Aimless Internet surfing costs us two days a month
Last updated at 10:52am on 10.04.07
Waste of time: The phenomenon has been named wilfing - short for what was I looking for?
Computer users waste up to two days a month surfing in cyberspace for things they don't need, a survey claims.
The phenomenon has been named wilfing - short for what was I looking for? - and it affects more than two thirds of the 34 million in the UK with access to the Internet.
A major proportion of them admit to indulging in the aimless habit whether at home or at work.
Pete Cohen, life coach and GMTV's "resident motivator", said: "Not allowing ourselves to wilf takes a mixture of planning and willpower.
"These days there are all manner of websites gunning for our attention. Set yourself a specific surfing goal and time limit to keep on track."
The research, conducted for the price comparison website moneysupermarket.com, also reveals that shopping websites are the biggest cause of wilfing.
And men are much more likely than women to seek out these sites and browse through them aimlessly for hours without making a purchase.
In fact a third of males quizzed in the nationwide study even admit wilfing has had a damaging effect on their relationship with their partner.
One in five men who used the internet also confessed to being "distracted" from work or study by adult entertainment websites.
Jason Lloyd, head of broadband at moneysupermarket.com, said: "The Internet was designed to make it easier for people to access the information they need quickly and conveniently.
"However, our study shows that although people log on with a purpose, they are now being offered so much choice and online distraction that many forget-what they are there for, and spend hours aimlessly wilfing instead." The research was carried out by the YouGov polling organisation, which interviewed 2,412 adults.
Researchers have found the Internet has hit the profits of major high street stores, especially at Christmas when thousands of shoppers choose to avoid the seasonal rush and buy presents on line.
Last Christmas fashion chains such as Gap, Dorothy Perkins and Miss Selfridge gave away piles of vouchers offering major reductions to help boost sales.
Footfall, the research organisation which measures shopper numbers, said traditional stores were under huge pressure from the Internet and supermarkets.
Its figures showed a fall of 6 to 7 per cent compared with the Christmas run-up in 2005.
Reader views (3)
I guess some of this idle reading could include newstopics posted on Google news? Tragic.
- Burt Mahoon, Richmond, UK, 11/04/2007 08:34
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When did you last find yourself in the local town or shopping centre window shopping or just browsing? Perhaps you have some time at lunch or have actually traveled there on a Saturday for something specific but instead drifted in to wondering aimlessly from shop to shop enjoying the sheer aimless bliss of it all? Can be a great way of unwinding and loosing yourself no? I don't recall there being any acronym for this? Danger of buying something you don't need? Obtaining credit you cannot afford? Being lured by advertisements or strangers? Oh yes...
- Jon Ward, London, UK, 11/04/2007 08:10
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Well, fair enough, compulsive pointless Web trawling is a bit of a waste of time if overdone. However, a lot of "wilfing" can lead to genuine new and interesting discoveries, and broaden peoples' horizons.
To expect everybody to show some kind of robot-like behaviour and NEVER follow up something that seems interesting is both joy-denying and indicative of cluelessness in regard to human nature. We are not robots and we are not all employed by Scrooge.
The article is unecessarily alarmist and jobsworthy, but that seems to be the new trend in modern jouralism. So don't be surprised when peole despair of the yellow-press mentality of the papers and resort to the Web instead!
- Al Green, Bristol, UK, 10/04/2007 13:54
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