoarding vital crucial information on their PCs where it is
unavailable to colleagues, according to a new report.
More than six in ten (64 percent) of IT managers questioned believed their
organizations suffered because of these so-called "micro-silos" cause, a survey
by database specialist
Filemaker
found.
The situation is made worse by the fact that software is now easier to use,
allowing end-users to customise applications within their own work space.
But there is also a shortage of skills not only among senior employees, with
only one in five business directors rated as being good as IT, but also among
juniors. Tony Speakman, Filemaker regional manager for Northern Europe, said
youngsters are not being taught the right skills at school.
"My kids were being taught databases using [Microsoft's] Excel. That is a
spreadsheet, not a database," he said.
Filemaker advises organisations to encourage staff to save and share
information centrally, establish a clear written policy on the use of IT and
data. The report was based on 100 phone interviews with people responsible for
IT in companies.
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