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Interruptions can range from the gabby lady on the other side of the cubicle wall, to the wanna-be coder down the hall that somehow feels a need to bond with you for an hour or more every day. But wait, it gets worse! Suddenly you find that you share your cubicle with a little microwave in one corner (imagine the traffic this generates), and you didn't even get a vote on whether it could take up residence there or not!

I work with a company that has many employees, but who doesn't appreciate that developers need their own space in order to be more productive. There are constant conversations going on around me. Quite frankly, if I want to get anything done then I have to stick on my headphones, but that is a bandaid and doesn't help to solve the problem. I don't want to have to wear headphones every !#$@ time I need to stay focused.

So how do you deal with interruptions at work?

Feel free to share your own horror stories of work environments that are inconducive to developers getting anything done.

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I'd get protection money from the microwave users ... "you pay me, I make sure that an accident won't visit Mr Microwave" etc. That, or I surf all day, and get all the work done in the hour after everyone goes away. – JeeBee May 7 at 16:06
Develop an eye-twitch and talk about your gun collection ;) – Dan May 7 at 16:58
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not remotely programming related ansd also a dupe – Neil Butterworth May 7 at 17:17
cook a hotpocket for ten minutes. It will blowup and the micro mess should reduce the number of users. – dotjoe May 16 at 14:20

13 Answers

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+1 for Headphones. I don't even hear the music, its just that I don't hear anything around me. I don't really mind having to put them in though. Though your interruptions sound a bit worse.

I'd get that microwave away from me. I don't know what I'm talking about, but anything shooting micro waves very near me several times a day, at least 5 days a week can't be a good thing :)

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I had similar thoughts about the microwave, actually. I've even had sinister thoughts to sabotage it (accidentally use a metal cup). :P – Jagd May 7 at 16:28
Bose Tri-ports. I can put them on in an airplane and not hear babies screaming ;-) – matt_dev May 7 at 17:03
I have a pair of Bose quiet comfort 2's. I couldn't program without them! – Charles Conway May 7 at 18:06
I've got some decent noise cancelation ones already, but I'll check out the Bose pair anyway. – Jagd May 7 at 18:25
I use a pair of sound blocking, almost over sized, headphones just to send the "please don't disturb"-signal. It works quite well. – FeatureCreep May 16 at 14:58
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Keep a log of how many times a day you get interrupted, show that to management.

Read for yourself and then show your management books like Peopleware by DeMarco and Lister or Pragmatic Thinking and Learning by Andy Hunt. Look at Neal Ford's "On The Lam from the Furniture Police."

Convince management that project teams should sit together (everyone will probably be focused on the same goals at the same time) or that developers should (everyone has the same need for quiet to be in flow).

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I agree about the log, include the type of interruption, but not the name of who interrupted you. Also, be careful how you present it to management, otherwise everyone might play a joke and interrupt you for fun. – Lucas B May 7 at 17:36
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If you can't CHANGE where you work change WHERE you work.

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I meant to mention this, but it pays VERY good. That's the most ironic part of all this. Were it not for that, I would have left a loooong time ago. – Jagd May 7 at 16:06
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Money isn't everything. The stress of not being able to work effectively hurts me more than a couple of dollars a year. I've found that most companies in an area pay about the same when you take into account benefits. Make a little less at this company with better 401k, stock options, and free lunch or a little more at this company with no stock or lunch. – Rob Spieldenner May 7 at 16:23
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Here is my true horror story, I hope you all like it.

I don't really know where to begin on this one. OK, I work in a small organisation that does some very big projects. In my area, I am responsible for a single web based system that manages the entire logistics for one particular aspect of the govt. This is just a subset of what we as a company do. We have about 1000 regular users of this system, and it generates a tidy sum of cash for us each month. I ended up in this position because I initially designed the solution, wrote it all from scratch, built the back end servers, the cabling, wrote the documentation, did all the data migration, integration testing, and user training myself. Took many long hours over a couple of years to pull off, but we got there in the end, and I had a week off after that and got myself 8 hours of sleep.

I worked closely with the CEO on this one, an amazing charismatic guy that has a life history of producing rabbits out of top hats. He knows nothing about computers, but he is just brilliant enough to have that midas touch regardless.

Staffing wise on this project, we have 2 part time help desk crew (low wage types), a tech support guy who works 80 hours a week, and ... me. We report to - the CEO, the production manager, the business development manager, the sales manager, and the financial controller - all of whom have a different opinion on not just what we need to do, but how it should be done. I suppose you can already see where this is leading.

Sadly, things have changed a bit with the CEO. He is still around, but he is much more hands off now with day to day operations. The new middle managers have slotted in and have grown comfortable enough to start throwing their weight around instead.

We recently won a large contract to upgrade the system to a new set of requirements. Around 2000 new functional points, requiring about 2 man years of development, all due in 12 months time. Big money considering the amount of work required. All good. Management looked at our resources and decided that we needed a project manager to make it happen. I argued that a second developer / tester / tech may be better value, since we already had enough managers as it was, and just me having to do all the work. I got my wish anyway - they allowed me, after much heated debate, to take on an extra trainee programmer that they pay peanuts to.

First glaring problem was equipment to work on. Did I mention that all the development equipment I have used so far I had to provide myself ? No ? Yes, thats right ... this company has never provided computers for the development team, such complex modern equipment is reserved for managers and sales reps and others that do real work. So I ended up purchasing a computer so my trainee could actually connect to the network and start coding. To be fair, the company later caved in about 2 months later and bought us a development server to work off. 2 Months that took, however the financial controller was most upset that I requested a 22" monitor for our trainee to code on - he could not understand why a perfectly good 17" monitor would not suffice. Sales managers get 22's, but then they have real work to do after all.

Everything went very very well for a while. We would work through the day, starting about 10am - 11am, and then work through together till 2am. 6 days a week - and we got a shitload of stuff done - hundreds of functional specs were produced, detailed development plans, test cases, code, documentation, training her up. We were smashing our deadlines and getting progress claims out the door ahead of schedule. Money was rolling, and we were on fire .. for a while.

Things started getting ugly when the financial controller was getting more and more upset about our 'cowboy' attitude to work. We should not be in the office later than 10am each day, and we definitely should not be in the office after 7pm. Timesheets were getting rejected, and we spent most of our 9-5 office day doing the work of the helpdesk support staff. Several times, my brilliant trainee was close to tears, trying hard as she was to please everyone, and not getting anywhere.

The financial controller and other managers would openly talk with disdain about our 'slack work ethic'. Unlike the boisterous sales guys who were always to be heard on their phones, or talking loudly about the football, we developers were relatively quiet. We would sometimes take an hour or more to even reply to an 'urgent' email, or just seem unnaturally distant to our managerial superiors.

This was not to be tolerated - we HAD to be far more responsive. We obviously were not working hard enough. So by using the technique of NOT PAYING WAGES, the financial controller managed eventually to win the incessant arguments about how development should be done. I made a choice at this point that no wages meant no turning up in the office to do other people's jobs. Mexican standoff.

I spent some 1-on-1 time with the CEO at his place after that to explain what was happening with the project .. In that conversation, things got pretty heated !! However, there was little that could be done in short time. It was suck it up and push through till we could implement something substantial. Some of my withheld wages were paid, and I got back in the office for a while, planning on getting the bulk of work done at home.

Being situated amongst the managers and support staff, we became in effect the local IT help desk. I may have detailed specs on my plate for coding a new module that will bring in significant new income for the company .. but our days would be filled with answering emails, fixing the manager's internet connection, cleaning mice, organising a new laptop for the manager's kids, and teaching a sales manager how to print a PDF document. (Such a task might sound simple, trust me, its not)

My coding trainee had effectively given up, and transferred herself to the helpdesk support crew. In there, she can keep her brain in neutral all day long, do her facebook stuff, leave at 5pm, and never have an issue on payday. OK, its not that easy in there, but its not the same as coding.

So I was back on my own as the sole designer/developer/tester/DBA for this intimidatingly large project. For the past 3 months, coding had ground to a complete halt. NOTHING had been done for 3 months. Absolutely nothing. Zilch - Nada - Nix. Nothing, not one line of code had been produced, tested, committed to the respository, and integrated into production. Resources halved, and 3 months wasted. A lot of talk about football, a lot of smiles, a little bit of respect, and no problems on pay day.

And then I get told around this time that our particular govt customer has not paid their bill for the last 3 months, because of some outstanding ad-hoc requirements that were agreed to, but never quite communicated to the development team (such as it was by that stage).

The 3 month bill being withheld was around 1.5 times my annual salery. The solution ? Blame the developers (me), and withhold all wages until the customer pays up. I understand at this stage that any normal person would just walk away and leave them to it. But I am not young anyore, Im not short of a dollar, and I would really like to see this project be successful and grow. So I stay home for a week and just put in some late ones to knock it over. Quite enjoyable really - computer right next to the bed, endless supply of smokes, food, drink .. music up on 11. I had a ball and knocked off the 3 months outstanding work in 8 days straight. Then went out with my mates and got absolutely smashed rotten. Thats 2 weeks out of the office.

The customer was happy, they paid their bill, and all is good.

But then I get an email telling me that - hey, thanks for saving our ass for the 100th time, but due to my continued absence from the office, they are not going to pay me for the so called 'work' that I may or may not have done.

Ah geez - how do you argue with that ? I dont think I can be bothered arguing with it anymore. I just want to code, and I cant get any coding done there, so its time to code elsewhere. The economy might be tanked already, but I have worked on a lot of big projects before that are still going, I still keep in touch with my mates from past projects, and a lot of them would be happy to have me back. (I think ?)

There is absolutely no chance in hell that my current employer can pull off their contract in the time remaining without me being there, and working my butt off for the next 12 months. My trainee was good, but no where near ready to take over. So leaving is going to leave my current employer horribly exposed on the progress claims that have been made to date I suppose, so I have a moral obligation to help them make it work, whether they pay me or not. The dozens of managers cant write a line of code between them, and there is nobody else in that building besides my trainee who has even looked at the code.

I haven't responded yet, and I probably wont bother responding today. The sun is shining outside, and I wouldnt mind getting out for a recent ride through the hills on 2 wheels.

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You have an admirable amount of persistence. You're a better man than I, by far. My moral obligations only go as far as the buck goes these days. – Jagd May 18 at 15:29
This is plain awful, but also the sad reality in many IT companies. – galaktor Aug 29 at 20:11
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Do they give you a laptop? If not, inquire about getting one. Then you'll be mobile and be able to work from quiet, unused conference rooms or wherever the sunlight is.

Can you move the microwave to the outside of the cube wall, maybe placing it on a table nearby?

Stress to your manager the pain and suffering.

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Hmmm... there is an unused cubicle down the hall, but that brings politics into play, because different organizations "own" different cubicles here. I think I'll check on it though. – Jagd May 7 at 16:30
I did this quite a bit at my last job. I found an unused office and took up residence there. I didn't tell anyone where I was working, so they couldn't bother me. If they wanted to see me in person, they needed to email me, and I would automagically appear in the right location from my hiding space. If I didn't want to be bothered, I would ignore the email or respond with an appropriate response. – MedicineMan May 7 at 16:39
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Non-work related interruptions at work kill productivity far worse than work-related interruptions. Getting a phone call related to what you're working on doesn't really interrupt the flow of work, or indeed reinforces it in some places. I have a big issue with car horns outside the office (or police sirens, or idiots being loud) and they can totally tear me from doing work, and doubly worse, if I'm in the zone when interrupted then I might not get it back that day (I'm sure you know what I mean).

So you could use the interruption time to surf the web, or better interact with the people around you similarly interrupted - and learn about them, learn about their roles, get yourself known instead of "the programmer in the microwave cubicle". Could be good for your job prospects within the company. Or not.

You can listen to music, but people moving around you can still be annoying, and worse make you feel like you don't have the freedom you need in your work. Alternatively just stick a notice on the microwave that it's broken after 2pm every day unless payment to use is made in strong coffee or biscuits.

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Why don't you just ask to be moved to a more quiet area? If that doesn't work get some noise-cancelling headphones, get a laptop and slip away into a conferance room. If your boss notices you spend more time in the conferance room than your cube he/she may reconsider moving you.

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The book "Time Management for System Administrators" has lots of great ideas on dealing with interruptions. It's a good book for software developers as well as sys admins.

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"Corporate Accounts Payable, Nina speaking. Just a moment..."

Seriously, if it's that bad, I'd just ask to be moved to a better location.

Also, find out when your boss's birthday is and get him/her a copy of Peopleware. At the very least, send him/her a polite email about interruptions and the importance of "flow," explaining things like how a handful of interruptions can mean a week's productivity lost.

The microwave thing is pretty awful though. Isn't there a break room or something where you can move it? I don't know if I could stand the humming and the beeping, not to mention the smells and the people traffic. If you can't get rid of it, it might be time to start job hunting.

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lol...man....did "Office Space" hit the bullseye or what?! :D – Dan May 7 at 17:05
Ok, I kid you not, there are three other microwaves that I am aware of in this building. One is about a 10 second walk from my cubicle, and the last two are probably about 20 to 30 seconds AND both are in a designated "kitchen" area. Honestly, it blew me away when they wanted to stick this microwave in my cubicle, because of all the other ones that were already in the building. They placed a little fridge in the cubicle of one developer just down from me, and another developer has a printer in his! – Jagd May 7 at 18:31
What would happen if the microwave were to "break"? Just kidding. Tell your boss either the microwave goes or you go. – Andy Leekman May 7 at 18:33
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The next time you get interrupted, kill the offending party. That will serve as a great example and others will think twice before interrupting you…. or you could go a month or so without brushing your teeth or showering that usually does the trick.

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"Thou shalt not kill," but I have to admit, it is REALLY tempting at times. Maybe I could just claim the microwaves fried my brain and made me do it. – Jagd May 7 at 18:34
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The worst I ever experienced was that there was a young CTO, and he will block me from asking another coworker for a question even for 3 minutes when my job depending on his past work. On the other hand, this CTO make meaningless noise from time to time, including "DOOO DOOOO doooo DOOOO DDOOOO DOOO dooo DOOOO" or snapping his fingers 5, 6 times in a row when he is "high". So some young co-workers follow suit too, and they are ok because the CTO plays video games with them. Well, so people who get close to the CTO and be popular with the CTO are cool. If you don't get popular with the CTO you are "uncool". How is that for distraction when it is authorized from the CTO.

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Thanks mate :)

Mind you - its now over a week since that last post, and I still haven't responded (or been paid), so I guess that makes the next decision an easy one.

I know there is a lot of doom and gloom when talking about the economy - but there are some excellent things happening out there still, and lucky for me, I will be joining some of my mates from a previous project later this week. All it took was a single 2-line email !! Too easy. Who needs CV's ?

If the current bunch of office wankers need me to do any contract work to save their asses for the 101st time, then I am still happy to find some time and help them out - but only because I care about their customer.

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Educate your supervisors. I'm suprised how many supervisors have never even heard of "the zone". And the productivity boost associated with spending as much time in the zone as possible.

A quick google search for 'programming in the zone' will pick up a few good articles. Nothing concrete, but it will at least prove to some that you are not the only person who feels that this is important to getting your work done.

This is a pretty good link for ideas on what you can do on your end 7 Tips for programming in The Zone.

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