How much time (and possible earnings) has been lost in WoW?
Posted: Thu Jan 08, 2009 4:15 pm
I was approached by a research firm to work some of the data I've gathered and in getting some data together for them, I did some different queries than I usually do.
Recently I started using a little productivity tool called RescueTimer to basically track every little thing I do while on my computer. I basically always feel like I never have enough time to get the important things done so I started looking at ways to track it.
One thing that jumped out at me right away was just how much time I was spending playing World of Warcraft. While I *thought* I only played WoW about 15 hours per week, I was easily putting in 25+. Those little sessions that I was convincing myself that I wasn't spending too much time were way more than I realized.
So anyway, to the point, basically I started looking at my WoW time as lost productivity time, and on a grander scale how much possible productivity has been lost in WoW over the past 4 years.
Warning, fudging numbers ahead!
I went back and took an average number of players seen per day since May 1, 2005, and the number of online servers to find the average number of total hours spent on WoW per day since May 1, 2005 according to the Census snapshot counts. I then took the number of servers which were online for each day. I took the average number of players, multiplied that by 24 hours in the day, and multiplied by the number of servers that were online to give the total number of average man hours spent in wow per day. The numbers were quite astonishing.
For example, let's take January 21, 2007. There were an average of 1083 characters seen per snapshot throughout the day. There were 217 servers online. This gives us a whopping 4.6 million man hours. The average hourly wage for USA in Jan of 07 was $17.22. If you calculate out the potential productivity based on that hourly rate, you are looking at $100,574,775 in potential lost earnings. Yes, that's one hundred million dollars.
BUT WAIT. Those numbers are only PER FACTION. The actual average is per faction so you DOUBLE that figure.
9.2 Million Man hours
$200,000,000 Possible dollars
For ONE DAY!
If you go back and calculate since March 2005, it comes up to over $200 billion!
Just food for thought =)
Recently I started using a little productivity tool called RescueTimer to basically track every little thing I do while on my computer. I basically always feel like I never have enough time to get the important things done so I started looking at ways to track it.
One thing that jumped out at me right away was just how much time I was spending playing World of Warcraft. While I *thought* I only played WoW about 15 hours per week, I was easily putting in 25+. Those little sessions that I was convincing myself that I wasn't spending too much time were way more than I realized.
So anyway, to the point, basically I started looking at my WoW time as lost productivity time, and on a grander scale how much possible productivity has been lost in WoW over the past 4 years.
Warning, fudging numbers ahead!
I went back and took an average number of players seen per day since May 1, 2005, and the number of online servers to find the average number of total hours spent on WoW per day since May 1, 2005 according to the Census snapshot counts. I then took the number of servers which were online for each day. I took the average number of players, multiplied that by 24 hours in the day, and multiplied by the number of servers that were online to give the total number of average man hours spent in wow per day. The numbers were quite astonishing.
For example, let's take January 21, 2007. There were an average of 1083 characters seen per snapshot throughout the day. There were 217 servers online. This gives us a whopping 4.6 million man hours. The average hourly wage for USA in Jan of 07 was $17.22. If you calculate out the potential productivity based on that hourly rate, you are looking at $100,574,775 in potential lost earnings. Yes, that's one hundred million dollars.
BUT WAIT. Those numbers are only PER FACTION. The actual average is per faction so you DOUBLE that figure.
9.2 Million Man hours
$200,000,000 Possible dollars
For ONE DAY!
If you go back and calculate since March 2005, it comes up to over $200 billion!
Just food for thought =)