Is it unprofessional to leave a note while you are gone for a break?

The name of the pictureThe name of the pictureThe name of the pictureClash Royale CLAN TAG#URR8PPP





.everyoneloves__top-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__mid-leaderboard:empty margin-bottom:0;







up vote
11
down vote

favorite
1












I need to interface with a lot of people on a day-to-day basis. The problem with this sometimes is that when I go out for lunch or for a quick snack, I am not available.



I hate to make people wait for me to return and if I'm going long enough I usually leave a sticky on my cubicle saying I'm out for so and so.



Firstly, is it even professional to leave stickies? It feels childish somehow.



Secondly, also I have the nagging feeling of being mistaken. What if I'm mistaken to be a slacker who takes breaks that are long enough to justify writing a note, by someone like say my manager? What is the popular approach here?







share|improve this question




























    up vote
    11
    down vote

    favorite
    1












    I need to interface with a lot of people on a day-to-day basis. The problem with this sometimes is that when I go out for lunch or for a quick snack, I am not available.



    I hate to make people wait for me to return and if I'm going long enough I usually leave a sticky on my cubicle saying I'm out for so and so.



    Firstly, is it even professional to leave stickies? It feels childish somehow.



    Secondly, also I have the nagging feeling of being mistaken. What if I'm mistaken to be a slacker who takes breaks that are long enough to justify writing a note, by someone like say my manager? What is the popular approach here?







    share|improve this question
























      up vote
      11
      down vote

      favorite
      1









      up vote
      11
      down vote

      favorite
      1






      1





      I need to interface with a lot of people on a day-to-day basis. The problem with this sometimes is that when I go out for lunch or for a quick snack, I am not available.



      I hate to make people wait for me to return and if I'm going long enough I usually leave a sticky on my cubicle saying I'm out for so and so.



      Firstly, is it even professional to leave stickies? It feels childish somehow.



      Secondly, also I have the nagging feeling of being mistaken. What if I'm mistaken to be a slacker who takes breaks that are long enough to justify writing a note, by someone like say my manager? What is the popular approach here?







      share|improve this question














      I need to interface with a lot of people on a day-to-day basis. The problem with this sometimes is that when I go out for lunch or for a quick snack, I am not available.



      I hate to make people wait for me to return and if I'm going long enough I usually leave a sticky on my cubicle saying I'm out for so and so.



      Firstly, is it even professional to leave stickies? It feels childish somehow.



      Secondly, also I have the nagging feeling of being mistaken. What if I'm mistaken to be a slacker who takes breaks that are long enough to justify writing a note, by someone like say my manager? What is the popular approach here?









      share|improve this question













      share|improve this question




      share|improve this question








      edited Oct 10 '12 at 14:23









      IDrinkandIKnowThings

      43.9k1398188




      43.9k1398188










      asked Oct 9 '12 at 16:37









      Arpith

      6881824




      6881824




















          4 Answers
          4






          active

          oldest

          votes

















          up vote
          8
          down vote



          accepted










          Has anyone ever actually commented to you on "hey you weren't around earlier and it was a problem?" You should ask yourself this first.



          Second, are these interactions with people who share a messenger/interoffice communicator? Most places have something you can set a status to "away" or "be right back" which is considerably more professional in my opinion.



          Assuming you have people asking and cannot use this, to answer




          Firstly, is it even professional to leave stickies? It feels childish
          somehow.




          This depends completely on your office environment. Some places this would be seen as completely unprofessional and some places this is completely fine. Because you are asking about this, it would seem you have a slightly more professional environment, and if you really do not think a post-it/sticky would appear unprofessional, simply print off a page saying "Sorry I missed you - I am away" or something similar. Or if you have a whiteboard at your desk use this. Lots of more professional options.




          Secondly, also I have the nagging feeling of being mistaken. What if
          I'm mistaken to be a slacker who takes breaks that are long enough to
          justify writing a note, by someone like say my manager? What is the
          popular approach here?




          Again, this completely depends on the environment. If your office is a 7:00 - 11:30, lunch, 12:00-3:30 type of office where you have a very structured working hours you may be seen that way. If you work in a more laid back environment then not.



          Having a printed sheet, by the way, would make this seem less "slackerish" if you use the same sheet every time.




          Something else to keep in mind is you may be making a huge issue out of nothing. People in office environments are frequently gone for meetings or other obligations other than breaks. This is to be expected in most environments. Additionally, as people become management or have more responsibilities, they even more often away from their desk.






          share|improve this answer






















          • Follow up question: Do we really have to wait for someone to come back saying they had a problem because of your absence to identify a bad methodology? IMHO it wouldn't be just unprofessional but just plain wrong if someone came back saying they had a problem.
            – Arpith
            Oct 9 '12 at 17:08






          • 1




            @Arpith I had actually edited another paragraph before your comment - people in most office environments have meetings or other things during the day. I don't know what your particular situation is, but I would say it's rare for most office employees to sit at their desk all day every day regardless of breaks
            – Elysian Fields♦
            Oct 9 '12 at 17:11






          • 2




            I frankly don't understand why a sticky note would be considered unprofessional. Maybe I just haven't worked in an environment where it would be. In the past, I've had a few hand-written sticky notes ("back soon", "out to lunch", etc.), and I'd just put the appropriate one on my monitor screen. If somebody had a problem with that, I might ask them what planet they're from. What am I missing?
            – Keith Thompson
            Oct 9 '12 at 21:55






          • 1




            @KeithThompson in some more professional environments (say a corporate office with lots of executives or visiting groups where having a super professional image is important) this may be an issue, I guess
            – Elysian Fields♦
            Oct 9 '12 at 22:24






          • 1




            @enderland: I wouldn't call this a "professional" environment. I'd say it is an environment that requires strict adherence to arbitrary behaviour standards. "Professional" gets the job done and gets paid for it.
            – gnasher729
            Jul 26 '15 at 8:47

















          up vote
          6
          down vote













          It depends on the environment. Most places I've personally worked, the stickies aren't really necessary. People are more often away from their desks than at them. And it doesn't really take a rocket scientist to realize that if someone isn't at their desk or replying to email around noon that they're probably at lunch...



          Some places though are different and the notes are commonplace. See what others do and follow their lead.






          share|improve this answer




















          • This I guess is OK when you are in a small group and the people are working in the same common shifts. But what about when you have to meet loads of people, apparently for the first time and they know nothing about you and they do not find you at your desk. Will notes in your absence be seen in the wrong light?
            – Arpith
            Oct 9 '12 at 16:59






          • 1




            @Arpith I've not worked many places where physically walking to a random person's desk was commonplace. Email is good, mmmkay.
            – Telastyn
            Oct 9 '12 at 17:46






          • 1




            @Arpith If you're supposed to meet "loads of people", then you should really just plan the meetings. I see walking up to someone's desk as something you generally do when there's a plan (so they should be there) or you have a quick question that can be solved faster in person (in which case you can generally send an email or check back later if they're not there).
            – Brendan Long
            Oct 9 '12 at 19:32

















          up vote
          4
          down vote













          One job I had required me to have lots of meetings and make regular trips to the various production facilities. I got a small magnetic dry erase board (similar to this one) and hung it by the cubicle entrance. I labeled it "Tangurena Finder" and had a large pie chart drawn on it. I moved the magnet to indicate where I was. I'd jot an estimated time when I expected to return. At this job I usually spent about 10-15 hours per week in my cubicle. Sometimes, jokers would change the labels on the pie chart. At this time, dry erase boards were very rare to see in cubes. If I were in a similar situation today, I would print the daily schedule from Outlook and post it in my cube. Ad hoc/last minute meetings would be handwritten on the schedule.






          share|improve this answer
















          • 1




            I've worked in a couple of places where there was a whiteboard with everyone's name on it. It was customary to put a note there if you were out of pocket for whatever reason. That way everyone could see where the whole team was at a glance.
            – Jim In Texas
            Oct 9 '12 at 22:54

















          up vote
          4
          down vote













          If you're mostly away for scheduled meetings, perhaps simply sharing your calendar with your colleagues would be a better solution? Microsoft Outlook allows you to share calendars with your co-workers, meaning they will be able to check exactly when you are busy and when you are available without having to walk to your desk, and without you having to manually write a note.



          Also, in line with Enderland's suggestion of marking yourself as "Away" in your office IM system, some calendars (e.g. Outlook) can automatically do this for you.






          share|improve this answer




















            Your Answer







            StackExchange.ready(function()
            var channelOptions =
            tags: "".split(" "),
            id: "423"
            ;
            initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);

            StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function()
            // Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
            if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled)
            StackExchange.using("snippets", function()
            createEditor();
            );

            else
            createEditor();

            );

            function createEditor()
            StackExchange.prepareEditor(
            heartbeatType: 'answer',
            convertImagesToLinks: false,
            noModals: false,
            showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
            reputationToPostImages: null,
            bindNavPrevention: true,
            postfix: "",
            noCode: true, onDemand: false,
            discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
            ,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
            );



            );








             

            draft saved


            draft discarded


















            StackExchange.ready(
            function ()
            StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fworkplace.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f4441%2fis-it-unprofessional-to-leave-a-note-while-you-are-gone-for-a-break%23new-answer', 'question_page');

            );

            Post as a guest

























            StackExchange.ready(function ()
            $("#show-editor-button input, #show-editor-button button").click(function ()
            var showEditor = function()
            $("#show-editor-button").hide();
            $("#post-form").removeClass("dno");
            StackExchange.editor.finallyInit();
            ;

            var useFancy = $(this).data('confirm-use-fancy');
            if(useFancy == 'True')
            var popupTitle = $(this).data('confirm-fancy-title');
            var popupBody = $(this).data('confirm-fancy-body');
            var popupAccept = $(this).data('confirm-fancy-accept-button');

            $(this).loadPopup(
            url: '/post/self-answer-popup',
            loaded: function(popup)
            var pTitle = $(popup).find('h2');
            var pBody = $(popup).find('.popup-body');
            var pSubmit = $(popup).find('.popup-submit');

            pTitle.text(popupTitle);
            pBody.html(popupBody);
            pSubmit.val(popupAccept).click(showEditor);

            )
            else
            var confirmText = $(this).data('confirm-text');
            if (confirmText ? confirm(confirmText) : true)
            showEditor();


            );
            );






            4 Answers
            4






            active

            oldest

            votes








            4 Answers
            4






            active

            oldest

            votes









            active

            oldest

            votes






            active

            oldest

            votes








            up vote
            8
            down vote



            accepted










            Has anyone ever actually commented to you on "hey you weren't around earlier and it was a problem?" You should ask yourself this first.



            Second, are these interactions with people who share a messenger/interoffice communicator? Most places have something you can set a status to "away" or "be right back" which is considerably more professional in my opinion.



            Assuming you have people asking and cannot use this, to answer




            Firstly, is it even professional to leave stickies? It feels childish
            somehow.




            This depends completely on your office environment. Some places this would be seen as completely unprofessional and some places this is completely fine. Because you are asking about this, it would seem you have a slightly more professional environment, and if you really do not think a post-it/sticky would appear unprofessional, simply print off a page saying "Sorry I missed you - I am away" or something similar. Or if you have a whiteboard at your desk use this. Lots of more professional options.




            Secondly, also I have the nagging feeling of being mistaken. What if
            I'm mistaken to be a slacker who takes breaks that are long enough to
            justify writing a note, by someone like say my manager? What is the
            popular approach here?




            Again, this completely depends on the environment. If your office is a 7:00 - 11:30, lunch, 12:00-3:30 type of office where you have a very structured working hours you may be seen that way. If you work in a more laid back environment then not.



            Having a printed sheet, by the way, would make this seem less "slackerish" if you use the same sheet every time.




            Something else to keep in mind is you may be making a huge issue out of nothing. People in office environments are frequently gone for meetings or other obligations other than breaks. This is to be expected in most environments. Additionally, as people become management or have more responsibilities, they even more often away from their desk.






            share|improve this answer






















            • Follow up question: Do we really have to wait for someone to come back saying they had a problem because of your absence to identify a bad methodology? IMHO it wouldn't be just unprofessional but just plain wrong if someone came back saying they had a problem.
              – Arpith
              Oct 9 '12 at 17:08






            • 1




              @Arpith I had actually edited another paragraph before your comment - people in most office environments have meetings or other things during the day. I don't know what your particular situation is, but I would say it's rare for most office employees to sit at their desk all day every day regardless of breaks
              – Elysian Fields♦
              Oct 9 '12 at 17:11






            • 2




              I frankly don't understand why a sticky note would be considered unprofessional. Maybe I just haven't worked in an environment where it would be. In the past, I've had a few hand-written sticky notes ("back soon", "out to lunch", etc.), and I'd just put the appropriate one on my monitor screen. If somebody had a problem with that, I might ask them what planet they're from. What am I missing?
              – Keith Thompson
              Oct 9 '12 at 21:55






            • 1




              @KeithThompson in some more professional environments (say a corporate office with lots of executives or visiting groups where having a super professional image is important) this may be an issue, I guess
              – Elysian Fields♦
              Oct 9 '12 at 22:24






            • 1




              @enderland: I wouldn't call this a "professional" environment. I'd say it is an environment that requires strict adherence to arbitrary behaviour standards. "Professional" gets the job done and gets paid for it.
              – gnasher729
              Jul 26 '15 at 8:47














            up vote
            8
            down vote



            accepted










            Has anyone ever actually commented to you on "hey you weren't around earlier and it was a problem?" You should ask yourself this first.



            Second, are these interactions with people who share a messenger/interoffice communicator? Most places have something you can set a status to "away" or "be right back" which is considerably more professional in my opinion.



            Assuming you have people asking and cannot use this, to answer




            Firstly, is it even professional to leave stickies? It feels childish
            somehow.




            This depends completely on your office environment. Some places this would be seen as completely unprofessional and some places this is completely fine. Because you are asking about this, it would seem you have a slightly more professional environment, and if you really do not think a post-it/sticky would appear unprofessional, simply print off a page saying "Sorry I missed you - I am away" or something similar. Or if you have a whiteboard at your desk use this. Lots of more professional options.




            Secondly, also I have the nagging feeling of being mistaken. What if
            I'm mistaken to be a slacker who takes breaks that are long enough to
            justify writing a note, by someone like say my manager? What is the
            popular approach here?




            Again, this completely depends on the environment. If your office is a 7:00 - 11:30, lunch, 12:00-3:30 type of office where you have a very structured working hours you may be seen that way. If you work in a more laid back environment then not.



            Having a printed sheet, by the way, would make this seem less "slackerish" if you use the same sheet every time.




            Something else to keep in mind is you may be making a huge issue out of nothing. People in office environments are frequently gone for meetings or other obligations other than breaks. This is to be expected in most environments. Additionally, as people become management or have more responsibilities, they even more often away from their desk.






            share|improve this answer






















            • Follow up question: Do we really have to wait for someone to come back saying they had a problem because of your absence to identify a bad methodology? IMHO it wouldn't be just unprofessional but just plain wrong if someone came back saying they had a problem.
              – Arpith
              Oct 9 '12 at 17:08






            • 1




              @Arpith I had actually edited another paragraph before your comment - people in most office environments have meetings or other things during the day. I don't know what your particular situation is, but I would say it's rare for most office employees to sit at their desk all day every day regardless of breaks
              – Elysian Fields♦
              Oct 9 '12 at 17:11






            • 2




              I frankly don't understand why a sticky note would be considered unprofessional. Maybe I just haven't worked in an environment where it would be. In the past, I've had a few hand-written sticky notes ("back soon", "out to lunch", etc.), and I'd just put the appropriate one on my monitor screen. If somebody had a problem with that, I might ask them what planet they're from. What am I missing?
              – Keith Thompson
              Oct 9 '12 at 21:55






            • 1




              @KeithThompson in some more professional environments (say a corporate office with lots of executives or visiting groups where having a super professional image is important) this may be an issue, I guess
              – Elysian Fields♦
              Oct 9 '12 at 22:24






            • 1




              @enderland: I wouldn't call this a "professional" environment. I'd say it is an environment that requires strict adherence to arbitrary behaviour standards. "Professional" gets the job done and gets paid for it.
              – gnasher729
              Jul 26 '15 at 8:47












            up vote
            8
            down vote



            accepted







            up vote
            8
            down vote



            accepted






            Has anyone ever actually commented to you on "hey you weren't around earlier and it was a problem?" You should ask yourself this first.



            Second, are these interactions with people who share a messenger/interoffice communicator? Most places have something you can set a status to "away" or "be right back" which is considerably more professional in my opinion.



            Assuming you have people asking and cannot use this, to answer




            Firstly, is it even professional to leave stickies? It feels childish
            somehow.




            This depends completely on your office environment. Some places this would be seen as completely unprofessional and some places this is completely fine. Because you are asking about this, it would seem you have a slightly more professional environment, and if you really do not think a post-it/sticky would appear unprofessional, simply print off a page saying "Sorry I missed you - I am away" or something similar. Or if you have a whiteboard at your desk use this. Lots of more professional options.




            Secondly, also I have the nagging feeling of being mistaken. What if
            I'm mistaken to be a slacker who takes breaks that are long enough to
            justify writing a note, by someone like say my manager? What is the
            popular approach here?




            Again, this completely depends on the environment. If your office is a 7:00 - 11:30, lunch, 12:00-3:30 type of office where you have a very structured working hours you may be seen that way. If you work in a more laid back environment then not.



            Having a printed sheet, by the way, would make this seem less "slackerish" if you use the same sheet every time.




            Something else to keep in mind is you may be making a huge issue out of nothing. People in office environments are frequently gone for meetings or other obligations other than breaks. This is to be expected in most environments. Additionally, as people become management or have more responsibilities, they even more often away from their desk.






            share|improve this answer














            Has anyone ever actually commented to you on "hey you weren't around earlier and it was a problem?" You should ask yourself this first.



            Second, are these interactions with people who share a messenger/interoffice communicator? Most places have something you can set a status to "away" or "be right back" which is considerably more professional in my opinion.



            Assuming you have people asking and cannot use this, to answer




            Firstly, is it even professional to leave stickies? It feels childish
            somehow.




            This depends completely on your office environment. Some places this would be seen as completely unprofessional and some places this is completely fine. Because you are asking about this, it would seem you have a slightly more professional environment, and if you really do not think a post-it/sticky would appear unprofessional, simply print off a page saying "Sorry I missed you - I am away" or something similar. Or if you have a whiteboard at your desk use this. Lots of more professional options.




            Secondly, also I have the nagging feeling of being mistaken. What if
            I'm mistaken to be a slacker who takes breaks that are long enough to
            justify writing a note, by someone like say my manager? What is the
            popular approach here?




            Again, this completely depends on the environment. If your office is a 7:00 - 11:30, lunch, 12:00-3:30 type of office where you have a very structured working hours you may be seen that way. If you work in a more laid back environment then not.



            Having a printed sheet, by the way, would make this seem less "slackerish" if you use the same sheet every time.




            Something else to keep in mind is you may be making a huge issue out of nothing. People in office environments are frequently gone for meetings or other obligations other than breaks. This is to be expected in most environments. Additionally, as people become management or have more responsibilities, they even more often away from their desk.







            share|improve this answer














            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer








            edited Oct 9 '12 at 17:10

























            answered Oct 9 '12 at 16:52









            Elysian Fields♦

            96.9k46292449




            96.9k46292449











            • Follow up question: Do we really have to wait for someone to come back saying they had a problem because of your absence to identify a bad methodology? IMHO it wouldn't be just unprofessional but just plain wrong if someone came back saying they had a problem.
              – Arpith
              Oct 9 '12 at 17:08






            • 1




              @Arpith I had actually edited another paragraph before your comment - people in most office environments have meetings or other things during the day. I don't know what your particular situation is, but I would say it's rare for most office employees to sit at their desk all day every day regardless of breaks
              – Elysian Fields♦
              Oct 9 '12 at 17:11






            • 2




              I frankly don't understand why a sticky note would be considered unprofessional. Maybe I just haven't worked in an environment where it would be. In the past, I've had a few hand-written sticky notes ("back soon", "out to lunch", etc.), and I'd just put the appropriate one on my monitor screen. If somebody had a problem with that, I might ask them what planet they're from. What am I missing?
              – Keith Thompson
              Oct 9 '12 at 21:55






            • 1




              @KeithThompson in some more professional environments (say a corporate office with lots of executives or visiting groups where having a super professional image is important) this may be an issue, I guess
              – Elysian Fields♦
              Oct 9 '12 at 22:24






            • 1




              @enderland: I wouldn't call this a "professional" environment. I'd say it is an environment that requires strict adherence to arbitrary behaviour standards. "Professional" gets the job done and gets paid for it.
              – gnasher729
              Jul 26 '15 at 8:47
















            • Follow up question: Do we really have to wait for someone to come back saying they had a problem because of your absence to identify a bad methodology? IMHO it wouldn't be just unprofessional but just plain wrong if someone came back saying they had a problem.
              – Arpith
              Oct 9 '12 at 17:08






            • 1




              @Arpith I had actually edited another paragraph before your comment - people in most office environments have meetings or other things during the day. I don't know what your particular situation is, but I would say it's rare for most office employees to sit at their desk all day every day regardless of breaks
              – Elysian Fields♦
              Oct 9 '12 at 17:11






            • 2




              I frankly don't understand why a sticky note would be considered unprofessional. Maybe I just haven't worked in an environment where it would be. In the past, I've had a few hand-written sticky notes ("back soon", "out to lunch", etc.), and I'd just put the appropriate one on my monitor screen. If somebody had a problem with that, I might ask them what planet they're from. What am I missing?
              – Keith Thompson
              Oct 9 '12 at 21:55






            • 1




              @KeithThompson in some more professional environments (say a corporate office with lots of executives or visiting groups where having a super professional image is important) this may be an issue, I guess
              – Elysian Fields♦
              Oct 9 '12 at 22:24






            • 1




              @enderland: I wouldn't call this a "professional" environment. I'd say it is an environment that requires strict adherence to arbitrary behaviour standards. "Professional" gets the job done and gets paid for it.
              – gnasher729
              Jul 26 '15 at 8:47















            Follow up question: Do we really have to wait for someone to come back saying they had a problem because of your absence to identify a bad methodology? IMHO it wouldn't be just unprofessional but just plain wrong if someone came back saying they had a problem.
            – Arpith
            Oct 9 '12 at 17:08




            Follow up question: Do we really have to wait for someone to come back saying they had a problem because of your absence to identify a bad methodology? IMHO it wouldn't be just unprofessional but just plain wrong if someone came back saying they had a problem.
            – Arpith
            Oct 9 '12 at 17:08




            1




            1




            @Arpith I had actually edited another paragraph before your comment - people in most office environments have meetings or other things during the day. I don't know what your particular situation is, but I would say it's rare for most office employees to sit at their desk all day every day regardless of breaks
            – Elysian Fields♦
            Oct 9 '12 at 17:11




            @Arpith I had actually edited another paragraph before your comment - people in most office environments have meetings or other things during the day. I don't know what your particular situation is, but I would say it's rare for most office employees to sit at their desk all day every day regardless of breaks
            – Elysian Fields♦
            Oct 9 '12 at 17:11




            2




            2




            I frankly don't understand why a sticky note would be considered unprofessional. Maybe I just haven't worked in an environment where it would be. In the past, I've had a few hand-written sticky notes ("back soon", "out to lunch", etc.), and I'd just put the appropriate one on my monitor screen. If somebody had a problem with that, I might ask them what planet they're from. What am I missing?
            – Keith Thompson
            Oct 9 '12 at 21:55




            I frankly don't understand why a sticky note would be considered unprofessional. Maybe I just haven't worked in an environment where it would be. In the past, I've had a few hand-written sticky notes ("back soon", "out to lunch", etc.), and I'd just put the appropriate one on my monitor screen. If somebody had a problem with that, I might ask them what planet they're from. What am I missing?
            – Keith Thompson
            Oct 9 '12 at 21:55




            1




            1




            @KeithThompson in some more professional environments (say a corporate office with lots of executives or visiting groups where having a super professional image is important) this may be an issue, I guess
            – Elysian Fields♦
            Oct 9 '12 at 22:24




            @KeithThompson in some more professional environments (say a corporate office with lots of executives or visiting groups where having a super professional image is important) this may be an issue, I guess
            – Elysian Fields♦
            Oct 9 '12 at 22:24




            1




            1




            @enderland: I wouldn't call this a "professional" environment. I'd say it is an environment that requires strict adherence to arbitrary behaviour standards. "Professional" gets the job done and gets paid for it.
            – gnasher729
            Jul 26 '15 at 8:47




            @enderland: I wouldn't call this a "professional" environment. I'd say it is an environment that requires strict adherence to arbitrary behaviour standards. "Professional" gets the job done and gets paid for it.
            – gnasher729
            Jul 26 '15 at 8:47












            up vote
            6
            down vote













            It depends on the environment. Most places I've personally worked, the stickies aren't really necessary. People are more often away from their desks than at them. And it doesn't really take a rocket scientist to realize that if someone isn't at their desk or replying to email around noon that they're probably at lunch...



            Some places though are different and the notes are commonplace. See what others do and follow their lead.






            share|improve this answer




















            • This I guess is OK when you are in a small group and the people are working in the same common shifts. But what about when you have to meet loads of people, apparently for the first time and they know nothing about you and they do not find you at your desk. Will notes in your absence be seen in the wrong light?
              – Arpith
              Oct 9 '12 at 16:59






            • 1




              @Arpith I've not worked many places where physically walking to a random person's desk was commonplace. Email is good, mmmkay.
              – Telastyn
              Oct 9 '12 at 17:46






            • 1




              @Arpith If you're supposed to meet "loads of people", then you should really just plan the meetings. I see walking up to someone's desk as something you generally do when there's a plan (so they should be there) or you have a quick question that can be solved faster in person (in which case you can generally send an email or check back later if they're not there).
              – Brendan Long
              Oct 9 '12 at 19:32














            up vote
            6
            down vote













            It depends on the environment. Most places I've personally worked, the stickies aren't really necessary. People are more often away from their desks than at them. And it doesn't really take a rocket scientist to realize that if someone isn't at their desk or replying to email around noon that they're probably at lunch...



            Some places though are different and the notes are commonplace. See what others do and follow their lead.






            share|improve this answer




















            • This I guess is OK when you are in a small group and the people are working in the same common shifts. But what about when you have to meet loads of people, apparently for the first time and they know nothing about you and they do not find you at your desk. Will notes in your absence be seen in the wrong light?
              – Arpith
              Oct 9 '12 at 16:59






            • 1




              @Arpith I've not worked many places where physically walking to a random person's desk was commonplace. Email is good, mmmkay.
              – Telastyn
              Oct 9 '12 at 17:46






            • 1




              @Arpith If you're supposed to meet "loads of people", then you should really just plan the meetings. I see walking up to someone's desk as something you generally do when there's a plan (so they should be there) or you have a quick question that can be solved faster in person (in which case you can generally send an email or check back later if they're not there).
              – Brendan Long
              Oct 9 '12 at 19:32












            up vote
            6
            down vote










            up vote
            6
            down vote









            It depends on the environment. Most places I've personally worked, the stickies aren't really necessary. People are more often away from their desks than at them. And it doesn't really take a rocket scientist to realize that if someone isn't at their desk or replying to email around noon that they're probably at lunch...



            Some places though are different and the notes are commonplace. See what others do and follow their lead.






            share|improve this answer












            It depends on the environment. Most places I've personally worked, the stickies aren't really necessary. People are more often away from their desks than at them. And it doesn't really take a rocket scientist to realize that if someone isn't at their desk or replying to email around noon that they're probably at lunch...



            Some places though are different and the notes are commonplace. See what others do and follow their lead.







            share|improve this answer












            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer










            answered Oct 9 '12 at 16:51









            Telastyn

            33.9k977120




            33.9k977120











            • This I guess is OK when you are in a small group and the people are working in the same common shifts. But what about when you have to meet loads of people, apparently for the first time and they know nothing about you and they do not find you at your desk. Will notes in your absence be seen in the wrong light?
              – Arpith
              Oct 9 '12 at 16:59






            • 1




              @Arpith I've not worked many places where physically walking to a random person's desk was commonplace. Email is good, mmmkay.
              – Telastyn
              Oct 9 '12 at 17:46






            • 1




              @Arpith If you're supposed to meet "loads of people", then you should really just plan the meetings. I see walking up to someone's desk as something you generally do when there's a plan (so they should be there) or you have a quick question that can be solved faster in person (in which case you can generally send an email or check back later if they're not there).
              – Brendan Long
              Oct 9 '12 at 19:32
















            • This I guess is OK when you are in a small group and the people are working in the same common shifts. But what about when you have to meet loads of people, apparently for the first time and they know nothing about you and they do not find you at your desk. Will notes in your absence be seen in the wrong light?
              – Arpith
              Oct 9 '12 at 16:59






            • 1




              @Arpith I've not worked many places where physically walking to a random person's desk was commonplace. Email is good, mmmkay.
              – Telastyn
              Oct 9 '12 at 17:46






            • 1




              @Arpith If you're supposed to meet "loads of people", then you should really just plan the meetings. I see walking up to someone's desk as something you generally do when there's a plan (so they should be there) or you have a quick question that can be solved faster in person (in which case you can generally send an email or check back later if they're not there).
              – Brendan Long
              Oct 9 '12 at 19:32















            This I guess is OK when you are in a small group and the people are working in the same common shifts. But what about when you have to meet loads of people, apparently for the first time and they know nothing about you and they do not find you at your desk. Will notes in your absence be seen in the wrong light?
            – Arpith
            Oct 9 '12 at 16:59




            This I guess is OK when you are in a small group and the people are working in the same common shifts. But what about when you have to meet loads of people, apparently for the first time and they know nothing about you and they do not find you at your desk. Will notes in your absence be seen in the wrong light?
            – Arpith
            Oct 9 '12 at 16:59




            1




            1




            @Arpith I've not worked many places where physically walking to a random person's desk was commonplace. Email is good, mmmkay.
            – Telastyn
            Oct 9 '12 at 17:46




            @Arpith I've not worked many places where physically walking to a random person's desk was commonplace. Email is good, mmmkay.
            – Telastyn
            Oct 9 '12 at 17:46




            1




            1




            @Arpith If you're supposed to meet "loads of people", then you should really just plan the meetings. I see walking up to someone's desk as something you generally do when there's a plan (so they should be there) or you have a quick question that can be solved faster in person (in which case you can generally send an email or check back later if they're not there).
            – Brendan Long
            Oct 9 '12 at 19:32




            @Arpith If you're supposed to meet "loads of people", then you should really just plan the meetings. I see walking up to someone's desk as something you generally do when there's a plan (so they should be there) or you have a quick question that can be solved faster in person (in which case you can generally send an email or check back later if they're not there).
            – Brendan Long
            Oct 9 '12 at 19:32










            up vote
            4
            down vote













            One job I had required me to have lots of meetings and make regular trips to the various production facilities. I got a small magnetic dry erase board (similar to this one) and hung it by the cubicle entrance. I labeled it "Tangurena Finder" and had a large pie chart drawn on it. I moved the magnet to indicate where I was. I'd jot an estimated time when I expected to return. At this job I usually spent about 10-15 hours per week in my cubicle. Sometimes, jokers would change the labels on the pie chart. At this time, dry erase boards were very rare to see in cubes. If I were in a similar situation today, I would print the daily schedule from Outlook and post it in my cube. Ad hoc/last minute meetings would be handwritten on the schedule.






            share|improve this answer
















            • 1




              I've worked in a couple of places where there was a whiteboard with everyone's name on it. It was customary to put a note there if you were out of pocket for whatever reason. That way everyone could see where the whole team was at a glance.
              – Jim In Texas
              Oct 9 '12 at 22:54














            up vote
            4
            down vote













            One job I had required me to have lots of meetings and make regular trips to the various production facilities. I got a small magnetic dry erase board (similar to this one) and hung it by the cubicle entrance. I labeled it "Tangurena Finder" and had a large pie chart drawn on it. I moved the magnet to indicate where I was. I'd jot an estimated time when I expected to return. At this job I usually spent about 10-15 hours per week in my cubicle. Sometimes, jokers would change the labels on the pie chart. At this time, dry erase boards were very rare to see in cubes. If I were in a similar situation today, I would print the daily schedule from Outlook and post it in my cube. Ad hoc/last minute meetings would be handwritten on the schedule.






            share|improve this answer
















            • 1




              I've worked in a couple of places where there was a whiteboard with everyone's name on it. It was customary to put a note there if you were out of pocket for whatever reason. That way everyone could see where the whole team was at a glance.
              – Jim In Texas
              Oct 9 '12 at 22:54












            up vote
            4
            down vote










            up vote
            4
            down vote









            One job I had required me to have lots of meetings and make regular trips to the various production facilities. I got a small magnetic dry erase board (similar to this one) and hung it by the cubicle entrance. I labeled it "Tangurena Finder" and had a large pie chart drawn on it. I moved the magnet to indicate where I was. I'd jot an estimated time when I expected to return. At this job I usually spent about 10-15 hours per week in my cubicle. Sometimes, jokers would change the labels on the pie chart. At this time, dry erase boards were very rare to see in cubes. If I were in a similar situation today, I would print the daily schedule from Outlook and post it in my cube. Ad hoc/last minute meetings would be handwritten on the schedule.






            share|improve this answer












            One job I had required me to have lots of meetings and make regular trips to the various production facilities. I got a small magnetic dry erase board (similar to this one) and hung it by the cubicle entrance. I labeled it "Tangurena Finder" and had a large pie chart drawn on it. I moved the magnet to indicate where I was. I'd jot an estimated time when I expected to return. At this job I usually spent about 10-15 hours per week in my cubicle. Sometimes, jokers would change the labels on the pie chart. At this time, dry erase boards were very rare to see in cubes. If I were in a similar situation today, I would print the daily schedule from Outlook and post it in my cube. Ad hoc/last minute meetings would be handwritten on the schedule.







            share|improve this answer












            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer










            answered Oct 9 '12 at 17:34









            Tangurena

            5,0401936




            5,0401936







            • 1




              I've worked in a couple of places where there was a whiteboard with everyone's name on it. It was customary to put a note there if you were out of pocket for whatever reason. That way everyone could see where the whole team was at a glance.
              – Jim In Texas
              Oct 9 '12 at 22:54












            • 1




              I've worked in a couple of places where there was a whiteboard with everyone's name on it. It was customary to put a note there if you were out of pocket for whatever reason. That way everyone could see where the whole team was at a glance.
              – Jim In Texas
              Oct 9 '12 at 22:54







            1




            1




            I've worked in a couple of places where there was a whiteboard with everyone's name on it. It was customary to put a note there if you were out of pocket for whatever reason. That way everyone could see where the whole team was at a glance.
            – Jim In Texas
            Oct 9 '12 at 22:54




            I've worked in a couple of places where there was a whiteboard with everyone's name on it. It was customary to put a note there if you were out of pocket for whatever reason. That way everyone could see where the whole team was at a glance.
            – Jim In Texas
            Oct 9 '12 at 22:54










            up vote
            4
            down vote













            If you're mostly away for scheduled meetings, perhaps simply sharing your calendar with your colleagues would be a better solution? Microsoft Outlook allows you to share calendars with your co-workers, meaning they will be able to check exactly when you are busy and when you are available without having to walk to your desk, and without you having to manually write a note.



            Also, in line with Enderland's suggestion of marking yourself as "Away" in your office IM system, some calendars (e.g. Outlook) can automatically do this for you.






            share|improve this answer
























              up vote
              4
              down vote













              If you're mostly away for scheduled meetings, perhaps simply sharing your calendar with your colleagues would be a better solution? Microsoft Outlook allows you to share calendars with your co-workers, meaning they will be able to check exactly when you are busy and when you are available without having to walk to your desk, and without you having to manually write a note.



              Also, in line with Enderland's suggestion of marking yourself as "Away" in your office IM system, some calendars (e.g. Outlook) can automatically do this for you.






              share|improve this answer






















                up vote
                4
                down vote










                up vote
                4
                down vote









                If you're mostly away for scheduled meetings, perhaps simply sharing your calendar with your colleagues would be a better solution? Microsoft Outlook allows you to share calendars with your co-workers, meaning they will be able to check exactly when you are busy and when you are available without having to walk to your desk, and without you having to manually write a note.



                Also, in line with Enderland's suggestion of marking yourself as "Away" in your office IM system, some calendars (e.g. Outlook) can automatically do this for you.






                share|improve this answer












                If you're mostly away for scheduled meetings, perhaps simply sharing your calendar with your colleagues would be a better solution? Microsoft Outlook allows you to share calendars with your co-workers, meaning they will be able to check exactly when you are busy and when you are available without having to walk to your desk, and without you having to manually write a note.



                Also, in line with Enderland's suggestion of marking yourself as "Away" in your office IM system, some calendars (e.g. Outlook) can automatically do this for you.







                share|improve this answer












                share|improve this answer



                share|improve this answer










                answered Oct 9 '12 at 23:04









                MikeFHay

                1413




                1413






















                     

                    draft saved


                    draft discarded


























                     


                    draft saved


                    draft discarded














                    StackExchange.ready(
                    function ()
                    StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fworkplace.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f4441%2fis-it-unprofessional-to-leave-a-note-while-you-are-gone-for-a-break%23new-answer', 'question_page');

                    );

                    Post as a guest

















































































                    Comments

                    Popular posts from this blog

                    What does second last employer means? [closed]

                    List of Gilmore Girls characters

                    Confectionery