Ears will be justifiably burning across UK offices today as results from a new study from diet Coke reveals that gossiping about office politics, other colleagues and the boss is now a staple skill being deployed by career minded Brits to get ahead. And itís girls who are leading the way.
Over half (53%) admit to gossiping about their colleagues and office politics over and above typical chat about family (24%), private life (22%) and their feelings (18%). And its bosses who should be especially worried ñ more than one in ten (12%) admitted to gossiping about their boss more frequently than dayís newspaper headlines (7%), world events (5%) and celebrities (5%).
The diet Coke commissioned report found that this work time gossip is not just idle small talk ñ rather itís a crucial skill with a specific code of rules that forms the backbone of modern office communication.
No such thing as ëdowntimeí
Half of 18-25 year old women (49%) say that bonding is crucial in order to secure success in the modern cut-throat workplace
Six out of ten (57%) say they use their break time as strategic moments to gossip and share secrets to form these bonds
Women are 20% more likely to use a break in their working day as a strategic networking opportunity than men
Masters of chat
Girls spend a whopping 69 minutes a day, equivalent to 2 years of their working lives, gossiping with their colleagues
Girls have a broader gossip repertoire than the boys, with the average womanís gossip session covers 5.1 topics compared to menís 4.6
Itís not just office politics - women are three times more likely to discuss their family, 10% more likely to discuss their private life and 6% more likely to discuss how they are feeling than men
The etiquette of gossip
1. Never be seen to be a gossip, but be good at it
2. For ëno one likes a gossipí read ëno one likes a bad gossipí (especially at work)
3. Know the difference between a secret that can be used as office social currency and a secret that should be kept
4. Know your gossip friends (and enemies) and who to trust
5. Choose your spot wisely ñ out of the office is best!
Leading social anthropologist, Kate Fox says: ìPeople have always gossiped at work but in todayís cut throat workplace itís taken on a more complex form - women in particular have developed advanced skills turning even their break time into a strategic moment to form bonds through gossiping and chatting together. What might appear to be idle chit chat is actually a finely honed communication skill integral to career advancement where being a ëgood gossipí and using crucial downtime as a subtle networking device can set you apart from your colleagues.î








