A recent article in PCWorld reveals that many companies are simply throwing money away:
Organisations are wasting money licensing Microsoft Office applications that the majority of employees barely use, a study released this week by application analytics startup SoftWatch has found. Conclusion: many users could easly be migrated to far cheaper cloud applications such as Google Apps.
The firm carried out a 3-month analysis of Office suite use in 51 global firms representing 148,500 employees, revealing that seven out of ten employees weren't using any single application heavily, launching them only for viewing or light editing.
The average employee spent only 48 minutes per day using Office, largely the Outlook email client, which consumed about 68 percent of that activity. Excel was in second place with 17 percent, or an average of 8 minutes per day, leaving Word and PowerPoint trailing with only 5 minutes and 2 minutes per day each.
That email is popular and spreadsheets and presentations less so is not a surprise. The latter are occasional applications that non-specialist employees use only when they really have to and their importance can't necessarily be measured in terms of how often they are used so much as the impact that use has.
(Score: 1, Interesting) by Anonymous Coward on Saturday May 03 2014, @07:36PM
Unless I happen to be the most unlucky person who has randomly managed to encounter only clueless people, for the past 20+ years, most office workers have had Office, or WordPerfect, or whatever and had minimal use for it. Most use it like a typewriter and have no grasp of any features like style sheets, and have no clue about document production.
(Score: 3, Insightful) by lx on Sunday May 04 2014, @11:21AM
Most use it like a typewriter
Which is fine by me. The problems usually start when they try using Word like InDesign or Photoshop. (Not a joke BTW. This happens far too often.)