Question: What is your take on the typical workplace?

Jason Fried: Yeah, my feeling is that the modern workplace is structured completely wrong. It’s really optimized for interruptions. And interruptions are the enemy of work. They are the enemy of productivity, they are the enemy of creativity, they are the enemy of everything. But that’s what the modern workplace is all about, it’s interruptions. Everyone’s calling meetings all the time, everyone’s screaming people’s names across the thing, there’s phones ringing all the time. People are walking around. It’s all about interruptions. And people go to work today, and then they end up doing most of their real work after work, or on the weekends. So, people are working longer hours, people are tired – I’m working 50-60 hours this week. It’s not that there’s 50 or 60 hours worth of work to do, it’s because you don’t work at work anymore. You go to work to get interrupted.

What happens is, is that you show up at work and you sit down and you don’t just immediately begin working, like you have to roll into work. You have to sort of get into a zone, just like you don’t just go to sleep, like you lay down and you go to sleep. You go to work too. But then you know, 45 minutes in, there’s a meeting. And so, now you don’t have a work day anymore, you have like this work moment that was only 45 minutes. And it’s not really 45 minutes, it’s more like 20 minutes, because it takes some time to get into it and then you’ve got to get out of it and you’ve got to go to a meeting.

Then when the meeting’s over, you’re probably pissed off anyway because it was a waste of time and then the meeting’s over and you don’t just go right back to work again, you got to kind of slowly get back into work. And then there’s a conference call, and then someone calls your name, “Hey, come a check this out. Come over here.” And like before you know it, it’s 4:00 and you’ve got nothing done today. And this is what’s happening all over corporate America right now. Everybody I know, I don’t care what business they’re in. Like when I talk to them about this, it’s like “Yeah, that’s my life.” Like, that is my life, and it’s wrong.

And so I think that has to change. If people want to get things done, they’ve got to get rid of interruptions. And so I think that’s something we’re focused on, is trying to remove every possible interruption from people’s day. So they have longer and longer periods of uninterrupted time to actually get work done. And so, our whole workplace, whatever the word you want to use, the office, workplace, although we’re kind of virtual anyways; it’s structured around removing interruptions. And one of the best ways you can do this is to shift your collaboration between people to more passive things. Using our products or someone else’s products. Things that you can put aside when I’m busy. So, if I’m busy, I don’t have to look at Base Camp, I don’t have to check email, I don’t have to check IM. I can put those things aside and do my work. And then when I’m done with my work and I need a break, I can go check these things out.

But if someone’s calling my name, or tapping on my shoulder, or knocking on my door, I can’t ignore those things. I can quit a program, but I can’t quit someone knocking on my door. I can’t quit someone calling my name, or someone ringing me on the phone. So, we try and, even though we might be sitting right across from each other, we don’t talk to each other, hardly at all during the day. Even though we’re right there, we’ll use instant messaging, or email, and if someone doesn’t respond, it means they’re busy. And they probably put that window away. Instead of calling, “Hey Jason, Jason, Jason” until they respond, that’s interrupting somebody; that doesn’t work and that’s how most workplaces are.

And managers are the biggest problem because their whole world is built around interruption. That’s what they do. Management means interrupting. Hey, what’s going on? How’s this going? Let me call a meeting because that’s what I do all day, I call meetings. And so, managers are the real problems here and that’s got to change too. So, as managers of our company, we don’t really manage people, but we prefer people to be managers of one. Let them just figure things out on their own, and if they need our help, they can ask us for it instead of us always constantly asking them if they need help and getting in their way. So, we’re all about getting rid of interruptions. And I think that if companies were more focused on getting rid of interruptions, they would get a whole lot more work done.

Question: How does your company avoid these distractions?

Jason Fried: So, this isn’t really a plug, but we use our product called Campfire, which is a real time chat tool. That is our office. Campfire is our office, and that’s a web based chat tool where there’s a persistent chat room open all the time. Anyone who has a question for anyone else in the company posts it there and in real time, everyone else can see it if they’re looking at it. But if they’re busy, they just don’t pay attention. And then if non one responds, then that means someone is busy. Not like, I’m going to keep calling their name until they turn around. That’s what it’s like in most offices. Or you ring someone and they’re not there and so you call their name, and they’re not there, so you go to their office and you bang on their door. If someone doesn’t respond in Campfire, it means they’re busy. And unless it’s a true emergency, where you really need an answer right now, then you just let them be and they’ll get back to you in three hours. And the truth of the matter is, there are almost no true emergencies in business. Everything can wait a few hours. Everything can wait a day. It’s not a big deal if you get back to me later in the day for me to know right now.

And the other thing about interruptions and calling people’s names, and ringing them on the phone and stuff, it’s actually really an arrogant sort of move because you’re saying that whatever I have to ask you is more important than what you’re doing. Because I’m going to stop you from doing what you are doing for me to ask you this questions that probably doesn’t matter anyway. So, we’re very cognizant of this, and we make sure that we only ping people, that’s what we call it, digitally and in ways that will not really get in their way if they’re really busy.

And that’s not always the case, but that’s really what we try to do. And use Campfire and use Base Camp and use High Rise and all our products. Other people’s products this well as well, but we just use our own because we built them for ourselves and we use them and they’re free for us.

Question: Does your office have a hierarchy?

Jason Fried: Yeah. So, we don’t really have hierarchy, technically. I mean, ultimately the buck stops with me, but like it doesn’t get to that. We really let people make their own decisions and we give them feedback on those decisions and help them learn and make better decisions. And we have some small teams. People work in teams of three, but there are really no true leader in those teams necessarily. It’s like, the leader is the product. Like the product is what leads you. It’s got to be good. Quality is the leader and everyone has to understand that that’s what this is all about. We’re making good products here. We’re not making your idea, or my idea, we’re making a product that useful for our customers. So, that’s kind of what guides everything. And it’s surprisingly works pretty well.

We have like, big visions for things, and we all share common points of view on like what’s important, but ultimately it’s quality, it’s the product, it’s usefulness, it’s clarity. Those are the things that lead us on the right direction.

Discuss

Brad Choma
I have now watched this five times. It's an odd sensation to feel thoughts stolen from your mind and reproduced for you. Out of my head, Jason!
Chad Calhoun
Brad, was Windows 7 your idea too? j/k
Tim Hamsted
Yes! Now if somebody could just stealthily send the video to everybody's boss, day after day, we might all work in peace.
Ben Poole
Meetings, managers and phone calls are an easy target (and don't get me wrong, very entertaining), but not really the root of the problem. If we replace them with Basecamp, Campfire, more items to track, update and get "digitally pinged" throughout the day, those new tools are just the distracting phone calls of tomorrow.
Jason Fried
Ben: There's a huge difference between passive communication tools like Basecamp, Campfure, Email, IM, Wikis, etc... You can close them. You can put them away. You can hide the windows. You can get back to them later. Try hiding your manager or someone calling your name across the room. Try hiding from that required meeting you must attend. There's a huge gap between things you choose to be interrupted by and things you have no choice but to be interrupted by.
Sophie Dennis
Perhaps what Ben is hinting at, is that often the people you work with, or for, don't themselves get the idea of using tools like Basecamp, Campfure, Email, etc... for passive communication. They use them interruptively, expecting rapid responses to any contact. And the rise of the Crackberry has only made this worse. This leads to pressure to keep these communication channels permanently open, which makes them almost as interruptive as having someone shout across the office. There is huge productive power in being able to turn off email, Basecamp, IM etc... to accomplish real work, but we need to encourage everyone to adopt a less "always on" attitude.
Ben Poole
Good point, Jason. We actually use Basecamp, Salesforce and some homegrown Wiki's at our shop with phenomenal success. I guess I thought maybe that point in your video might be missed by managers who need to hear it most, due to a slightly abrasive tone towards them ("managers are the problem"). Anyway, your team's tools are all awesome and I recommend them regularly to peers and other developers.
Ben Poole
Sophie - spot on. I simply pictured a misguided manager getting his/her hands on Basecamp (just as an example), and imposing bad policies to bog you down with tracking time, reporting, and basically having to reread to them what you have already tracked in the passive modes, while they pat themselves on the back for going Web 2.0.
Ben Poole
And yes, the rise of the Crackberry is a perfect example of a tool intended for increased efficiency becoming a tool of unlimited distraction. In fairness, it does both.
Tyler Smith
Jason, Where do I apply? Seriously. Tyler
Nicki Earley
PM here - I use Basecamp and IM and whatever the new tool is now.... I Don't agree 100 percent - I think sometimes "management" does "bug" people that might be dodging a due date. If I don't get a response on Basecamp or IM in a timely manner what am I supposed to do to get what we need, wait until you decide your ready? Right. You state the problem and a somewhat half A**ed solution. Really we as "managers" are just trying to get the project finished for the person paying.
Ken Earley
Haha! My wife has a point. I'm a developer, she's a manager. We see things from different points of view. Jason points the finger at managers being the problem. It really is more of a problem with BAD managers. Ones that don't have their act together. And to be more fair, it's bad communication strategies between management and developers. So, bad, lazy, crappy workers aside, it's more about changing the culture and communication than pointing fingers. Developers need time to work on their projects without distraction. However, management need to get information to pass on to clients, set up expectations, make contingency plans, organize work schedules, etc. To allow both sides to get what they need, they need to set up a communication strategy that works. Developers need to be able to articulate where they are, what they have done, and what their roadblocks are in an effective way. Managers need to organize all their questions and send them off with a realistic expectation of when the questions should be answered. Setting up a strategy that allows for non-emergency communication to be handled once a day, isn't too much to ask for as long as both sides take the time to do it completely.
Jason Fried
All good points. Yes, it's about bad managers, not just managers in general, but since management as a concept produces nothing on its own, management justifies its existence by creating meetings and meddling in a lot of people's work. Of course this is not always the case - and managers often think it's rarely the case - but if you talk with workers you'll get an entirely different story. I side with the workers on this one. People want to get things done, but they need uninterrupted stretches time to get those things done. Regarding tools and interruption... That is also true. But that's not the tool's fault. A tool is just a tool. How people use the tool, and how they're encouraged to use the tool, makes all the difference. A stressful environment and/or manager that sets an expectation of instant responses and ASAP all the time is going to be stressful no matter what tool you use. It all comes back to the expectations you set, the environment you create as a manager or business owner, and the value you put on what people really want: Respect for their time and work.
Jason Fried
Let me add one more thing... There are very few true business emergencies. ASAP is poison. Managers and businesses cry wolf far too often. Slow down a little. Give people some space. Tomorrow delivery is usually fine, 11pm tonight is usually not.
Dan Williamson
Dan Williamson
What if you work within 10 yards of your MD? Am we supposed to ignore them? Say 'Hey, that's pretty arrogant of you to assume that your query is more important than what I'm doing right now?'. Please. There are some good points here, but enterprise tool plug aside, this approach may best suit a lumbering corporate where business moves a little slower / structures are less flat. My solution? Work from home if possible. My work is all digital based, so it can be done pretty much anywhere. Even around the corner at a cafe if interuptions become unmanageable.
Petros Amiridis
I agree with Jason, but I have to also agree with many of the points made by other folks here. I want to emphasize one problem with passive tools. When you are in a company of mixed culture you don't get all the benefit you could get. I am head of a small team of developers. We use FogBugz. Management doesn't use it often. As a result, I have to repeat everything me and my team has already entered week by week. Sometimes sooner. This is cumbersome and frustrating. Anyway, I hope as time passes, people around us in the company, adopt our culture.
Dan Williamson
Dan Williamson
@Petros - You can see why Basecamp works so well. Its email based alert and reply approach helps tick everyone's box - including management who grew up with / default to email. Surely some research exists on how long enterprise tools typically take to bed-down in an organisation. And which types (with which qualities) bed-down quicker...?
Jason Fried
Interruption itself is arrogant. When you interrupt someone you are saying "What I have to ask you is more important than what you're doing." How often is that really true? How often is the question or comment or meeting worth a break in your attention, your focus, and your work?
Gaby Prado
As both a manager and a resource for others, I feel torn. Interruptions do kill me, but just as much not having answers or knowledge I need to manage. So there's a biggie that we should include in the equation: flawless communication. I assume by your omitting this topic that your team never fails to inform others in time, give delivery time and meet it, etc. If the "respect-my-working-time" periods are not coupled by a "respect-thy-worker-communicating-well" attitude, tools won't do the trick. Mind you, I am a Basecamp user, and heavily into digital pings, but do -more often than desired- tap on shoulders and wish I didn't have to.
Haider Al-Mosawi
I didn't notice who the video was presented by, but 20 seconds into the video I thought this sounds a lot like 37signals! :P
onsip
Great thought on efficiency in the workplace. We use Basecamp for project work / doc sharing / long term communication and our web tool (my.OnSIP) for daily communication. As a VoIP service, our chat tool is integrated with the web tool - so we know if our coworkers are on the phone or busy. Voicemails are also emailed to us, streamlining communication further. Less interruption, more work! onsip.com
Felicia Heartsong
When I took an Operations Research college class in 1982, we were shown a formula that described this. The key variable was "Recovery Time". When you are working on anything complex, it is like juggling, if you get interrupted, it takes time and effort to get all the balls in the air again. I wish I would have kept that book.
Ryan Torrenti
Hurry-sickness. It is inevitable for us to escape the world, and this is especially in regards to the world we live in. I'm still in College, but through even the jobs that I have held through the years I can see Jason's point. I can remember working at a car wash detailing cars, and the constant interruptions from my manager that at the end of the day would ultimately slow down production. Now, I was in a work place obviously where human interaction was essential, and I was not assigned a neat computer with all of these programs that I could displace at my disposal, but here is the key. Mangers, Boss's, Slave drivers, whatever you want to refer them as, use discretion when communicating with employees. Be smart about the timing in which you approach your staff, and think less of yourself, and power trip, and more of the productivity of your company as a whole. I have a father who is in charge of regional sales for the entire northeast, and down to Florida. Largely his time is spent on his I phone, Mac, and or traveling on the road. I think it is imperative that we in the work place differentiate between work, and home. I think Mr. Fried is heading in the right direction, but there is more to it.
Mary McCabe
As a middle school teacher, I am amazed the students retain anything due to the constant interruptions during class time. These range from tardy students who must be caught up, phone calls asking us to send a certain student to the office, delivery of notices that must be handed out, announcements over the intercom, to the final and most consistent interruption, redirecting students who have lost their focus. But hey, guess we're just training them for the real world.....
Jason Liebe
Jason Liebe
I think it circles back around to what Jason said about making the product the leader. When a team knows that everything revolves around the success of the project it puts them in a different mindset.
Vincent P Domeraski
Two words. The Office.
Nonie 3234
This is the main reason why I get twice the amount of work done when I work at home, than if I go in to the office! I sent this to my supervisor, and to her manager. They have been spreading it also. Perhaps it will initiate a change in my workplace! Thank you so much.
Kevin Eves
Does REWORK, or some other resource, contemplate the scalability issue, ie, addressing flow/interruption is great and doable for reasonably sized groups. I've rarely seen any cogent argument for how to scale it to meet the needs of organizations that legitimately have a charter or meet a need that can't be met by self-organizing ad hocracy.
John Nolt
I'm a product manager, one of those people that runs around asking people for stuff, calling meetings, fretting about "deliverables" that seem to be needed "ASAP". Maybe it's that I feel targeted by Jason's rant, or some other more subtle reason, but something about this video made me angry. I'm trying to parse my emotional response, and I think it boils down to a couple of things: 1. I find that in my daily work life many people have trouble parsing the written word and divining actionable content from it. Maybe it's my writing skills that are deficient, but I know that if I talk to someone in person they are a) forced to respond to me, finally, when I have trouble getting them to answer via chat, email, or phone... b) more likely to understand what I need, since I can make sure I have their attention and... c) more likely to follow through with whatever we talked about, since I'm staring them in the face when they promise to do something for me. 2. I like working in an environment with camaraderie and a bit of bustle. I like to see people huddled together working on a problem. I like gathering around a whiteboard figuring something out or brainstorming. These things make a happy "workplace" for me, and Jason's video seems to portend a dead-silent cubicle farm where it's a faux-pas to talk to my neighbor to ask the simplest question. Maybe the guys at 37Signals have this rich theater of the mind they're immersed in, when they want to be, via their chat tools and whatnot and it's totally intense and awesome like everybody's way into their code and building the next TRON and there's cheeto-dust and Mountain Dew cans everywhere. I do spend a large amount of my day chatting with various people individually and would really welcome an open room for chatting. But I also welcome my weekly team meetings, and I know that things we haven't discussed will come up during them simply because we're talking out loud, and also because people show up/call in who I don't chat with often or who don't respond often to group-list emails. I agree that "ASAP" is heinous, but sometimes it's reality. Sometimes customers can't get the service they're paying for and the business is losing money. Sometimes a project's existence is threatened because upper management requires an answer and I need to give it to them "ASAP" or else that thing we've all been working hard on will be scrubbed. Sometimes there *IS* urgency, whether it's an artifact of the marketplace or internal corporate culture. I'm a product manager, one of those people that runs around asking people for stuff, calling meetings, fretting about "deliverables" that seem to be needed "ASAP". Maybe it's that I feel targeted by Jason's rant, or some other more subtle reason, but something about this video made me angry. I'm trying to parse my emotional response, and I think it boils down to a couple of things: 1. I find that in my daily work life many people have trouble parsing the written word and divining actionable content from it. Maybe it's my writing skills that are deficient, but I know that if I talk to someone in person they are a) forced to respond to me, finally, when I have trouble getting them to answer via chat, email, or phone... b) more likely to understand what I need, since I can make sure I have their attention and... c) more likely to follow through with whatever we talked about, since I'm staring them in the face when they promise to do something for me. 2. I like working in an environment with camaraderie and a bit of bustle. I like to see people huddled together working on a problem. I like gathering around a whiteboard figuring something out or brainstorming. These things make a happy "workplace" for me, and Jason's video seems to portend a dead-silent cubicle farm where it's a faux-pas to talk to my neighbor to ask the simplest question. Maybe the guys at 37Signals have this rich theater of the mind they're immersed in, when they want to be, via their chat tools and whatnot and it's totally intense and awesome like everybody's way into their code and building the next TRON and there's cheeto-dust and Mountain Dew cans everywhere. I do spend a large amount of my day chatting with various people individually and would really welcome an open room for chatting. But I also welcome my weekly team meetings, and I know that things we haven't discussed will come up during them simply because we're talking out loud, and also because people show up/call in who I don't chat with often or who don't respond often to group-list emails. I agree that "ASAP" is heinous, but sometimes it's reality. Sometimes customers can't get the service they're paying for and the business is losing money. Sometimes a project's existence is threatened because upper management requires an answer and I need to give it to them "ASAP" or else that thing we've all been working hard on will be scrubbed. Sometimes there *IS* urgency, whether it's an artifact of the marketplace or internal corporate culture. I dunno, maybe I'm just resisting what seems to be Jason painting everything with such a broad brush, and speaking with such intensity and authority. Heck, I can't argue with 37Signals's success. Maybe I just need a nap.
John Nolt
Oh, and now I look like an idiot for double-posting, not to mention my response will never get read. *Sigh*
Jeff c
The amount of regurgitation on the internet is astounding.
Louis Mazzini
I can't work at work primarly down to Lotus Notes 6.5.
james rubinstein
Jason, I found your video both insightful and thought-provoking. I'm a Human Factors guy, and I'm always thinking about the human factors of work. I've had managers that are workus interruptus, and I've had other managers who say "here's the goal, here are the resources... call me when you are done". Either can be an impediment to work, although I'd like to think I'm smart enough to deal with the 'laissez-faire' managment style better. A manager's job is to lead, to organize, to motivate, and to direct. Some of those jobs require face-to-face interaction. I think, however, that managers often find themselves 'putting out fires' rather than being able to focus on strategy (I once hear the average amount of time a manager spends on a single task is 7minutes !), and as a result they probably consider their employees work schedule in the same way. We used to have a de-motivational poster in our office "Meetings: none of us can fail alone as spectacularly as we can fail together", or something like that. All that is just my way of saying that 37signals has an interesting way around this problem, using software. By queuing work up, an employee can always know what the next task is and only needs to be reminded of status, strategy, and goals. I say, "bravo" Mr Fried.
a e
This is so unbelievably accurate. In fact, I got interrupted while trying to watch it.
Jon Winebrenner
Apparently Jason has read the 4-hour Workweek and is applying it in full force within his business.
Doug Davies
Great video, I agree with almost everything, however there are some points that im not to sure about if im honest Pet Supplies
Dominic Deeson
I think there's some good stuff there but where this guy shoots himself in the foot is by taking 1,000 words to say something that could have been said in a hundred. No wonder he doesn't get anything done; he doesn't shut-up! Must be a bloody nightmare to work with. No wonder nobody ever talks to him.
Steve White
Some companies are oblivious to the fact that these interruptions (meetings, conference calls,etc) are having a negative impact on productivity. Between this and the social aspect of a typical office, it's a wonder anyone gets anything done. Steve from How to Get Your Ex Back
Paul D
This may work for teams of very self-motivated people, but it doesn't solve the manager's problem when the teams aren't so independent. How do you coordinate people who don't know how to prioritize by themselves without interrupting them? You can't just take information from one person to the next and wait 3 hours between hops. You'll end up with a pile of non-deliverable results, because all of your decisions will be out-of-date.
Tammy Camp
Tammy Camp
Great point Jason. If we have all these tools in place, I believe that we will start working within our lifestyle rather than work be our lifestyle. This is predominantly in the US work culture. Perhaps we should start being a bit more European?
brown erik
I agree with you here, my friend! These days, modern workplaces are entirely structured wrong. It is best utilized for interruptions. And we all know the major enemy of work is interruptions. Not just work, Interruptions pose a serious threat to creativity, productivity and everything. And unfortunately, that’s all modern workplaces are about. However these big visions are what that leads us into the right direction!contact center
Kaleb Center
This concept illustrates the difference between extroverts and introverts, and why extroverts more often become managers. It also explains the two sides to the comments posted here. Extroverts in the workplace need that vocalization of ideas in order to process information. They call meetings because the more voices there are, the better they think. They interrupt not because they are arrogant or think their topic outweighs yours, but because they don't attribute a loss of productivity to interruptions, but rather a fresh start. They believe that the more information that is shared, the better everyone's work becomes. Introverts, on the other hand, need the time to internalize ideas, projects, etc. Even when they're not "doing" anything (like the first 20-40 minutes at work) they're really refining an approach, working out strategy, and improving the process in advance. They're busy making "sense" of the external stimuli around them and putting that information into a useful form. They believe uninterrupted work time is necessary to ensure no critical piece of info is overlooked. Stopping to communicate their thoughts is only an unnecessary holdup and doesn't contribute to the task at hand. What we need, it seems, is an application that can probe the introverts' minds and vocalize the output to the extroverts.
Bonnie Bluhm
Try working in a healthcare setting! I am an RN who has worked in outpatient clinics (includes family practice, Urgent Care, shot clinics, specialty clinics) for years. The problem is that there are true emergencies (only in a clinic or a hospital should you be able to use that acronym ASAP) mixed up with stupid meetings, memos, extra paperwork on top of extra paperwork to please the lawyers, "step into my office" chats, hierarchies that demand obedience when none is necessary, lack of communication, lack of teamwork, lack of caring because the bottom line is the dollar and the competition. Healthcare settings, with few exceptions are breeding grounds for the worst aspects of working closely with humans: gossip, hearsay, rumor, backstabbing, plotting, ax-grinding, oneupmanship, ego trips, tattling, power trips. What we need everywhere are people who have trained themselves to be thoughtful, considerate, and patient. Its the rush for money and power that makes everyone so greedy and crazy that they are willing to make everyone else crazy. We need humans who care about other humans.
mehmet later
Where do I apply? Seriously.
turk mali dizisi
thanks for this post, admin ;) Türk Malı Dizisi
basoyna arven
Try working in a healthcare setting! I am an RN who has worked in outpatient clinics (includes family practice, cinsel sohbetUrgent Care, shot clinics, specialty clinics) for years. The problem is that there are true emergencies (only in a clinic or a hospital should you be able to use that acronym ASAP) mixed up with stupid meetings, memos, extra paperwork on top of extra paperwork to please the lawyers, “step into my office” chats, hierarchies that demand obedience when none is necessary, lack of communication, lack of teamwork, lack of caring because the bottom line is the dollar and the competition. Healthcare settings, with few exceptions are breeding grounds for the worst aspects of working closely with humans: gossip, hearsay, rumor, backstabbing, plotting, ax-grinding, oneupmanship, ego trips, tattling, power trips. What we need everywhere are people who have trained themselves to be thoughtful, considerate, and patient. Its the rush for money and power that makes everyone so greedy and crazy that they are willing to make everyone else crazy. We need humans who care about other humans. sohbet siteleri sohbet siteleri
yunus akin
Good point, Jason. We actually use Basecamp, Salesforce and some homegrown Wiki’s at our shop with phenomenal success. I guess I thought maybe that point in your video might be missed by managers who need to hear it most, due to a slightly abrasive tone towards them (“managers are the problem”). Anyway, your team’s tools are all awesome and I recommend them regularly to peers and other developers. Sohbet Chat
Kimberly Martin
Kimberly Martin
What a great lesson. I'm a high school principal and I am often amazed that a ten hour day can slip away and I've accomplished absolutely nothing. Imagine all the interruptions that Jason described with 100 adult employees- and then add 1000 teenagers and their parents to the mix. Goodness! Of course the emails and phone messages get checked from home!
Shalom Freedman
This makes a lot of sense. But even those of us have a more congenial workplace, at home , tend to let ourselves be interrupted by both the outside world and our own inner desires. 'Screw your courage to the sitting place' is in this sense perhaps the best advice one can give to oneself. But of course this too has to be qualified as we now have learned that 'standing' is a form of exercise which can really help in the weight- struggle for those of us who sit for long hours at work, and have a weight- problem.
Ben Andrews
That article perfectly described everything that's wrong with the way business is done these days. The amount of work I could potentially get done vs what actually gets done is vastly different. There have to be some smart executives out there who understand this. Buy Plates New Kinerase Reviews
Nicolas Chevallier
I had the same problem before : many interruptions, and a lot of time was lost... We are not using Basecamp but a proprietary web based tool that do almost the same but more specifically. CEO of Allogarage
William Sellers
A lot of this reminds me of the book "PeopleWare: Productive Projects and Teams" by Tom DeMarco and Timothy Listser" that was written in 1985. In that book they touched on putting cotton in the phone's bells so it could not insist on your attention so loudly. I've had a lot of managers, good and not-so-good. The odd part to me was the difference in how I felt about them socially and at work. Eventually, I began to feel that some people begin to mistake management with the product. ie. they begin to think that "management" is the product. One of my favorite quotes while working at BellSouth: "There are a million days to lose a working day. But not even a single way to get one back." -- DeMarco & Lister Being able to maximize a working day comes down to one thing: everyone agreeing to try. If even one member refuses to "delay gratification" without good reason, the system will break down. One last thought on "bad" managers kind of applies an "Innovators Dilemma" principle of harnessing forces. While at BellSouth I tried to point out the problem with one-celled managers to the higher-ups. But usually I only got chuckles or frowns from people who thought I meant "one-brain-celled" managers. I meant one-spreadsheet-cell. If executives give a manager custody of one cell on the master spreadsheet, they will tell the manager to make the number as big, or as small, as possible (for revenue or cost respectively.) Thus, the manager makes their goals at the expense of someone else's. The guy in charge of buying computers is told to spend as little as possible. He may buy very poor equipment despite the problem that the savings will more than be used by the IT department to keep it all running.
Lex Lionel
Part 1 is a great synopsis of today's office environment. What needs to be addressed is how we change that work place into a worker friendly environment. Part 2 is good, except there is no emphasis put on sense of urgency. The vehicle in place for dealing with issues is great as long as there's no need for immediacy. This is not a typical product that they're making.Salesmen would go nuts not being able to get answers NOW. Part 3 is good but this business sounds like it has a product that sells itself. The team concept works as long as there is competition between them.My best guess is this is a manufacturing corporate office, probably some kind of software maker. I'm glad his approach works for him. It' wouldn't in a traditional business. That's not saying it is bad, but very different.
Benjamin Weiss
This post is insightful and reflects what many people think. Yet that doesn't mean that the proposed solutions are fully effective nor that the 'problem' is exact. Management is a major issue, that's sure, but it's the system which is THE issue. Don't focus on tactical manager-worker relations, look at the whole system of corporate management (by which tactical managers' habbits are strongly influenced). Not every worker is enough qualified or trusted so that he could work without being managed. Not every manager can prioritize tasks without being strongly involved and knowledgable. Not every upper management can make conclusions without a bottom-up reflection process. As a whole, I liked alot your ideas but they should be integrated with specific corporate features such as corporate dynamics&politics constraints. Moreover, the solutions must be part of a system of corporate changes, they must not be implemented alone because if so they'll only make more issues.
Sanaldata sanaldata
All that is just my way of saying that 37signals has an interesting way around this problem, using software.
palmiye palmiye
All that is just my way of saying that 37signals has an interesting way around this problem, using software.
aspirinc masprnc
Try working in a healthcare setting! I am an RN who has worked in outpatient clinics (includes family practice, Urgent Care, shot clinics, specialty clinics) for years illegal-crew.org. The problem is that there are true emergencies (only in a clinic or a hospital should you be able to use that acronym ASAP) mixed up with stupid meetings, memos, extra paperwork on top of extra paperwork to please the lawyers, “step into my office” chats, hierarchies that demand obedience when none is necessary, lack of communication, lack of teamwork, lack of caring because the bottom line is the dollar and the competition. Healthcare settings, with few exceptions are breeding grounds for the worst aspects of working closely with humans: gossip, hearsay, rumor, backstabbing, plotting, ax-grinding, oneupmanship, ego trips, tattling, power trips. What we need everywhere are people who have trained themselves to be thoughtful, considerate, and patient. Its the rush for money and power that makes everyone so greedy and crazy that they are willing to make everyone else crazy. We need humans who care about other aspirinc.
Jerome Pesenti
It all sounds very good. But it ignores one big component of most businesses: customers.
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Randy Johnson
Right... He has, in general terms, described a trend throughout most industries and professions. How did it get this way? It is a combination of the following: 1. Data and info moving so fast and being so dynamic that every worker, even the lowest levels, needs massive amounts of priortizing--let alone "leadership." 2. The fierce competitiveness and selfish motives of even the most well-intentioned people make for a room, department, and ultimately a company, full of projects and agendas that are most important for the individual pushing it for selfish reasons. Hence mega-corporations where "the right hand doesn't know what the left hand is doing" or being told 5 different things by 3 different managers. Right, it doesn't add up.
Brian Doyle
Crap. I think its the declining work ethic in the younger work force.
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. I basically pictured a misguided manager getting his/her hands on Basecamp ( as an example), and imposing bad policies to bog you down with tracking time, reporting, and fundamentally having to reread to them what you have already tracked in the passive modes, while they pat themselves on the back
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. I basically pictured a misguided manager getting his/her hands on Basecamp ( as an example), and imposing bad policies to bog you down with tracking time, reporting, and fundamentally having to reread to them what you have already tracked in the passive modes, while they pat themselves on the back
Jean Bon
Hy, i am entrepreneur and i use basecamp for my project since they given a free version of their service. You gain a lot of time with this solution. CEO of Yootint
Ngex Syhera
All that is just my way of saying that 37signals has an interesting way around this problem, using software. Thanks
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That article perfectly described everything that's wrong with the way business is done these days. The amount of work I could potentially get done vs what actually gets done is vastly different. There have to be some smart executives out there who understand this. or New Health Reviews
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i liked the top 100 vidoes very much. there’s phones ringing all the time on that video.
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great. thank you.
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berlin travel multi msn If this means that we are all in one place, instead of working in this our life, our lifestyle will begin to work, as we believe. This is particularly the U.S. business culture. Maybe I should start a bit more European? photoshop mario oyunları strateji oyunları
J Pash
Regarding office productivity, I really this talk on Ted about how sound affects people. According to the speaker, open plan office can reduce productivity by 66%. Having worked from home for the past 5 year I can't say that my output has increased by 66%. But whenever I have to go into the office for a day or two, I get next to nothing done. Slightly off topic, but I think it's funny how so many people are sneaking links into their comments. It's quite an art. I guess this is why nofollow was invented.
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Well hopefully my response is correct. During working hours, we are required and it is our duty to always focus on our work. If we are not serious and focused, the only solution is to stop working because this is very harmful. Indonesia Furniture Handicraft Wholesale Marketplace
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Interruption itself is arrogant. When you interrupt someone you are saying "What I have to ask you is more important than what you're doing." How often is that really true? How often is the question or comment or meeting worth a break in your attention, your focus, and your work? Thanks Краник – магазин сантехники
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this makes a lot of sense. But even those of us have a more congenial workplace, at home , tend to let ourselves be interrupted by both the outside world and our own inner desires. 'Screw your courage to the sitting place' is in this sense perhaps the best advice one can give to oneself. göbek eritme health archive about for health fitness step pornjum
victoria
It depends what is your position and which workplace are you working. For example if you are working as a cashier, you can not answer your phone. you just have 15 minutes break every 3 hours and you can not talk to your coworkers or you can not leave your desk.
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Great article. Thank you. Modelika
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workplace are you working. For example if you are working as a cashier, you can not answer your phone.
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Prabhakar Krishanmurthy
Prabhakar Krishanmurthy
Your observation and research is also true for other places in the world, especially India. As a Professor, i have only interruptions. What is the alternative design that is workable?
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I want to emphasize one problem with passive tools. When you are in a company of mixed culture you don't get all the benefit you could get. Digital Slr Camera I am head of a small team of developers. We use FogBugz. Management doesn't use it often. Cars As a result, I have to repeat everything me and my team has already entered week by week. Sometimes sooner. This is cumbersome and frustrating. Anyway, I hope as time passes, people around us in the company, adopt our culture. Game Cheats
alice chang
nice topic! It just cool, But even those of us have a more congenial workplace, at home , tend to let ourselves be interrupted by both the outside world and our own inner desires. Red Bull Caps
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Carmen Banderas Dereck
It's simply of confusion result. I love to work and working is not a real problem.
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I’m writing from Turkey. I like your writings. Love learning about this…gives me inspiration when I hit walls and plateaus… Boy uzatma sometimes I have to let go and not try to control everything
Jarrod Frenzel
I have been working at home for the past 7 years. I am more productive working at home than any other situation of the past. I am a The Woodlands Appraiser and run my office out of the upstairs gameroom. I like it because of the awesome focus I have when I'm up there with no distractions.
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Basecamp ( as an example), Tatil köyü,Tatil köyleri and imposing bad policies to bog you down with tracking time, yemek tarifleri reporting, and fundamentally having to reread to them what you have already tracked in the passive modes, while they pat themselves on the back
james lee
I think it has been a good year except for the economy. We definitely have to work on this and get it going. orlando personal injury
Suzi Wol
This is so right! It is impossible to get the job done these days due to interruptions. At my last job the boss insisted on having meetings every day of the week and there was only the two of us that worked there! It's just crazy!
Suzi Wol
This is so right! It is impossible to get the job done these days due to interruptions. At my last job the boss insisted on having meetings every day of the week and there was only the two of us that worked there! It's just crazy!
Jerzy Kaltenberg
Jerzy Kaltenberg
It's easy to agree with a dilbertesque critique of workplace culture. Technology merely gives us the opportunity to change the way we work, provided the corporate culture allows us to do so. Point of fact, for majority of office workers it does not. The risk averse, micromanaged approach to work ( which in reality means diluting responsibility ad absurdiam & burdening workers with unnecessary reporting, meetings and other interruptions) effectively means that in order to get any work done at all, we must work against the rules and/or on our own time. Despite the fact that I work longer hours, I do not see any real productivity gains. I know that I could be more productive & certainly happier if I were only left alone to do the work I need & want to do without interruptions, but the work environment created by the aforementioned risk averse & micromanaged approach means I must wear myself out during the work day in mostly useless endevours & do the real work when I should be at rest. This can't be either good or productive. It's easy to say 'management is the problem', but that solves nothing. Management merely enforces the rules we all agree to when we join up. Work culture is the thing that needs to change, and it won’t change until we get decent economic growth & replace the cost control / risk management obsessed drones with technically competent leaders willing to take risk.
Jerzy Kaltenberg
Jerzy Kaltenberg
It's easy to agree with a dilbertesque critique of workplace culture. Technology merely gives us the opportunity to change the way we work, provided the corporate culture allows us to do so. Point of fact, for majority of office workers it does not. The risk averse, micromanaged approach to work ( which in reality means diluting responsibility ad absurdiam & burdening workers with unnecessary reporting, meetings and other interruptions) effectively means that in order to get any work done at all, we must work against the rules and/or on our own time. Despite the fact that I work longer hours, I do not see any real productivity gains. I know that I could be more productive & certainly happier if I were only left alone to do the work I need & want to do without interruptions, but the work environment created by the aforementioned risk averse & micromanaged approach means I must wear myself out during the work day in mostly useless endevours & do the real work when I should be at rest. This can't be either good or productive. It's easy to say 'management is the problem', but that solves nothing. Management merely enforces the rules we all agree to when we join up. Work culture is the thing that needs to change, and it won’t change until we get decent economic growth & replace the cost control / risk management obsessed drones with technically competent leaders willing to take risk.
John William Rod
It's awesome post and fully agreed. "Yeah, my feeling is that the modern workplace is structured completely wrong" I think also this way. oscar
Ranjit  Nambiar
Ranjit Nambiar
Good Post Jason Many times, the best way to avoid distractions at work is to focus on your work on Priority - and if your collegues understand that then you will not be interrupted .
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Why You Can’t Work at Work

Jason Fried
Co-founder, 37signals

With its constant commotion, unnecessary meetings, and infuriating wastes of time, the modern workplace makes us all work longer, less focused hours. Jason Fried explains how we can change all of this.

| In Business & Economics

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