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Oooh La La ... Details on Employees Fooling Around With the Boss

Published Thursday Feb 11, 2016

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What do Barack Obama, Bill Gates and Brad Pitt have in common? All met their significant others at work. They’re also far from alone. According to CareerBuilder’s annual Valentine’s Day survey, 37 percent of workers have dated a coworker, and 33 percent of those office romances have led to marriage—on par with last year’s findings.

The national survey was conducted online by Harris Poll on behalf of CareerBuilder from Nov. 4 to Dec. 1, 2015, and included a representative sample of 3,252 full-time, private sector workers across industries and company sizes.

Of those who have had an office romance, nearly one in four (23 percent) have dated someone in a higher position than them—a more common occurrence for women than men (26 percent versus 20 percent). And as if dating a superior wasn’t risky enough, 17 percent of workers office romances involved at least one person who was married at the time.

But are these employees breaking the rules? More than two in five employees (45 percent) don’t know whether their company has a dating policy in place.

Playing it Cool
To keep it professional, some are keeping their affairs hush-hush. One-third of workers who have had an office romance (33 percent) had to keep their relationship a secret at work, which can be easier said than done. More than one one in four workers who have had an office romance (27 percent) have run into co-workers while out with their office sweetheart (10 percent pretended they weren’t dating, while 17 percent admitted to it).

But even the most secretive of office romances may not be so secret after all: 65 percent of employees say they’re confident they know the relationship status of everyone in their office.

Among those who have had an office romance, more than one in 10 say their trysts began during a late night on the job (12 percent). The next most popular place for amore to bloom is happy hour after work (10 percent), followed by chance meetings outside of work (10 percent), and lunches (9 percent). Nearly one in 10 workers who have had an office romance (9 percent) claim they fell for their workplace loves at first sight.

Lust, Love and Heartbreak
About 1 in 5 employees (22 percent) say what someone does for a living influences whether they would date that person (20 percent of men and 24 percent of women), and 18 percent say they’re attracted to people who have a similar job as them (22 percent of men and 14 percent of women).

Unfortunately, not all workplace relationships end happily ever after–and some result in more than heartbreak: 5 percent of workers who have had an office romance say they have left a job because of an office relationship gone sour.

To keep a meaningful relationship at work without the romantic spark, nearly 1 in 10 (8 percent) employees are playing it safe and say they have a platonic office spouse.

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