Driven to Distraction by Technology 261
Ant writes "CNET News.com says 'The typical office worker is interrupted every three minutes by a phone call, e-mail, instant message or other distraction. The problem is that it takes about eight uninterrupted minutes for the brains to get into a really creative state. The result, says Carl Honore, journalist and author of "In Praise of Slowness," is a situation where the digital communications that were supposed to make working lives run more smoothly are actually preventing people from getting critical tasks accomplished.'"
That sounds right. (Score:5, Funny)
Hold on, I just got an IM.
Actually, that doesn't sound right (Score:5, Funny)
Work keepy interrupting my IMing, not the other way around
Re:That sounds right. (Score:5, Insightful)
This fellow Honore is probably thinking of certain professions such as computer programmers and IT professionals and architects and graphic designers, where you really do need periods of uninterruptedness to get some solid creative work done.
As a programmer, I'm willing to bet that most people in these fields have long since discovered the power of ear buds (and noise-cancelling headphones, my own favorite) to blot out the world around them. To a lot of us, IM and email are just a bit of line noise that we easily put up with. I usually welcome a little interruption now and then, and in fact it helps spur the creative juices sometimes to have a context shift.
Overall I think this article is a bit alarmist, though there's probably something to it in terms of the frenetic pace of life in modern offices.
Re:That sounds right. (Score:2)
When I have a project I need t
Re:That sounds right. (Score:2, Funny)
Re:That sounds right. (Score:2)
It's not the technology, its the people! (Score:5, Insightful)
Quit being so quick to find evil in technology.
Re:It's not the technology, its the people! (Score:5, Insightful)
yeah, I don't like telephones...
Re:It's not the technology, its the people! (Score:2)
Later, when they talk to you in person, or you actually answer, tell them "my phone has been on the fritz lately" and they'll assume it was a technology problem, not intentional hangups.
Re:It's not the technology, its the people! (Score:4, Insightful)
Actually the book goes into a lot more detail about the concept of flow, and how much productivity is lost per interruption.
The thing I like about IM is that it is non-realtime (so I can devote as much or as little attention to it as I want) and that it is opt-in - I can set myself to do no disturb mode and people can only contact me with urgent things, or I can go completely offline. You can leave a telephone off the hook, but it's far less socially acceptable.
Re:It's not the technology, its the people! (Score:2)
It's a lot easier than politely getting rid of the person sitting on the end of your desk who won't take the hint that you don't want to talk to them right now.
Re:It's not the technology, its the people! (Score:5, Insightful)
really? we must have really high tech phones here because of this funny button called "do not disturb" I use it all the time. if I am coding, I turn off the crackberry, shutdown outlook, and put the phone in DND.
works great and they must come down 3 floors to talk to me in person (if they have a proxcard that will get them in the section.)
I suggest trying it. Remember if you are always available to everyone they expect that, do not be available to their beck and call. let them know you are working on important projects (just before DND change your voicemail greeting) and can not be disturbed for at least XX time and will check your messages after that.
It's funny how that if you do not let them control you like a robot, they back off and let you do your work.
Re:It's not the technology, its the people! (Score:2)
Like someone else said, it's the people, and sometimes people won't get the hint. Suppose he was there but had just tried to ignore her because he was workin
Re:It's not the technology, its the people! (Score:2)
Yes you must. I've had a lot of phones on my desks, and none have ever had such a button.
Even having it doesn't help when it's the phone in the next cube that keeps ringing.
Re:It's not the technology, its the people! (Score:5, Funny)
Yep, I'd say your phone is pretty high-tech. Allow me describe to you the features of my phone. My phone sports a 12-key user-interface, stylishly arranged in a rectangular shape. Ten of the keys have a numeral on them, allowing me to quickly and easily enter a phone number. There is also a * key and a # key, which excitingly serve pretty much no purpose whatsoever, for maximum flexibility. This allows me to press them pretty much anytime I want to and pretend they are doing whatever I want.
Re:It's not the technology, its the people! (Score:3, Informative)
Your phone might have that feature too.
Re:It's not the technology, its the people! (Score:2)
Re:It's not the technology, its the people! (Score:2)
So, when I need an answer in the next 20 minutes, I stop by in person and ask the question. I get my answer and can get back to work, and that person can try to answer my e-mail in a more timely manner next time.
Not to mention... (Score:2)
Even worse.... (Score:2)
Or voicemail messages that say "call me."
Hey buddy - you just called me. How about you actually leave a hint as to what you want to talk about?
(But your pet peeve reminds me of the character on Harvey Birdman [adultswim.com] who is constantly interrupting to ask, "Didja get that thing I sentcha?" Hee.)
Only if you pay attention (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Only if you pay attention (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Only if you pay attention (Score:2)
Together, they block out 80-90% of the sound distractions. People come up, see the headphones, and re-evaluate if they should interupt me. Many still do, but some back off and send an email.
It also helps my slight ADD nature since I don't hear conversations near me that slightly affect me, so I don't get involved in them.
This doesn't help email and IM, but it's a good start.
I don't believe it (Score:5, Insightful)
But I don't think that productivity is being harmed to such an extent that a fuss must be raised over it. Projects are still being finished, people are still getting paid, and products are still being sold. It's not that there are so many more distractions than before, it's simply that we can quantify (and villify) one particular set of distractions.
Maybe it's just me, but sometimes taking a time out to stare out the window at the horizon helps me feel a lot better about sitting in front of the computer.
Re:I don't believe it (Score:4, Insightful)
Its not just the fact that it makes you feel better - often someone who appears to be just staring blankly and unproductively into space, may actually be deep in thought about the complex system they're working on.
I often have to think through logic paths, forks, and possible consequences of the tinest changes to such an extent that it takes me nearly fifteen minutes of quiet to get down through my abstract mental models to the required level of detail. Any interruption can completely derail your mental thought processes and waste up to an hour while you deal with the minor interruption, maybe go get a coffee, settle back down again, and start thinking it through from the top again.
In a nutshell - just because someone looks like they're zoning out, doesn't mean they're not being productive.
Re:I don't believe it (Score:3, Interesting)
I guess that depends on what you're doing...things can easily still "get done," but one has to wonder about the negative influence that these distractions might be having- not just on the end results, but on the overall well-being of those involved (think "stress").
Now, we have people like Bill Gates, who fancies himself as some kind of sociological genius. To wit:
Microsoft Chairman Bill Gates has tried to make the case that however overwhelmed workers may feel, they are actually suffering from "informati
Re:I don't believe it (Score:2)
You need to start acting insane around people. Do that and the "people wanting to talk to you" issue takes care of itself.
Whereas reading Slashdot... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Whereas reading Slashdot... (Score:3, Funny)
hones the creative brain to a razor's edge.
Basically, then, you're saying that Slashdot gradually turns a creative brain into grey, thinly sliced lunch meat? Hannibal Lecter would be delighted!
Re:Whereas reading Slashdot... (Score:2)
Lecter, Schmecter.
Re: (Score:2)
Aha! (Score:2)
*thinks*
Oh dear God, please don't answer that.
Productivity (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Productivity (Score:2)
exactly right (Score:5, Funny)
Open offices (Score:5, Interesting)
Especially this is difficult when I cannot give an instant answer and have to think about it for a minute. I first need to change my way of thinking into the model of the interrupting project and then back to the original project that I'm supposed to be working on. Afterwards I probably have to figure out some things for the second time because they were lost in the process.
E-mails or IM's aren't so bad, they just pop up a little square in the lower left corner of the screen and I can deal with them later. Other people or phonecalls are harder to ignore.
Re:Open offices (Score:2)
I tried explaining to the boss that he has to stop piping little jobs down, with Highest Priority, to me when I am trying to meet a coding deadline on a large project.
I put it in these terms, imagine you're doing your taxes and every 10 minutes your wife comes to ask you to do something else.
A) How long
Re:Open offices (Score:3, Insightful)
Now, my boss wasn't exactly calm about these things, and easily got nervous, so about every half hour, he'd call me and ask for the progress. Around 3 pm, as he once again called me and asked "How's it going? Will you still be finish
Re:Open offices (Score:2)
I told my boss I'd be putting them in, and he could talk to me only when I removed them, otherwise I wouldn't be able to get work done. (this was an open office where my desk and my boss's desk faced and touched each other with no divider, and he was the type of guy who'd interrupt you from business-critical tasks when having trouble printing, which was all the time).
Now, you can actually hear stuff with earplugs on, but I pretended I co
Mental queueing (Score:3, Insightful)
Org problem, not tech problem (Score:5, Insightful)
Set your IM to busy.
Set your mail client to check for new email once an hour.
Switch your phone to voicemail.
If your boss won't let you, then it's an organisation problem, because your boss absolutely needs to understand that this is how to get you to work most efficiently.
Re:Org problem, not tech problem (Score:2)
Re:Org problem, not tech problem (Score:4, Interesting)
I find that Outlooks "Display a notification message when a new mail arrives" option is a substantial productivily killer because not only does it flash a window up in your face, but it taunts you to stop working on your current thing by giving you a one button press to view the email.
With this off, the only way to tell that you have email is a small icon in the system tray. If that is still too much then you can either exit Outlook completely or use something like Knockout [sunflowerhead.com] to remove the icon.
The Tyranny of Email (Score:2)
This is a link [w-uh.com] to an old Slashdot story from maybe three years ago, that very eloquently talks about how the instantaneous nature of email, IM, and business in general these days is affecting people.
After reading it, I have turned off all notifications on my computer, and haven't looked back since. It's nice to be master of your own domain, even if it is a tiny one.
Re:The Tyranny of Email (Score:2)
In the future, you may not want to put those two phrases together like that... : p
Re:Org problem, not tech problem (Score:2, Interesting)
It is interesting to note the case of Donald E Knuth (of The Art of Computer Programming fame), no doubt one of the most productive and eminent scientists of our age. He stopped using email 15+ years ago!!
http://www-cs-faculty.stanford.edu/~knuth/email.ht ml/ [stanford.edu]
And the point is well made. Email can be a distraction and the solution has to
hmmmm... three minutes... (Score:3, Funny)
Problem pretty easily solved (Score:5, Informative)
Just run a silent system. No bells or chimes to signal when new email comes in. Have your phone light up, not ring. I never IM, as it annoys the hell out of me in general, so my distractions rarely, if ever, register enough to take me away from my work.
Also, the same studies that say you need eight minutes to charge up say that your brain is only good for about twenty minutes at a clip, and then processing effectivness takes a big dive. Therefore, you can surface every half hour or so to check up on what you've missed.
But the people stopping by... There's now way to fix that, except maybe not showing or begin collecting rare cheeses.
Re:Problem pretty easily solved (Score:2)
If you have the opportunity to work nights, try it. I hardly ever have visitors, the phone never rings, and if anyone wants to schedule me for a meeting, they'd better be prepared to: a) come in by 7am or I'm on overtime; and b) accept that I'll have put in a full day at work by the time they arrive, so I'll be tired and probably cranky if the meeting overruns much.
Re:Problem pretty easily solved (Score:2)
Re:Problem pretty easily solved (Score:2)
Re:Problem pretty easily solved (Score:2)
I turned the ringer off on my phone. There's a red light on it that blinks when someone calls. I found that if I'm deep in thought (and thus at a very bad time to be interrupted) I don't notice it. If I'm idling, or not too far into something, the blinking light instantly attracts my attention. It also blinks when there's a voicemail, so I pick up on that as soon as I emerge from my deep thinking.
As for people stopping by, you can retrain them if you have your supervisor's support. In my ca
Re:Problem pretty easily solved (Score:2)
Pff.. Blinkenlights are so noisy!
Real.. err.. people-who-don't-want-to-be-disturbed use the Kraftwerk approach - No ringer, no lights, nothing. Schedule a time for someone to call you, pick up the phone at precisely at that moment, and if they're not on the other end they've missed you.
From Wikipedia's entry on Kraftwerk [wikipedia.org]:
The band are notoriously reclusive, so much so that it is rumoured that their own record com
Re:Problem pretty easily solved (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Problem pretty easily solved (Score:2)
Operating Room support (Score:3, Interesting)
My strategy is to ignore eamil and my personal phone line and just worry about the emergencies for the first 5 hours of my day, then try to do the actual engineering work with whatever time is left. Works ok, but it would be nice to have more free time. Unfortunately, I just can turn off my pager.
Priorities (Score:5, Insightful)
If I'm deep in thought, off goes the email, and the phone certainly gets ignored.
Work on the stuff you know is important, or at the very least work on the stuff your boss tells you is important. Don't just switch tasks every time somebody adds something to your to-do list. The guy calling on the phone will get taken care of in time. Time management gurus call this taking care of the important rather than just the "urgent." This is the only way things get fixed in the long-term - often the guy screaming for help on the phone is looking for a short term solution.
In fact, I normally prefer email to phone calls. It is less interrupting, and it forces the person who is contacting you to organize their thoughts rather than just randomly spilling them out. Phone is GREAT for conversations, but TERRIBLE for just making requests. Unless you know that the call is going to be very high priority for both parties, I think you're better off just sending an email to schedule a time to make the call, or better still a visit.
But that is just my two cents...
Re:Priorities (Score:2)
Yes. To some extent I wonder whether it is cultural and generational. When I was at school we sat in our place in rows and talked when we were called upon. Same for study hall.
In particular, I've purposefully avoided instant messaging. If someone has an inspiration, they'll have a mature thought by the time they can see in a more scheduled opportunity.
Re:Priorities (Score:2)
Text messaging aka SMS
Read when convenient. Call back or reply by text. With slow typing you have more than enough time to put what you mean in words.
One exception - it's considered rude to SMS requests/question type messages to strangers - they have to pay to reply. It is perfectly okay to send messages that don't require acknowledgement/reply though.
If you're distracted during the week... (Score:2, Interesting)
Works for me.
Re:If you're distracted during the week... (Score:4, Insightful)
Only one problem with this - eventually this behavior is expected, and essentially you become a slave rather than an employee.
The worst that I remember was a time when I was so exhausted by the weekend, that my Saturdays consisted of lying down to take a nap in the mid-afternoon, and not waking up until about 10pm. At that point, there was nothing to do but just go to bed. Maybe by Sunday afternoon, I was starting to feel somewhat human again, but by then it was time to chuck myself back into the chipper on Monday.
These days I REFUSE to work evenings and weekends any more. Having a life outside of the office is important to me now.
I now have the Friday afternoon rule. If a "crisis" comes up after 3PM on Friday, it couldn't be so important that it cannot wait until Monday.
If I were placed back in a situation where regular work on evenings and weekends were required, I would plan on looking for a new job. Even leaving the industry, if that is what it takes. There is no way I am going back into that hellhole.
Definetly True (Score:2, Insightful)
We had this problem in our office, where telephone calls were routed to groups of people. Everybody got distracted and decided upon looking at the caller ID wether to pick up the phone.
Favourite office sport became being the last one to pick up, before the answering machine answered.
We descarded the old system and routed all calls directly, forwarding the call quickly (after two rings) to one other phone, if it wasn't picked up. If that one also wasn't picked up within two rings, the call got forwarded t
Driven to distraction (Score:2)
Distraction? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Distraction? (Score:2)
Re:Distraction? (Score:2)
Compulsive Email (Score:3, Interesting)
This is quite terrible, given that most stuff can be ignored, yet we get emails and voice mails all the time.
I think this is one reason why people totally despise spam.
I remember in '91 there was a guy who would go on "vacation" (with the vacation program) even when in the office. You'd mail him and get a note that he was realy busy, and would respond later. If you went and interrupted him, it needed to be really, really urgent, or he'd have a fit.
I thought it was odd then, but now it makes perfect sense.
And they say A.I. is different from natural one (Score:2, Insightful)
We're not yet accustomed to it (Score:2, Interesting)
Just read the article: more and more companies are realizing that they cannot continue with all of the information management like they have used to. At first, these little tricks will seem pretty odd, but once we filter out those that work for everyone involved, they will be strategies commonly u
Interrupts better than polling (Score:3, Insightful)
I suppose there are parameters that I could vary (get a more interesting job, for one;).
bleh (Score:5, Insightful)
Hey, I won't disagree that it is very difficult to work with constant distraction. As a Programmer, a SysAdmin, sometimes you have to sit and _think_ about the big picture.
You must pause and consider.
However, the above quote shows quite aptly one of the major flaws with Western Medicine. It seems to think that all human beings are identical.
8 minutes? Clearly this is some sort of average, and an average likely deduced by dubious means. It could be 1 minute for some, 16 minutes for others.. and the type of creativity could make as much of a difference as the person involved!
Of course, let's just boil it all down into a neat figure, instead...
Re:bleh (Score:2)
Where did you get the impression "Western Medicine" was involved in this? That quote appears to have come from "journalist and author" Carl Honore. It's not news that journalists oversimplify things.
Use your head... (Score:2, Interesting)
I myself will simply ignore the email and focus on what I must accomplish. Then when I'm at a breaking point, I'll look at the email.
Simple old-fashioned prioritization.
All thing fall under:
Telecommute (Score:4, Interesting)
Next day did not show up at the office and logged on from home through VPN and shut off my phones. Worked my 8 hours and got back to work next day. They had a problem with it, but I said it was billable time and I had to allocate the entire day to one client that was basically a convoluted research project.
The reason why I was surprised at the reaction? I live 3 miles from my office. Any urgent ticket, for which I have real-time notification, would have same speed of response if not quicker than calling me in the office.
Some people just don't get it, but it's a good option if you can make it work. I much prefer working in my home office with a high end sound system rather than the open-doored office in subzero temperatures.
I've been successful another 2 times so far to work remotely and converted most customers for remote access.
Distraction or Destruction? (Score:5, Funny)
I had an employee a few years ago who didn't seem to understand the idea of uninterrupted work. I regularly close my door and get work done - research, coding, whatever - and the rule around the lab is, if the door is closed, you leave the person alone. This one guy didn't seem to understand this - I mean, he didn't WANT to have this apply to him...
He would come up with really annoying ways to interrupt, like hammering on my door really hard, or standing in front of the door talking loudly. The final straw, that resulted in his near-decapitation, was one incident where he emailed me, emailed me five minutes later to complain I hadn't responded, then borrowed a security key to let himself in to my office to ask why I wasn't answering email.
Sigh.
What would be a better solution? (Score:2, Insightful)
I don't however think that the best solution is to "unplug" so to speak, because I've had the reverse to, deeply entranced in something complex for hours on end, only to find out that it was useless work because I was emailed twenty minutes into the task an
Re:What would be a better solution? (Score:2)
If something is open to that kind of change, I generally just sit on it. Until a task is certain, it doesn't need to be done.
If I worked in open cubes, I'd wear two sets of hea
Where did you get eight minutes? (Score:2)
bullcrap (Score:2, Informative)
Personally I only answer the phone if it's my wife (w/ small baby at home) or a number I don't recognize which is rare. As for email, IM, etc., they are turned off and only checked twice a day.
And by the way, for any low functioning PHB
Telephones are the worst. (Score:2, Interesting)
Office Work != Creative State (Score:3, Insightful)
When I code.. (Score:2, Funny)
tetris (Score:2, Funny)
Besides, I've got a meeting with the Bobs in a few minutes.
I don't think so... 2 reasons: (Score:3, Insightful)
(Same problem accurately estimating cloud cover. Here's an exercise: Take a sheet of plain paper. Fold it in half the short way, tear a big circle out of the middle. Open it back up. You have a rectangular paper donut. Tear the round piece in half. Put one half in your pocket, tear the other into about a dozen random shapes and sizes. Lay the donut down. Lay the random pieces into the open hole. Ask passers-by to tell you how much of the hole is filled. You'll get big numbers. 70-80 % coverage. You can prove it's really only 50% - you have exactly half the hole in your pocket untouched.)
(2) the 8 minute ramp-up is almost as silly. Suppose it's roughly right. Office workers are required to be in "a really creative state" to get any work done? Nonsense.
Head down, headphones on (Score:2)
I've gotten some of my best coding work done in the strangest of places....planes and trains. Why? Well, for one, you've got no internet (usually), therefore no
I just ordered the book on Amazon (Score:3, Funny)
No news for me (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:No news for me (Score:2)
I go further. My biggest problem has always been the phone, what with people calling me with problems that they could easily solve for themselves if they'd just spend 90 seconds thinking about the problem instead of reflexively picking up the phone. I hate that, so I just don't pick up the phone. My voicemail message says that I'll respond to messages when I'm able and that if you really want to contact me you s
This should help get back to work (Score:2)
Last week I read "How to Work the Competition into the Ground and Have
Fun Doing it" by John T. Molloy. While the "color" material of the
book is obviously from the 80's, all the substantive information
contained within the book is still a goldmine.
One of the techniques I thought I'd share that I picked up in a book
was a way to stay on task. It helps recover back to the task at hand,
as well as making you plan what you're going to be doing.
In the b
Microsoft is already there (Score:2, Interesting)
Mod parent up (Score:2)
I have managed to get 2 days per week working from home; with a sho' 'nuff office. Desk phone? Heh, it's 60 miles from me and I don't care how often it rings.
A riposte to the constant distractions is to 'Be somewhere else.' Not always possible, but you can try...
My GOD this is correct,,,, (Score:2)
The worst offender (Score:2)
I concur! (Score:2)
There's a tragic disconnect between the level of horribly annoying technology we can construct, and the level we should construct.
--grendel drago
Tom DeMarco says turn your phone ringer off (Score:2)
He did formal studies (assigning the same task to a large number of programmers) and compared productivity. The ability to turn the telephone ringer off and having a private office with a large desk were the biggest predictors of productivity.
This is an older study, predating IM, and probably back when email wasn't such a part of daily life, but it seems to me obvious that the same principle applies.
This is reported in a book called Peopleware.
This is why computers increase productivity. (Score:2)
You can defer IM.
You can not defer a persistent phone caller, because your co-workers will bug you about the ringing.
You can not defer the goon squad from popping by your cubicle every 5 minutes to ask you something.
(That said, my visit to Novell in Provo back in 1996 was enlightening. They had cube walls that went up to the ceiling. And doors that closed. I tell this story every time it comes up at my current job that people are complaining about goon-visits, in hopes that managemen
Creative state? (Score:2)
As for those who are creative workers or manage creative workers, I'm pretty sure this is not news and that you have "pretty good reasons" for not ensuring that the work environment remains as free from interruptions as possible... right?
Welcome to the Machine (Score:3, Interesting)
But the main defense is not just computers, or even personal discipline like "concentration". Mainly, we need to care more about our jobs. When our work itself is engrossing, we aren't as distracted by mere "wazzup?" messages from friends when we're busy. The real best use of the technology will be to keep all the administrivia of our jobs from sucking up our time, where we're most vulnerable to pleasant distractions.
Personally, since my work is even more fun that posting to Slashdot, I get in my time only during the interstices between work tasks. Makes task switching seem like a social break. So I can work many hours at a time, without leaving the keyboard. On second thought, maybe I should be taking a walk to talk F2F with some real humans...
Re:Tell me about it. (Score:2)
Re:Personnal responsibility (Score:2)
One of problems with "creativity mode" is that you hardly ever know when you are entering it, it's quite volatile, and disabling stuff often makes it impossible - simply because instead of being creative you keep worrying about missed calls, or "what happens if something bad happens and I don't know?"
The best would be some kind of prioritization system. Say, you have a vending machine type slot for money