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Field Reports: Guerrilla Office Tactics
Merlin Mann | Oct 1 2007
I've started collecting stories -- some of which may be entirely apocryphal tall tales -- of the purported lengths to which people are going to filter noise and to ensure that their time and attention aren't ceded to bad ideas, thoughtless people, or garden-variety time burglars. Here's a few of the more novel ones I've picked up. I'd also love to hear your favorites from amongst the cheats, tricks, and squirrely rules you've heard about: Before you flame meI’m not saying I necessarily promote or recommend any of these for you (or anyone, for that matter) — I just think they’re a fascinating snapshot of the lengths people need to go to today in order to get a semblance of order in their environment.
Yeah, sure, some of these are extreme, and some may get you fired or punched in the nose. But you have to admit, people are conducting some fascinating evolutionary experiments. Tempting stuff. The Question to YouHave you heard of any tricks that teams and individuals are trying to keep the madness at bay? Any that you can verify are being used in your own group — and are they succeeding or failing? For the mentioned tricks you find abhorrent, what solutions do you think might work better? 17 Comments
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I've Done The "No Cell Phone" Meeting: It WorksSubmitted by birwin on October 2, 2007 - 4:38am.
I ran a meeting a couple of months ago that involved people from both inside and outside my company. I instituted a strict "no cell phone" rule for the meeting. Here's the e-mail I sent to the participants beforehand: "Just a forewarning. Wednesday's meeting will be cell phone free. Everyone needs to TURN OFF their cell phone. I don't mean put it on vibrate. I mean TURN IT OFF. I rank a ringing or vibrating cell phone while you're in a meeting, having a meal with someone, or talking face-to-face with some one in any other way on the rudeness scale right around smoking, picking your nose, scratching your butt, or farting in public. Mankind survived for thousands of years without cell phones; you can survive for a couple of hours. :) Thank you!" There were some grumbles, but everyone got the point. :) Afterward everyone commented on how productive the meeting was and how much we got done in 3 hours, and they all attributed it to the "cell phone free zone". From now on, any meetings I run will be cell-phone free. Can't pull it off when my boss is running meetings, though, as he's a Crackberry addict. :( » POSTED IN:
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