Setting Off Alarm Bells at Work

What can a person do to set off alarm bells at work?

I don’t mean this figuratively, I mean it literally — actual sirens going off in the office.

In most office environments, to trigger an alarm you would need to start a fire under a smoke detector, try to exit through an emergency door, or perhaps break into a safe.

At the administrative headquarters of the Chicago Public Schools, there is another activity that will set off alarms.? A friend of mine, Susanne Neckermann, found this out the hard way on a recent visit there.

Here’s how Susanne described it to me:

I went down to the Chicago Public Schools office today to talk about administrative issues surrounding a field experiment I’m conducting in the schools. As it turns out, none of the people that I wanted to reach were in their offices, so I ended up sitting there working away on my laptops using the guest wireless login.

Getting tired of “business” mails, I clicked on a link to facebook in one of my emails. The second that I clicked on that link an enormous alarm went off.

Apparently, the use of such internet sites is not tolerated by CPS and rather than block those websites altogether, accessing them causes this ear-piercing noise to go off that sounds something like a fire-department wagon passing directly by you.

Horrified, I was able to navigate away from the page as fast as I could, which made the noise stop. I must have looked quite stunned and glanced over at the CPS person that was with us in the room. She stated quite matter of factly, “Oh, did you try to go to facebook or youtube? They instituted that alarm as some sort of public shaming.”

The idea of the alarm is actually quite interesting from a deterrence standpoint.? The most straightforward thing for an employer to do to keep employees from using a particular website at work is just to make that website inaccessible from the work-based network.? (Many Islamic countries adopt this approach; when I was in Dubai, I discovered that they would not let me get access to the website where I bet on horse racing, which I thought was quite odd given that some of the biggest horse races in the world occur in Dubai.)

While denying access to particular websites will keep workers off those banned sites, there may be close substitutes available.? For instance, if the goal is to prevent workers from looking at pornography, there are thousands of competing sites.? It might not be easy to figure out how to ban every one of these.? Indeed, employees might spend more time searching for sites that are not banned than they would have spent on the banned sites in the first place.

In that regard, there is a certain brilliance to the alarm bell approach.? The firm lets people know that certain classes of sites are banned, and that an alarm will go off when they hit one of those sites.? The firm gives the workers an incomplete list of which sites are banned.? Thus, the worker can never be quite sure when they go to a site that should be banned (but may or may not actually be alarmed due to the difficulty of identifying and banning every naughty site), if they will trigger the alarm.? The firm turns the information asymmetry that exists between the worker and the firm into a tool that works for the firm instead of against it.

The other good thing about an alarm, as opposed to an outright ban on a site, is that there may be times when a worker really does want to get to a banned site for a good and important reason.? It will be unpleasant while the worker is on the site because of the alarm, but at least the option exists.

So hats off to the folks at the Chicago Public Schools for finding a clever solution to a tough problem.? Let’s hope they teach that cleverness to the students in the system.

And let’s hope that visiting the Freakonomics blog doesn’t trigger any alarms.

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COMMENTS: 77

  1. Dan says:

    I can’t imagine this is aimed at shaming students–it would only work on teachers and staff. Among students, it would mainly be used by hooligans looking for new ways of being disruptive.

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  2. bob says:

    so anyone could stand near this building, use their wifi and set off alarms inside? sounds like fun … where is this building again….?

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  3. Dan says:

    Fantastic idea. Another interruption in the classroom is exactly what the CPS needs, I’m sure. And training people to ignore alarms is an added bonus.

    A real win-win. Hats off the the CPS, indeed. I assume Mr. Levitt will soon be working under similar conditions, right?

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  4. Grant says:

    Won’t this just prompt people to start using proxy sites? I guess you can block those, too. Still, as pointed out above, this is pretty easy to circumvent for someone with a moderate amount of computer knowledge.

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  5. Stacy says:

    Oh, get over it. I’m guessing none of you went to school when the internet existed, because nowadays, students can’t even access Google Image search to get pictures for projects. And forget going on a blog or clicking on any link in an email. Wanted to use the internet at school to read up on something because you don’t have internet at home? Forget it.
    There’s an entire portion of people devoted to finding “innapropriate” sites to block, including everything from Ebay to Wikipedia (some school districts believe Wikipedia isn’t a reliable source)
    And because children can handle it, you guys should be able to. They’re not being paid to go to school. YOU are being paid to DO YOUR WORK.

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  6. Svavar says:

    I wouldn’t last a week at a job like that.

    While I agree with #2 that companies shouldn’t treat their employees like children, government jobs tend to attract apathetic people and it’s very hard to get rid of under-performing government workers.

    So, when you can’t fire them for looking at Facebook/YouTube/porn all day, this may be the last resort.

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  7. MJ Person says:

    Was there some response on the web-browser/e-mail linking the alarm to the website?

    I mean, if I’m sitting in a waiting room fussing with my laptop, and suddenly an alarm goes off, “quickly navigating away from the page” is not going to be my first response. I’d look around, decide it’s a fire alarm, pack up, and head outside.

    How did you decide navigating to Facebook triggered an alarm?

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  8. Svavar says:

    Also, for those who think companies should force employees to spend every minute “working”, you should look into the Results-Only Work Environment strategy.

    http://www.businessweek.com/magazine/content/06_50/b4013001.htm

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ROWE

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