Noisy office, how to tackle? [duplicate]

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  • Are there any strategies you can use to remain focused when working in a open plan environment?

    9 answers



I recently joined a software company. It has open space concept. I find it very noisy and counter productive. I use noise cancellation headphones but it is not practical to use it everyday when I am in office. I feel it is not healthy to use it everyday. I posted the question in stack overflow because I am sure many software engineers face similar problem. I am curious to know how others tackle this :)







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marked as duplicate by Michael Grubey, mhoran_psprep, IDrinkandIKnowThings, squeemish, acolyte Jun 28 '13 at 14:52


This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.










  • 1




    you didn't get a tour of the office before you accepted the position? There are so many questions of people complaining about noisy office space, it makes me wonder.
    – squeemish
    Jun 28 '13 at 14:50






  • 1




    Maybe it's my age but really, it's not hard to learn to ignore noise and concentrate. It was expected that you would do that when I started working. People would have laughed and pointed if you had used headphones or complained about the noise (which was really high in the office I worked in as we had 20+ people and at least 4 or 5 conversations at all times and the radio playing country music very loudly and several phones ringing fairly constantly).
    – HLGEM
    Jun 28 '13 at 16:09










  • @squeemish some company's that work with NDAs might not allow you full access to the building when going for a tour. When I was given a tour of my current workplace (shortly after my interview), I was shown the layout of the building and a few labs, but not the main office (where I would be working) because there was a lot of confidential stuff happening in there that day.
    – Jamie Taylor
    Jul 3 '13 at 15:34










  • @HLGEM - Paradoxically, when there are many different noises occurring at once they all tend to combine into white noise which can be easy to ignore. Singular loud noises are a different beast.
    – Martin F
    Oct 13 '14 at 19:14
















up vote
9
down vote

favorite













This question already has an answer here:



  • Are there any strategies you can use to remain focused when working in a open plan environment?

    9 answers



I recently joined a software company. It has open space concept. I find it very noisy and counter productive. I use noise cancellation headphones but it is not practical to use it everyday when I am in office. I feel it is not healthy to use it everyday. I posted the question in stack overflow because I am sure many software engineers face similar problem. I am curious to know how others tackle this :)







share|improve this question












marked as duplicate by Michael Grubey, mhoran_psprep, IDrinkandIKnowThings, squeemish, acolyte Jun 28 '13 at 14:52


This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.










  • 1




    you didn't get a tour of the office before you accepted the position? There are so many questions of people complaining about noisy office space, it makes me wonder.
    – squeemish
    Jun 28 '13 at 14:50






  • 1




    Maybe it's my age but really, it's not hard to learn to ignore noise and concentrate. It was expected that you would do that when I started working. People would have laughed and pointed if you had used headphones or complained about the noise (which was really high in the office I worked in as we had 20+ people and at least 4 or 5 conversations at all times and the radio playing country music very loudly and several phones ringing fairly constantly).
    – HLGEM
    Jun 28 '13 at 16:09










  • @squeemish some company's that work with NDAs might not allow you full access to the building when going for a tour. When I was given a tour of my current workplace (shortly after my interview), I was shown the layout of the building and a few labs, but not the main office (where I would be working) because there was a lot of confidential stuff happening in there that day.
    – Jamie Taylor
    Jul 3 '13 at 15:34










  • @HLGEM - Paradoxically, when there are many different noises occurring at once they all tend to combine into white noise which can be easy to ignore. Singular loud noises are a different beast.
    – Martin F
    Oct 13 '14 at 19:14












up vote
9
down vote

favorite









up vote
9
down vote

favorite












This question already has an answer here:



  • Are there any strategies you can use to remain focused when working in a open plan environment?

    9 answers



I recently joined a software company. It has open space concept. I find it very noisy and counter productive. I use noise cancellation headphones but it is not practical to use it everyday when I am in office. I feel it is not healthy to use it everyday. I posted the question in stack overflow because I am sure many software engineers face similar problem. I am curious to know how others tackle this :)







share|improve this question













This question already has an answer here:



  • Are there any strategies you can use to remain focused when working in a open plan environment?

    9 answers



I recently joined a software company. It has open space concept. I find it very noisy and counter productive. I use noise cancellation headphones but it is not practical to use it everyday when I am in office. I feel it is not healthy to use it everyday. I posted the question in stack overflow because I am sure many software engineers face similar problem. I am curious to know how others tackle this :)





This question already has an answer here:



  • Are there any strategies you can use to remain focused when working in a open plan environment?

    9 answers









share|improve this question











share|improve this question




share|improve this question










asked Jun 28 '13 at 14:10









helpasneeded

4612




4612




marked as duplicate by Michael Grubey, mhoran_psprep, IDrinkandIKnowThings, squeemish, acolyte Jun 28 '13 at 14:52


This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.






marked as duplicate by Michael Grubey, mhoran_psprep, IDrinkandIKnowThings, squeemish, acolyte Jun 28 '13 at 14:52


This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.









  • 1




    you didn't get a tour of the office before you accepted the position? There are so many questions of people complaining about noisy office space, it makes me wonder.
    – squeemish
    Jun 28 '13 at 14:50






  • 1




    Maybe it's my age but really, it's not hard to learn to ignore noise and concentrate. It was expected that you would do that when I started working. People would have laughed and pointed if you had used headphones or complained about the noise (which was really high in the office I worked in as we had 20+ people and at least 4 or 5 conversations at all times and the radio playing country music very loudly and several phones ringing fairly constantly).
    – HLGEM
    Jun 28 '13 at 16:09










  • @squeemish some company's that work with NDAs might not allow you full access to the building when going for a tour. When I was given a tour of my current workplace (shortly after my interview), I was shown the layout of the building and a few labs, but not the main office (where I would be working) because there was a lot of confidential stuff happening in there that day.
    – Jamie Taylor
    Jul 3 '13 at 15:34










  • @HLGEM - Paradoxically, when there are many different noises occurring at once they all tend to combine into white noise which can be easy to ignore. Singular loud noises are a different beast.
    – Martin F
    Oct 13 '14 at 19:14












  • 1




    you didn't get a tour of the office before you accepted the position? There are so many questions of people complaining about noisy office space, it makes me wonder.
    – squeemish
    Jun 28 '13 at 14:50






  • 1




    Maybe it's my age but really, it's not hard to learn to ignore noise and concentrate. It was expected that you would do that when I started working. People would have laughed and pointed if you had used headphones or complained about the noise (which was really high in the office I worked in as we had 20+ people and at least 4 or 5 conversations at all times and the radio playing country music very loudly and several phones ringing fairly constantly).
    – HLGEM
    Jun 28 '13 at 16:09










  • @squeemish some company's that work with NDAs might not allow you full access to the building when going for a tour. When I was given a tour of my current workplace (shortly after my interview), I was shown the layout of the building and a few labs, but not the main office (where I would be working) because there was a lot of confidential stuff happening in there that day.
    – Jamie Taylor
    Jul 3 '13 at 15:34










  • @HLGEM - Paradoxically, when there are many different noises occurring at once they all tend to combine into white noise which can be easy to ignore. Singular loud noises are a different beast.
    – Martin F
    Oct 13 '14 at 19:14







1




1




you didn't get a tour of the office before you accepted the position? There are so many questions of people complaining about noisy office space, it makes me wonder.
– squeemish
Jun 28 '13 at 14:50




you didn't get a tour of the office before you accepted the position? There are so many questions of people complaining about noisy office space, it makes me wonder.
– squeemish
Jun 28 '13 at 14:50




1




1




Maybe it's my age but really, it's not hard to learn to ignore noise and concentrate. It was expected that you would do that when I started working. People would have laughed and pointed if you had used headphones or complained about the noise (which was really high in the office I worked in as we had 20+ people and at least 4 or 5 conversations at all times and the radio playing country music very loudly and several phones ringing fairly constantly).
– HLGEM
Jun 28 '13 at 16:09




Maybe it's my age but really, it's not hard to learn to ignore noise and concentrate. It was expected that you would do that when I started working. People would have laughed and pointed if you had used headphones or complained about the noise (which was really high in the office I worked in as we had 20+ people and at least 4 or 5 conversations at all times and the radio playing country music very loudly and several phones ringing fairly constantly).
– HLGEM
Jun 28 '13 at 16:09












@squeemish some company's that work with NDAs might not allow you full access to the building when going for a tour. When I was given a tour of my current workplace (shortly after my interview), I was shown the layout of the building and a few labs, but not the main office (where I would be working) because there was a lot of confidential stuff happening in there that day.
– Jamie Taylor
Jul 3 '13 at 15:34




@squeemish some company's that work with NDAs might not allow you full access to the building when going for a tour. When I was given a tour of my current workplace (shortly after my interview), I was shown the layout of the building and a few labs, but not the main office (where I would be working) because there was a lot of confidential stuff happening in there that day.
– Jamie Taylor
Jul 3 '13 at 15:34












@HLGEM - Paradoxically, when there are many different noises occurring at once they all tend to combine into white noise which can be easy to ignore. Singular loud noises are a different beast.
– Martin F
Oct 13 '14 at 19:14




@HLGEM - Paradoxically, when there are many different noises occurring at once they all tend to combine into white noise which can be easy to ignore. Singular loud noises are a different beast.
– Martin F
Oct 13 '14 at 19:14










1 Answer
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up vote
2
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Keep out the noise



If possible, wear headphones when you need to concentrate. Some may even prefer earplugs but that would be a little extreme and your colleagues might view you as an anti-social who does not want to mix with them. Listen to your favourite music and keep the noise out. That way, you can concentrate better on the job at hand and meet the deadline.



Tell Them to Shut up, Gently



If you need some peace or require a little less noise in the office in order to work, talk to your colleagues and get their cooperation to tone down their conversation. Do it tactfully so as not to offend them. Do it professionally and inform them that you would appreciate some quiet for you to concentrate on an urgent job, and do it firmly by keeping your tone firm, yet level. They do not owe it to you to be quiet. You are requesting them to help you out by keeping down their voices. This way you can get your work done in peace without offending anyone.



Embrace the Noise



The adage "If you can't beat them, join them" will be very tempting to apply in this situation but the bottom line is, you still have a task to complete. Embrace the noise around you by mentally blocking out the noise and concentrate on the task at hand. Master the art of mental noise block, which will come in handy for you to function anywhere, anyplace, regardless of the environment and still be able to produce work.



Talk to the Boss



Apply this tip only if all else fail and the situation gets out of control. Talk to the relevant authority in the organisation about the working environment which has hampered your ability to concentrate at work. If you do not know who to talk to, approach your immediate superior and explain to him/her about your issues. Let them decide on the next step to take. Approach this topic with tact as you do not wish to be seen as a "tell tale" who tells on others who complains all the small matters to the boss or the "social outcast" who cannot bear to see others talking and enjoying their social interaction at work.






share|improve this answer



























    1 Answer
    1






    active

    oldest

    votes








    1 Answer
    1






    active

    oldest

    votes









    active

    oldest

    votes






    active

    oldest

    votes








    up vote
    2
    down vote













    Keep out the noise



    If possible, wear headphones when you need to concentrate. Some may even prefer earplugs but that would be a little extreme and your colleagues might view you as an anti-social who does not want to mix with them. Listen to your favourite music and keep the noise out. That way, you can concentrate better on the job at hand and meet the deadline.



    Tell Them to Shut up, Gently



    If you need some peace or require a little less noise in the office in order to work, talk to your colleagues and get their cooperation to tone down their conversation. Do it tactfully so as not to offend them. Do it professionally and inform them that you would appreciate some quiet for you to concentrate on an urgent job, and do it firmly by keeping your tone firm, yet level. They do not owe it to you to be quiet. You are requesting them to help you out by keeping down their voices. This way you can get your work done in peace without offending anyone.



    Embrace the Noise



    The adage "If you can't beat them, join them" will be very tempting to apply in this situation but the bottom line is, you still have a task to complete. Embrace the noise around you by mentally blocking out the noise and concentrate on the task at hand. Master the art of mental noise block, which will come in handy for you to function anywhere, anyplace, regardless of the environment and still be able to produce work.



    Talk to the Boss



    Apply this tip only if all else fail and the situation gets out of control. Talk to the relevant authority in the organisation about the working environment which has hampered your ability to concentrate at work. If you do not know who to talk to, approach your immediate superior and explain to him/her about your issues. Let them decide on the next step to take. Approach this topic with tact as you do not wish to be seen as a "tell tale" who tells on others who complains all the small matters to the boss or the "social outcast" who cannot bear to see others talking and enjoying their social interaction at work.






    share|improve this answer
























      up vote
      2
      down vote













      Keep out the noise



      If possible, wear headphones when you need to concentrate. Some may even prefer earplugs but that would be a little extreme and your colleagues might view you as an anti-social who does not want to mix with them. Listen to your favourite music and keep the noise out. That way, you can concentrate better on the job at hand and meet the deadline.



      Tell Them to Shut up, Gently



      If you need some peace or require a little less noise in the office in order to work, talk to your colleagues and get their cooperation to tone down their conversation. Do it tactfully so as not to offend them. Do it professionally and inform them that you would appreciate some quiet for you to concentrate on an urgent job, and do it firmly by keeping your tone firm, yet level. They do not owe it to you to be quiet. You are requesting them to help you out by keeping down their voices. This way you can get your work done in peace without offending anyone.



      Embrace the Noise



      The adage "If you can't beat them, join them" will be very tempting to apply in this situation but the bottom line is, you still have a task to complete. Embrace the noise around you by mentally blocking out the noise and concentrate on the task at hand. Master the art of mental noise block, which will come in handy for you to function anywhere, anyplace, regardless of the environment and still be able to produce work.



      Talk to the Boss



      Apply this tip only if all else fail and the situation gets out of control. Talk to the relevant authority in the organisation about the working environment which has hampered your ability to concentrate at work. If you do not know who to talk to, approach your immediate superior and explain to him/her about your issues. Let them decide on the next step to take. Approach this topic with tact as you do not wish to be seen as a "tell tale" who tells on others who complains all the small matters to the boss or the "social outcast" who cannot bear to see others talking and enjoying their social interaction at work.






      share|improve this answer






















        up vote
        2
        down vote










        up vote
        2
        down vote









        Keep out the noise



        If possible, wear headphones when you need to concentrate. Some may even prefer earplugs but that would be a little extreme and your colleagues might view you as an anti-social who does not want to mix with them. Listen to your favourite music and keep the noise out. That way, you can concentrate better on the job at hand and meet the deadline.



        Tell Them to Shut up, Gently



        If you need some peace or require a little less noise in the office in order to work, talk to your colleagues and get their cooperation to tone down their conversation. Do it tactfully so as not to offend them. Do it professionally and inform them that you would appreciate some quiet for you to concentrate on an urgent job, and do it firmly by keeping your tone firm, yet level. They do not owe it to you to be quiet. You are requesting them to help you out by keeping down their voices. This way you can get your work done in peace without offending anyone.



        Embrace the Noise



        The adage "If you can't beat them, join them" will be very tempting to apply in this situation but the bottom line is, you still have a task to complete. Embrace the noise around you by mentally blocking out the noise and concentrate on the task at hand. Master the art of mental noise block, which will come in handy for you to function anywhere, anyplace, regardless of the environment and still be able to produce work.



        Talk to the Boss



        Apply this tip only if all else fail and the situation gets out of control. Talk to the relevant authority in the organisation about the working environment which has hampered your ability to concentrate at work. If you do not know who to talk to, approach your immediate superior and explain to him/her about your issues. Let them decide on the next step to take. Approach this topic with tact as you do not wish to be seen as a "tell tale" who tells on others who complains all the small matters to the boss or the "social outcast" who cannot bear to see others talking and enjoying their social interaction at work.






        share|improve this answer












        Keep out the noise



        If possible, wear headphones when you need to concentrate. Some may even prefer earplugs but that would be a little extreme and your colleagues might view you as an anti-social who does not want to mix with them. Listen to your favourite music and keep the noise out. That way, you can concentrate better on the job at hand and meet the deadline.



        Tell Them to Shut up, Gently



        If you need some peace or require a little less noise in the office in order to work, talk to your colleagues and get their cooperation to tone down their conversation. Do it tactfully so as not to offend them. Do it professionally and inform them that you would appreciate some quiet for you to concentrate on an urgent job, and do it firmly by keeping your tone firm, yet level. They do not owe it to you to be quiet. You are requesting them to help you out by keeping down their voices. This way you can get your work done in peace without offending anyone.



        Embrace the Noise



        The adage "If you can't beat them, join them" will be very tempting to apply in this situation but the bottom line is, you still have a task to complete. Embrace the noise around you by mentally blocking out the noise and concentrate on the task at hand. Master the art of mental noise block, which will come in handy for you to function anywhere, anyplace, regardless of the environment and still be able to produce work.



        Talk to the Boss



        Apply this tip only if all else fail and the situation gets out of control. Talk to the relevant authority in the organisation about the working environment which has hampered your ability to concentrate at work. If you do not know who to talk to, approach your immediate superior and explain to him/her about your issues. Let them decide on the next step to take. Approach this topic with tact as you do not wish to be seen as a "tell tale" who tells on others who complains all the small matters to the boss or the "social outcast" who cannot bear to see others talking and enjoying their social interaction at work.







        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered Jun 28 '13 at 14:17









        Michael Grubey

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