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Tuesday, June 3, 2008

Make a Goodwill Tour of Your Office, Increase Productivity

My first job was at a start-up of just three people (it grew to a whopping 12 at its largest). At first we didn’t even have separate offices, and as we grew, we upgraded to larger digs with more people crammed two to an office. At a start-up, everyone pretty much knows everything about each other’s lives. It’s not just the office sharing; it’s the long hours, the pent-up stress blowouts, and the commiseration over peeved significant others and your lack of life/sleep.

Things were a little different when I started at my present company, which has approximately 300 employees. My department is made up of only three people (sound familiar?), and we have one large open office. So, like before, we’re pretty much in tune with what’s going on in each other’s lives, without the crazy 60-to-80-hour week crap. (I love trying to figure out how to talk to gyno on the phone with my male boss within earshot. Fun.)

That said, there are nine other departments in my company, with varying numbers in each department (IT has three like us, while advertising has more than 50). I usually only have contact with these people when I need something from them. They don’t really know me from Adam, so I have to wait in line usually like everyone else. But I see the long-timers and the super-friendlies skipping their way to the figurative front of the line all the time. I figured this was just how it went and so be it.

There is a part of corporate life that I don’t always understand. It’s the water cooler conversations. To be honest, I don’t give a crap about American Idol, Let’s Make a Deal or what your kids are doing. The asinine things I would hear people talk about totally escaped me – there are times where what they are saying doesn’t even make sense, jokes with mismatched punch lines, etc.

But I learned how to speak it eventually. The first couple of times I didn’t even understand what I was saying but the coworker chuckled and left. As I caught on, I realized that while I may not care what’s going on in my coworkers’ lives, that connection can be leveraged.

If you aren’t a natural connector or social butterfly, try making a “goodwill tour” of your company. Take an hour or so in the morning, when folks are getting their coffee, checking their e-mail and reading the headlines to ask them how their weekend was, how their kids are, how their week is going so far.

I stopped by one department on Monday to ask a manager if he was feeling any better after being out the prior week. He seemed surprised and was genuine in his thanks for the inquiry. As I left I asked another coworker in that department how his weekend was and how his kids were, knowing how much he values his family. I asked another how her daughter’s graduation went, and made a joke about a woman having more work done than the coworker’s house, which I overhear her complaining about the renovation on.

I used to think these things were enormous productivity blockades and time-wasters. Sometimes they are; but other times it has helped me jump to the head of that proverbial line. How’s that cold, Roy? Oh, good to hear. Listen, I’m having tough time getting these lists…

While it sounds self-serving in some aspects, it’s helped me to get involved in my colleagues’ lives to a healthy extent. I have even built outside relationships with a small handful of them. Sometimes I have to be forced into social situations and increasing productivity and decreasing work downtime is a great motivator for me.

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3 Comments:

Anonymous Honey said...

I have tried to explain this to the BF, and it's behind my "9 ways to sound smarter" post on my site. It's tough at first to figure out, though...

June 3, 2008 7:01 PM  
Anonymous Norcross said...

I have to force myself to do that. While my boss and I have a great relationship and chat like friends, that's about where it ends (for the most part). I actually did a guest post about the "work friend" idea, and I'll be putting it on my blog today.

June 4, 2008 8:53 AM  
Blogger Janice said...

The more pals you have in the office, the easier it is to get what you need when you need it. It's definitely a lot harder in a large office/company where you rarely have reason to work with people in other departments, but that's when it's more important to make that effort. I work in a not tiny but not large office, and it's nice to know that if I really needed help, 14 other people have my back. We help each other out in large part b/c of quid pro quo, but I'd also like to believe it's also because most of us understand that we're all stressed out and overworked, but you just can't leave a teammate high and dry.

I was also thinking the other day about how it pays to be nice. My organization often gets phone calls for an affiliated company with a similar name, and whenever we get calls for them, we always direct them to the sales rep we're friendliest with.

June 8, 2008 11:46 AM  

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