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Ok, nice community wiki question for something that has not being asked yet (apparently).

I am currently sitting in an openspace with a guy who likes to beat the Enter key like it stole his wallet and kicked his cat. Believe me, I've never heard so much cruelty on a poor key. This is his normal behavior, it's not like he is in a bad mood today.

Other (previous) example I had: chain smoker and hoarder (that office was literally packed with garbage).

So I was wondering other annoying behaviors from colleagues, and how you dealt with them. In particular, being part of conflict management at the social level, as a manager do you watch out for behaviors and symptoms of the occurrence of annoyances ?

edit: please, I want to stress out my original question clearly states "how you dealt with them". I don't want to know only what is the annoyance, I'd like to know also how the conflict was solved (or non solved). I will write out my solutions later.

This is not a question. It's group therapy. – Sinan Ünür Nov 6 at 14:14
This is a question relative to management. We already have management questions and conflict resolution questions. – Stefano Borini Nov 6 at 14:15
Not buying it. Even the edited title emphasizes the annoyance rather than resolution. I can understand you want to complain but, really? – Sinan Ünür Nov 6 at 14:20
Actually, I always have metal shot in my ears, so I don't care, but I was thinking to the other people in the room. – Stefano Borini Nov 6 at 14:24
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It's clearly not programming related, you could ask this for any other working environment. – gs Nov 6 at 14:47
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locked by Bill the Lizard Nov 6 at 15:38

closed as not programming related by Sinan Ünür, Robert Koritnik, gs, Thomas Owens, Stefano Borini Nov 6 at 14:26

13 Answers

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Talking loud over phone , very common behavior by people . But it may disturb people around.

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I really don't like people who snack all day in a team room environment. They should at least learn to chew in rhythm.

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  1. Excessive use of perfume
  2. Same but also wearing same sweater for a week
  3. Speaking loudly on the phone all the time (I'm in the cube) and chewing the gum in the process

First two - I had to ask for a different office. #3 can be solved with pair of headphones

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What's wrong with wearing the same sweater for a week? Or do you mean without washing it :S – Dominic Bou-Samra Nov 6 at 14:15
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Checking of voice mail over speaker phone at full volume in cubical land.

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I used to sit next to one guy who was actually a really cool guy to work with...except when he ate. Smacking lips, slurping, etc, etc. He was the loudest eater I have ever heard. I typically had to go to lunch or crank my headphones when it was his lunchtime.

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We have an eavesdropper. Every time somebody's having a conversation, he stops working to listen in on the conversation.

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I do that, but mainly just in case I have something useful to add... And not to every conversation. Because I don't have a list of subjects I can be asked questions about tatooed on my forehead, I have to help people out. – Massif Nov 6 at 14:20
This person's a little more egregious. For example, people will walk away from him to have a conversation in private, then he will just happen to be hanging out around them. – Bob Kaufman Nov 6 at 14:33
Ok, that's just creepy. – Massif Nov 6 at 15:15
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People who are late for everything. I have other things to do than wait for you to show up for a meeting. If I need to talk over a work issue with you I don't want to wait until you stroll in at 10:30.

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I used to sit next to a bloke who had a walkman and the cheapest possible headphones -- you know the ones with orange foam that look half-disintegrated and would snap in half if you were to breathe on them? There was only one earpiece left on it and so it generated the most horrendous tinny racket. To make matters worse, he then insisted on humming along with the highest pitch humming I've ever heard.

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Passive-aggressive colleague

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Asking questions on internet fora when they can ask a colleague and get an answer much quicker.

Geniunely... this is annoying.

edit: obviously, not every question can be answered by someone in the office already though

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Bothering a colleague, making him lose focus, when the question could have quickly been asked to google or a forum... – Adriano Varoli Piazza Nov 6 at 14:25
@Adriano: Disrupting when you are "in the zone". Still, it's the idea of Agile development to be always with half of the brain in the room...Isolation goes against agile. – Stefano Borini Nov 6 at 14:35
touche... Still, spending half an hour trawling the internet then another half working out how to adapt your findings to your current situation versus 15 minutes of a colleague's time to tell you how they solved a similar issue elsewhere... – Massif Nov 6 at 15:15
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1) I had a colleague who would just walk up to your desk, and take stuff. Like while I was sitting there. No, "Hey, can I use your hot sauce?", just walk up, take, and use.

2) Later I sat next to a conference room. There was a WHOLE TEAM that would have weekly parties in that conference room. Loud talking, laughing, etc. Some days I thought they were playing soccer in that room. However, the 1 time in 2 years my team had a party... they complained about the noise of our eating/talking. It was much quieter than their QUIETEST day.

3) I currently sit near the kitchenette. The folks who get their coffee, and then stand there and talk. For the better part of 20 minutes. Who DON'T know what "indoor voice" is.

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Some kinds of annoying behavior like loud phone speaking can be solved by very simple tactics:

  • Behave the same for 1 or 2 days.
  • Ask several people around to behave the same way.
  • Stay near such person with someone else and tell each other stories about (loud speaking) person who had big problems because of this.

This often helps.

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I have this colleague with a temper. He's quite the control freak and perfectionist and if something continues to bug him (like a bug that keeps coming back or someone else's code that gets worse everytime you look at it) you can hear his bad temper being built up.

It starts with a slightly elevated breath volume with some deep breaths every minute or so, becomes a snorting sound after 15 minutes, his keystrokes become louder by the minute and after that he starts speaking to himself (like an angry Fred Flintstone). If the problem is not solved, he'll speak up louder with even louder keystrokes (that poor poor space-bar). The color of his neck turns red and finally he stands up with fire in his eyes and he rushes to the door and beyond. You can hear his moaning and groaning fading away as he walks away through the corridor towards the coffee machine.

That is so terribly distracting. But funny at the same time :)

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