Locking doors or putting on headphone is more of an avoidance strategy which tends to reduce productivity. Instead, I'm looking for ways to increase productivity.
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Pair programming with a co-worker:
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I have a friend who has noise-canceling headphones which he wears when he doesn't want to be disturbed. It works pretty well for him. I find a quiet coffee shop with WiFi access in which to hide. I tuck into a corner and face the wall so I'm not distracted. If there's too much ambient noise I play some environmental sounds from my iPod with the volume down low. |
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Close the door, Close the browser, (esp if StackOverflow is open) and email, turn on the tunes. |
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+5 INT for creativity... |
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Some people on my team go work from home when they need peace and quiet. That's quite common at Microsoft as well. |
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A counterexample: (i.e.: this doesn't work!) I used to work in a large cube farm, and people being interrupted by people "dropping by" at people's desks was a huge problem. One of the managers came up with the idea of a little red flag that as mounted to the top of each person's cubicle. When they were in "focus time" they raised their little flag, and that was supposed to be a signal to other people not to interrupt them. It did not work at all. The most common phrase in the building became, "I know you've got your little flag up, but..." |
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A couple of times when I've had something specific to slog through for a couple of hours I've booked a meeting room for a couple of hours and taken my laptop in there. No phone, no email, and peace and quiet. The meeting room isn't suitable for all tasks, and it assumes you have a laptop, but it works well when I have a design doc to get finished or a tender response to prepare. |
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Turn off my email client or set it to only check email every hour or so. It takes a while for people to get used to a slower turnaround time on email, but it greatly reduces interruptions and helps me stay focussed. |
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You could try to politely explain to your colleagues that you need time to concentrate during a certain part of the day. Put an auto-reply on your email, an away message on your IM or perhaps a sign on your door. I've found that when people truly respect you and you ask them for some peace and quiet, they'll usually comply. |
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To keep a pesky manager from asking me "is it done yet" every other hour, I setup an issue tracking solution. It took a while to get him and others to actually enter issues into it, and I only sold it to the manager when I showed off its milestone progress bars, but it has been a mostly effective solution. |
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I've had limited success advocating instant messaging. The problem with IM is that people always expect an instant reply. If I ignore/disable the flashing window and sound effects I find a visitor at my door shortly later asking why I didn't reply. |
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