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How to be productive while waiting for meetings to start, when managers are casual about being late
How to co-ordinate working hours for a team distributed across time zones?Am I right to consider workload when new good ideas are suggested by my team?Time management strategies for reading policy or technical documentation at workHow do you deal with co-workers who respond to your emails without reading the whole thing, or don't read them at all?Auditing time while waiting for tasksHow to handle being late
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The problem: I cannot work normally when I know I will be interrupted any minute.
Example:
- My manager say we have a team meeting (all 12 members) with the big boss in 14:30.
- In 14:27 I am already in a standby mode and cannot continue working normally, because I expect to be called any minute.
- It's 14:35 nothing happens, everyone keeps on working. I text them in our skype chat "Aren't we supposed to go to the meeting already?", The response is "Why are you in a hurry? They will call us soon."
- It's 14:50 - nothing happens.
15:30 - we are finally called to the big meeting!- We sit in the conference room and another coworker (Tom) comes in and say "we need to talk about something important". Our meeting is called off and we return to our desks.
- The meeting with Tom is over after 5 mins. Again we are on a standby to start our meeting.
- 16:50 - nothing happens. Our managers do not inform us what is going on, are we having a meeting soon or not.
This is just one example. I was in situations like this many times and still can't cope with it and continue my work stressless. The pressure of being called just now is distracting me from thinking about my tasks. Sometimes is 5 min wasted, but sometimes it can be an hour.
Measures taken by now: I talked with my managers, they don't get me seriously and say "Don't think about it, just continue working". They are not willing to change this process, while the only thing I want is to be informed what's going on (Do I have to wait 5 mins or 1 hour for example)
Question: Since nothing can be done from their side, I want to ask what can I do from my side to cope with this problem. How to continue working normally and not waste time waiting? Are there any tricks to concentrate and ignore this standby situation?
Update: This meeting was about our team performance and our salary raises depending on that. I couldn't stay careless as I kept repeating in my mind what I would say about my projects.
time-management process
add a comment
|
The problem: I cannot work normally when I know I will be interrupted any minute.
Example:
- My manager say we have a team meeting (all 12 members) with the big boss in 14:30.
- In 14:27 I am already in a standby mode and cannot continue working normally, because I expect to be called any minute.
- It's 14:35 nothing happens, everyone keeps on working. I text them in our skype chat "Aren't we supposed to go to the meeting already?", The response is "Why are you in a hurry? They will call us soon."
- It's 14:50 - nothing happens.
15:30 - we are finally called to the big meeting!- We sit in the conference room and another coworker (Tom) comes in and say "we need to talk about something important". Our meeting is called off and we return to our desks.
- The meeting with Tom is over after 5 mins. Again we are on a standby to start our meeting.
- 16:50 - nothing happens. Our managers do not inform us what is going on, are we having a meeting soon or not.
This is just one example. I was in situations like this many times and still can't cope with it and continue my work stressless. The pressure of being called just now is distracting me from thinking about my tasks. Sometimes is 5 min wasted, but sometimes it can be an hour.
Measures taken by now: I talked with my managers, they don't get me seriously and say "Don't think about it, just continue working". They are not willing to change this process, while the only thing I want is to be informed what's going on (Do I have to wait 5 mins or 1 hour for example)
Question: Since nothing can be done from their side, I want to ask what can I do from my side to cope with this problem. How to continue working normally and not waste time waiting? Are there any tricks to concentrate and ignore this standby situation?
Update: This meeting was about our team performance and our salary raises depending on that. I couldn't stay careless as I kept repeating in my mind what I would say about my projects.
time-management process
6
Spend this downtime to write a program that will predict the actual meeting times.
– Evorlor
11 hours ago
Work on your code. Bring a crossword. Do some knitting. Bring a stress toy. Read the cricket scores. Write anagrams sentences. Just pretend to be alert when the unpunctual managers finally deign to show up. It's all a big phony game. Eventually you can work for a better company.
– smci
6 mins ago
Another tactic is to prominently display a Meeting Clock of how much of people's collective time (/salaries/whatever) is being wasted in each minute of meeting, or each minute of delay.
– smci
5 mins ago
add a comment
|
The problem: I cannot work normally when I know I will be interrupted any minute.
Example:
- My manager say we have a team meeting (all 12 members) with the big boss in 14:30.
- In 14:27 I am already in a standby mode and cannot continue working normally, because I expect to be called any minute.
- It's 14:35 nothing happens, everyone keeps on working. I text them in our skype chat "Aren't we supposed to go to the meeting already?", The response is "Why are you in a hurry? They will call us soon."
- It's 14:50 - nothing happens.
15:30 - we are finally called to the big meeting!- We sit in the conference room and another coworker (Tom) comes in and say "we need to talk about something important". Our meeting is called off and we return to our desks.
- The meeting with Tom is over after 5 mins. Again we are on a standby to start our meeting.
- 16:50 - nothing happens. Our managers do not inform us what is going on, are we having a meeting soon or not.
This is just one example. I was in situations like this many times and still can't cope with it and continue my work stressless. The pressure of being called just now is distracting me from thinking about my tasks. Sometimes is 5 min wasted, but sometimes it can be an hour.
Measures taken by now: I talked with my managers, they don't get me seriously and say "Don't think about it, just continue working". They are not willing to change this process, while the only thing I want is to be informed what's going on (Do I have to wait 5 mins or 1 hour for example)
Question: Since nothing can be done from their side, I want to ask what can I do from my side to cope with this problem. How to continue working normally and not waste time waiting? Are there any tricks to concentrate and ignore this standby situation?
Update: This meeting was about our team performance and our salary raises depending on that. I couldn't stay careless as I kept repeating in my mind what I would say about my projects.
time-management process
The problem: I cannot work normally when I know I will be interrupted any minute.
Example:
- My manager say we have a team meeting (all 12 members) with the big boss in 14:30.
- In 14:27 I am already in a standby mode and cannot continue working normally, because I expect to be called any minute.
- It's 14:35 nothing happens, everyone keeps on working. I text them in our skype chat "Aren't we supposed to go to the meeting already?", The response is "Why are you in a hurry? They will call us soon."
- It's 14:50 - nothing happens.
15:30 - we are finally called to the big meeting!- We sit in the conference room and another coworker (Tom) comes in and say "we need to talk about something important". Our meeting is called off and we return to our desks.
- The meeting with Tom is over after 5 mins. Again we are on a standby to start our meeting.
- 16:50 - nothing happens. Our managers do not inform us what is going on, are we having a meeting soon or not.
This is just one example. I was in situations like this many times and still can't cope with it and continue my work stressless. The pressure of being called just now is distracting me from thinking about my tasks. Sometimes is 5 min wasted, but sometimes it can be an hour.
Measures taken by now: I talked with my managers, they don't get me seriously and say "Don't think about it, just continue working". They are not willing to change this process, while the only thing I want is to be informed what's going on (Do I have to wait 5 mins or 1 hour for example)
Question: Since nothing can be done from their side, I want to ask what can I do from my side to cope with this problem. How to continue working normally and not waste time waiting? Are there any tricks to concentrate and ignore this standby situation?
Update: This meeting was about our team performance and our salary raises depending on that. I couldn't stay careless as I kept repeating in my mind what I would say about my projects.
time-management process
time-management process
edited 8 mins ago
smci
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6
Spend this downtime to write a program that will predict the actual meeting times.
– Evorlor
11 hours ago
Work on your code. Bring a crossword. Do some knitting. Bring a stress toy. Read the cricket scores. Write anagrams sentences. Just pretend to be alert when the unpunctual managers finally deign to show up. It's all a big phony game. Eventually you can work for a better company.
– smci
6 mins ago
Another tactic is to prominently display a Meeting Clock of how much of people's collective time (/salaries/whatever) is being wasted in each minute of meeting, or each minute of delay.
– smci
5 mins ago
add a comment
|
6
Spend this downtime to write a program that will predict the actual meeting times.
– Evorlor
11 hours ago
Work on your code. Bring a crossword. Do some knitting. Bring a stress toy. Read the cricket scores. Write anagrams sentences. Just pretend to be alert when the unpunctual managers finally deign to show up. It's all a big phony game. Eventually you can work for a better company.
– smci
6 mins ago
Another tactic is to prominently display a Meeting Clock of how much of people's collective time (/salaries/whatever) is being wasted in each minute of meeting, or each minute of delay.
– smci
5 mins ago
6
6
Spend this downtime to write a program that will predict the actual meeting times.
– Evorlor
11 hours ago
Spend this downtime to write a program that will predict the actual meeting times.
– Evorlor
11 hours ago
Work on your code. Bring a crossword. Do some knitting. Bring a stress toy. Read the cricket scores. Write anagrams sentences. Just pretend to be alert when the unpunctual managers finally deign to show up. It's all a big phony game. Eventually you can work for a better company.
– smci
6 mins ago
Work on your code. Bring a crossword. Do some knitting. Bring a stress toy. Read the cricket scores. Write anagrams sentences. Just pretend to be alert when the unpunctual managers finally deign to show up. It's all a big phony game. Eventually you can work for a better company.
– smci
6 mins ago
Another tactic is to prominently display a Meeting Clock of how much of people's collective time (/salaries/whatever) is being wasted in each minute of meeting, or each minute of delay.
– smci
5 mins ago
Another tactic is to prominently display a Meeting Clock of how much of people's collective time (/salaries/whatever) is being wasted in each minute of meeting, or each minute of delay.
– smci
5 mins ago
add a comment
|
10 Answers
10
active
oldest
votes
I'm assuming that advising you "just go on working" won't have much effect. The best compromise might be to try and find short, low-attention jobs that you can do around meeting time so you can instantly break off when you're called to the meeting and it won't matter if your mind isn't totally on the job.
These might be mundane administrative or housekeeping tasks (anything from cleaning your desk to sorting your email inbox or deleting unused files and documents), or other one-off tasks (conducting online research, interactions with nearby people, putting things in nearby places). If you can't easily think of these jobs, you could make a to-do list of such tasks in whatever format is quickest and easiest to access, and either tick them off as you do them, or if you don't have time after each task, revisit it in an idle moment and update the to-do list.
An alternative would be just to slack off around meeting time and search the web or play with your phone or chat with neighbors till you're called. If you're not going to get any work done, you may as well not try.
16
One additional suggestion: if what the OP is concerned about is what he's going to say in the meeting about his projects, spend some time writing and organizing a summary of his projects. If it's down on a piece of paper, ready to go, that may open up some mental space for working on other things. Ideally boiled down to a short set of notes so he's not reading from it, just using it as a reminder as he talks.
– DaveG
yesterday
I once had a boss who was habitually late to meetings he had organized, and this is what I would do too (it was somewhat of a programming role so I couldn't exactly "work normally" for an unknown, possibly brief period of time whether I had wanted to or not). Basically cleaned my desk, tidied my work area, organize my files, empty Downloads folders, etc.
– Alex M
yesterday
3
@DaveG Seems like a good answer, why don’t you post it as such? I’d like to upvote it.
– 11684
15 hours ago
add a comment
|
Don't pay attention on all this meetings times at all. Since even management is so unprofessional, that they don't care, why should you?
Concentrate on your stuff and only when meeting actually comes, you come in.
4
+1, this. What OP did was professional. What they did was unprofessional. There's no professional way to deal with people who behave unprofessionally, by definition, other than either not giving a flying -d-uck, or switching to another workplace. If a meeting (...) about our team performance and our salary raises is treated like that, it's basically like the top brass is saying "we don't give a flying -d-uck about your salaries, your time, your well-being or you at all" - either you allow it for some reason and ignore it completely - or you don't, and look for other place to work.
– vaxquis
8 hours ago
@vaxquis Thinking "caring" instead of "giving a flying -d-uck" might lead you to writing of a more professional appearance. Without automatically raising even someone else's situation to swearing, you might have a better outlook. (N.B. Not Outlook with a capital "O" ;)
– Andrew Morton
3 hours ago
@AndrewMorton I already used an euphemism (I don't recall "a flying duck" to be a swear word in English - please provide a reference if it is). Are we playing the rationalwiki.org/wiki/Euphemism#Euphemism_treadmill game here? If so, count me out please.
– vaxquis
3 hours ago
@vaxquis We are not. I was referring to the emotional intensity rather than the actual words.
– Andrew Morton
2 hours ago
1
@AndrewMorton I think that waiting for 2.5h for a scheduled meeting that was cancelled without being notified what is happening (or at least being notified that it is unknown what is happening) warrants an emotional response; IMVHO OP has every right to be upset. What surprises me is people telling her "nothing happened" or "it's not something that you should be bothered with" or "you should learn to cope with it".
– vaxquis
2 hours ago
add a comment
|
... what can I do from my side to cope with this problem. How [can I] continue working normally?
As your manager said, "Don't think about it, just continue working."
Are there any tricks to concentrate and ignore this standby situation?
Yes.
- Know by experience that this type of meeting is fluid, rather than in stone.
- Know that it has nothing to do with you.
- Make notes (questions/comments/suggestions) in your phone.
- You don't have to worry about forgetting them, because... #3
- There is no pressure because nothing you say (no question or comment) will change the outcome, because...
- The outcome is already decided. The big boss is just announcing it.
Nothing from you should indicate that "the big boss" is wasting your time.
Those are what I'd call "career limiting".
You've already mentioned this to your boss, which is fine.
But, don't mention it to your boss again - once is more than enough, since they're already aware.
One more piece of advice: If the big boss asks for questions/comments/suggestions, limit yourself to either zero or one. Especially zero (see #6 above).
add a comment
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It may or may not be applicable in this particular case, but I've found it a lot less stressful to work for an indeterminate time if I know I'll be able to take a minute or so to ‘park’ the work before going off to something else.
Especially if it's a task that involves a lot of thought, or juggling a lot of mental state, knowing I can spend a minute ‘dumping’ that to a piece of paper or text file lets me be much more productive and relaxed.
Of course, that's not always possible. But in my experience, if a meeting is at an indeterminate time or has been delayed, people are generally more tolerant and don't expect you to drop everything instantly.
(Conversely, one of the most frustrating jobs I had was one where interruptions averaged every 10 minutes, and people expected me to drop everything and instantly be not only listening to them, but also remembering exactly what they were talking about… This cartoon explains better than I can just how frustrating that can be!)
You get an upvote just for the cartoon reference!
– stolenmoment
9 hours ago
add a comment
|
Just filter out the time from the message.
In fact you might as well filter out the complete message, since in your workplace "we have a meeting at 14:30" seems to mean "we may or may not have a meeting sometime today/this week/next year."
When you do finally get called to the meeting, don't feel bad about taking as long as you need to "close down" what you are doing to a state you can recover from.
If the meeting organizer complains that you are "late" for a meeting which actually started an hour late, simply reply "sorry, but your inability to organize your work schedule is not my problem."
Final piece of advice: never set an alarm to remind you about things that might not happen on time.
9
If your bosses boss complained about being late, you would really say that? Do you plan to work longer at such a company, or is that a way to get fired? A meeting with your bosses boss is not when it's "time", it's when the bosses boss has time. And it's up to the underling to make time. Maybe at the expense of a full day of work if that's the state the company is in, but I don't think telling your bosses boss "well, that's your problem" is a solution to any problem.
– nvoigt
11 hours ago
add a comment
|
In general: Write your thoughts and questions down.
(With respect to the upcoming meeting topic, of course.)
- What are your ideas?
- What problems and potential pitfalls do you see?
- What questions could be properly addressed to you?
- What questions do you anticipate (addressed to you others) that you could answer???
- Depending on your role, is there a quick visual (diagram, design, other other imagery) you could sketch up quickly to contribute?
In this particular case, you "kept repeating in [your] mind what [you] would say about [your] projects." So, start by writing down what you're mind already has on repeat. Do this quickly, and make a second pass to flesh out details or prepare for questions you might be asked.
Etc.
This is a really good habit to get into, in my opinion, regardless of whether you have meeting anxiety (or ... we'll just say, flexible meeting start times). One of two things will happen, and often both in my experience:
- You'll be well-prepared for the meeting. You'll look and sound professional and confident. And, you'll impress the shit out of everyone.
- Your anxiety will fade, and you might actually find that after a few minutes of note-taking, your mind has stopped racing and can focus on your assigned work again.
This sort of thing really helped me personally. And at this point, if I know I've got a meeting coming up and I'm already well-versed in the topic — there's not much anxiety. If it's a new topic, I'm likely to take my mind out of that endless thought-cycle by writing my thoughts and questions down 15 to 30 minutes ahead of time. And then I feel OK.
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If I was told there was a meeting about to start shortly, then I would probably do some small tasks until the time the meeting is supposed to start. If there is still no meeting going on, then I would continue with small tasks until ten minutes pass by. Once it is ten minutes after the meeting was supposed to begin, I would probably start working on major task items until I am preempted by the team lead, manager, co-worker, etc. that the meeting is actually about to begin.
New contributor
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The meeting is delayed? Just don’t work then.
Look, you are en employee for a company. While interacting with co-workers requires human interaction, I have news for you…
These are not really “human” interactions. These are business interactions.
In your case, your business task is to do work at your workstation until you have to do something else. Like be in a meeting.
If your boss tells you a meeting is happening at 14:30, then guess what? Stop working. Regardless of what is happening, just stop working.
The deal is you are not responsible for scheduling and delays; they are.
If you are being told to be ready for a meeting at a specific time, just stop what you are doing and that’s it.
Believe it or not, waiting for meetings is a part of the job as well. So just don’t worry about it.
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Most of the other answers doesn't take into account the update OP gave in their post, so I thought I'd throw in my 5c:
The problem: I cannot work normally when I know I will be interrupted any minute.
How to continue working normally?
Are there any tricks to concentrate and ignore this situation?
That problem is unsolvable. You are a human being. By definition, if you are aware that you can be interrupted with high-priority stuff any minute, you won't be able to work normally. Being aware of a possible interruption raises your adrenaline and/or vasopressin levels, depending on the exact setting.
You will be able to work normally as soon as you forget about the possible interruption, by doing something intellectually or emotionally engaging - but you will still be extremely annoyed by it when the interruption finally happens, and won't be able to work normally for some time after that, due to a sudden drop in adrenaline and vasopressin but also highly evelated cortisol level.
As long as you're a sentient human being and are not using hospital-grade drugs blocking the secretion and/or uptake/reuptake of hormones, there is no real trick here. You're being put in a stressful situation, and you're showing a normal reaction to stress.
This is actually a sign of both mental health and emotional sensitivity. If you really want, you can try to fight with it. I, personally, wouldn't. No job is worth getting numb and empty inside, IMVHO.
How to (...) not waste time waiting?
How to be productive while waiting for meetings to start?
This meeting was about our team performance and our salary raises depending on that. I couldn't stay careless as I kept repeating in my mind what I would say about my projects.
If you really want/need to be productive then, do things that are extremely low-priority and don't require any intellectual or emotional immersion (like mentioned by other people). I would look at other people in my team do, though - if they are slacking off while waiting, I'd also find e.g. a good online game to play or a nice video stream to watch :)
The real problem lies elsewhere, I think.
I talked with my managers, they don't get me seriously and say "Don't think about it, just continue working". They are not willing to change this process, while the only thing I want is to be informed what's going on (Do I have to wait 5 mins or 1 hour for example)
What you did was professional. What they did was unprofessional. There's no professional way to deal with people who behave unprofessionally, by definition, other than either not giving a flying -d-uck, or switching to another workplace. If a meeting (...) about our team performance and our salary raises is treated like that, it's basically like the top brass is saying "we don't give a flying -d-uck about your salaries, your time, your well-being or you at all" in your face - either you allow it for some reason and ignore it completely - or you don't, and look for other place to work.
Being treated like that should light a red light saying STOP in your head.
Also, concerning something I read in one comment here:
Do you plan to work longer at such a company, or is that a way to get fired?
Actually, that's a good point - if you want to continue work in a place when you will be treated like garbage, for any reason (e.g. a very urgent need for money, not being able to switch etc.) raising any concerns is not a good idea.
A meeting with your bosses boss is not when it's "time", it's when the bosses boss has time.
chuckle Nope. A meeting with my bosses boss is when we both have time. I'm not a slave - I'm a valued specialist in a highly competitive market. If my bosses' boss would treat me like OP was treated repeatedly, he would get my notice, as simple as that - and I would essentially expect the same from him. I'm not doing him a favour by working for him, and he's not doing any particular favour for me. We're exchanging my work for his money, and I don't recall anything about "slavery" or "obligatory loss of self-respect" in any contract I had signed :) If he wants me to wait - so be it, I'm still getting paid. If, however, he do[es]n't get me seriously when the subject is our team performance and our salary raises depending on that, then it's high time to update my CV again and browse some nice brand new job offers :)
New contributor
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Productive, that's possible! Just find an activity with the following property:
- leaves you in a state of mind very conducive to meetings right after
Some options:
- read a novel
- meditate
- do a Sudoku
- doodle
- eat a light sandwich
And that's it.
I'm afraid work productivity is not a true possibility, because your manager is explicitly wasting your time. That doesn't mean you can't do something productive for you as a human being, but it will at best have second-order positive effects on your work performance.
More office-styled alternatives are perhaps:
- read lore related to your work, e.g. history of a technology
- play with the product you're making
- urinate
- organize documents
- sleep under your desk
Good luck!
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10 Answers
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10 Answers
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oldest
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I'm assuming that advising you "just go on working" won't have much effect. The best compromise might be to try and find short, low-attention jobs that you can do around meeting time so you can instantly break off when you're called to the meeting and it won't matter if your mind isn't totally on the job.
These might be mundane administrative or housekeeping tasks (anything from cleaning your desk to sorting your email inbox or deleting unused files and documents), or other one-off tasks (conducting online research, interactions with nearby people, putting things in nearby places). If you can't easily think of these jobs, you could make a to-do list of such tasks in whatever format is quickest and easiest to access, and either tick them off as you do them, or if you don't have time after each task, revisit it in an idle moment and update the to-do list.
An alternative would be just to slack off around meeting time and search the web or play with your phone or chat with neighbors till you're called. If you're not going to get any work done, you may as well not try.
16
One additional suggestion: if what the OP is concerned about is what he's going to say in the meeting about his projects, spend some time writing and organizing a summary of his projects. If it's down on a piece of paper, ready to go, that may open up some mental space for working on other things. Ideally boiled down to a short set of notes so he's not reading from it, just using it as a reminder as he talks.
– DaveG
yesterday
I once had a boss who was habitually late to meetings he had organized, and this is what I would do too (it was somewhat of a programming role so I couldn't exactly "work normally" for an unknown, possibly brief period of time whether I had wanted to or not). Basically cleaned my desk, tidied my work area, organize my files, empty Downloads folders, etc.
– Alex M
yesterday
3
@DaveG Seems like a good answer, why don’t you post it as such? I’d like to upvote it.
– 11684
15 hours ago
add a comment
|
I'm assuming that advising you "just go on working" won't have much effect. The best compromise might be to try and find short, low-attention jobs that you can do around meeting time so you can instantly break off when you're called to the meeting and it won't matter if your mind isn't totally on the job.
These might be mundane administrative or housekeeping tasks (anything from cleaning your desk to sorting your email inbox or deleting unused files and documents), or other one-off tasks (conducting online research, interactions with nearby people, putting things in nearby places). If you can't easily think of these jobs, you could make a to-do list of such tasks in whatever format is quickest and easiest to access, and either tick them off as you do them, or if you don't have time after each task, revisit it in an idle moment and update the to-do list.
An alternative would be just to slack off around meeting time and search the web or play with your phone or chat with neighbors till you're called. If you're not going to get any work done, you may as well not try.
16
One additional suggestion: if what the OP is concerned about is what he's going to say in the meeting about his projects, spend some time writing and organizing a summary of his projects. If it's down on a piece of paper, ready to go, that may open up some mental space for working on other things. Ideally boiled down to a short set of notes so he's not reading from it, just using it as a reminder as he talks.
– DaveG
yesterday
I once had a boss who was habitually late to meetings he had organized, and this is what I would do too (it was somewhat of a programming role so I couldn't exactly "work normally" for an unknown, possibly brief period of time whether I had wanted to or not). Basically cleaned my desk, tidied my work area, organize my files, empty Downloads folders, etc.
– Alex M
yesterday
3
@DaveG Seems like a good answer, why don’t you post it as such? I’d like to upvote it.
– 11684
15 hours ago
add a comment
|
I'm assuming that advising you "just go on working" won't have much effect. The best compromise might be to try and find short, low-attention jobs that you can do around meeting time so you can instantly break off when you're called to the meeting and it won't matter if your mind isn't totally on the job.
These might be mundane administrative or housekeeping tasks (anything from cleaning your desk to sorting your email inbox or deleting unused files and documents), or other one-off tasks (conducting online research, interactions with nearby people, putting things in nearby places). If you can't easily think of these jobs, you could make a to-do list of such tasks in whatever format is quickest and easiest to access, and either tick them off as you do them, or if you don't have time after each task, revisit it in an idle moment and update the to-do list.
An alternative would be just to slack off around meeting time and search the web or play with your phone or chat with neighbors till you're called. If you're not going to get any work done, you may as well not try.
I'm assuming that advising you "just go on working" won't have much effect. The best compromise might be to try and find short, low-attention jobs that you can do around meeting time so you can instantly break off when you're called to the meeting and it won't matter if your mind isn't totally on the job.
These might be mundane administrative or housekeeping tasks (anything from cleaning your desk to sorting your email inbox or deleting unused files and documents), or other one-off tasks (conducting online research, interactions with nearby people, putting things in nearby places). If you can't easily think of these jobs, you could make a to-do list of such tasks in whatever format is quickest and easiest to access, and either tick them off as you do them, or if you don't have time after each task, revisit it in an idle moment and update the to-do list.
An alternative would be just to slack off around meeting time and search the web or play with your phone or chat with neighbors till you're called. If you're not going to get any work done, you may as well not try.
answered yesterday
Stuart FStuart F
7472 silver badges7 bronze badges
7472 silver badges7 bronze badges
16
One additional suggestion: if what the OP is concerned about is what he's going to say in the meeting about his projects, spend some time writing and organizing a summary of his projects. If it's down on a piece of paper, ready to go, that may open up some mental space for working on other things. Ideally boiled down to a short set of notes so he's not reading from it, just using it as a reminder as he talks.
– DaveG
yesterday
I once had a boss who was habitually late to meetings he had organized, and this is what I would do too (it was somewhat of a programming role so I couldn't exactly "work normally" for an unknown, possibly brief period of time whether I had wanted to or not). Basically cleaned my desk, tidied my work area, organize my files, empty Downloads folders, etc.
– Alex M
yesterday
3
@DaveG Seems like a good answer, why don’t you post it as such? I’d like to upvote it.
– 11684
15 hours ago
add a comment
|
16
One additional suggestion: if what the OP is concerned about is what he's going to say in the meeting about his projects, spend some time writing and organizing a summary of his projects. If it's down on a piece of paper, ready to go, that may open up some mental space for working on other things. Ideally boiled down to a short set of notes so he's not reading from it, just using it as a reminder as he talks.
– DaveG
yesterday
I once had a boss who was habitually late to meetings he had organized, and this is what I would do too (it was somewhat of a programming role so I couldn't exactly "work normally" for an unknown, possibly brief period of time whether I had wanted to or not). Basically cleaned my desk, tidied my work area, organize my files, empty Downloads folders, etc.
– Alex M
yesterday
3
@DaveG Seems like a good answer, why don’t you post it as such? I’d like to upvote it.
– 11684
15 hours ago
16
16
One additional suggestion: if what the OP is concerned about is what he's going to say in the meeting about his projects, spend some time writing and organizing a summary of his projects. If it's down on a piece of paper, ready to go, that may open up some mental space for working on other things. Ideally boiled down to a short set of notes so he's not reading from it, just using it as a reminder as he talks.
– DaveG
yesterday
One additional suggestion: if what the OP is concerned about is what he's going to say in the meeting about his projects, spend some time writing and organizing a summary of his projects. If it's down on a piece of paper, ready to go, that may open up some mental space for working on other things. Ideally boiled down to a short set of notes so he's not reading from it, just using it as a reminder as he talks.
– DaveG
yesterday
I once had a boss who was habitually late to meetings he had organized, and this is what I would do too (it was somewhat of a programming role so I couldn't exactly "work normally" for an unknown, possibly brief period of time whether I had wanted to or not). Basically cleaned my desk, tidied my work area, organize my files, empty Downloads folders, etc.
– Alex M
yesterday
I once had a boss who was habitually late to meetings he had organized, and this is what I would do too (it was somewhat of a programming role so I couldn't exactly "work normally" for an unknown, possibly brief period of time whether I had wanted to or not). Basically cleaned my desk, tidied my work area, organize my files, empty Downloads folders, etc.
– Alex M
yesterday
3
3
@DaveG Seems like a good answer, why don’t you post it as such? I’d like to upvote it.
– 11684
15 hours ago
@DaveG Seems like a good answer, why don’t you post it as such? I’d like to upvote it.
– 11684
15 hours ago
add a comment
|
Don't pay attention on all this meetings times at all. Since even management is so unprofessional, that they don't care, why should you?
Concentrate on your stuff and only when meeting actually comes, you come in.
4
+1, this. What OP did was professional. What they did was unprofessional. There's no professional way to deal with people who behave unprofessionally, by definition, other than either not giving a flying -d-uck, or switching to another workplace. If a meeting (...) about our team performance and our salary raises is treated like that, it's basically like the top brass is saying "we don't give a flying -d-uck about your salaries, your time, your well-being or you at all" - either you allow it for some reason and ignore it completely - or you don't, and look for other place to work.
– vaxquis
8 hours ago
@vaxquis Thinking "caring" instead of "giving a flying -d-uck" might lead you to writing of a more professional appearance. Without automatically raising even someone else's situation to swearing, you might have a better outlook. (N.B. Not Outlook with a capital "O" ;)
– Andrew Morton
3 hours ago
@AndrewMorton I already used an euphemism (I don't recall "a flying duck" to be a swear word in English - please provide a reference if it is). Are we playing the rationalwiki.org/wiki/Euphemism#Euphemism_treadmill game here? If so, count me out please.
– vaxquis
3 hours ago
@vaxquis We are not. I was referring to the emotional intensity rather than the actual words.
– Andrew Morton
2 hours ago
1
@AndrewMorton I think that waiting for 2.5h for a scheduled meeting that was cancelled without being notified what is happening (or at least being notified that it is unknown what is happening) warrants an emotional response; IMVHO OP has every right to be upset. What surprises me is people telling her "nothing happened" or "it's not something that you should be bothered with" or "you should learn to cope with it".
– vaxquis
2 hours ago
add a comment
|
Don't pay attention on all this meetings times at all. Since even management is so unprofessional, that they don't care, why should you?
Concentrate on your stuff and only when meeting actually comes, you come in.
4
+1, this. What OP did was professional. What they did was unprofessional. There's no professional way to deal with people who behave unprofessionally, by definition, other than either not giving a flying -d-uck, or switching to another workplace. If a meeting (...) about our team performance and our salary raises is treated like that, it's basically like the top brass is saying "we don't give a flying -d-uck about your salaries, your time, your well-being or you at all" - either you allow it for some reason and ignore it completely - or you don't, and look for other place to work.
– vaxquis
8 hours ago
@vaxquis Thinking "caring" instead of "giving a flying -d-uck" might lead you to writing of a more professional appearance. Without automatically raising even someone else's situation to swearing, you might have a better outlook. (N.B. Not Outlook with a capital "O" ;)
– Andrew Morton
3 hours ago
@AndrewMorton I already used an euphemism (I don't recall "a flying duck" to be a swear word in English - please provide a reference if it is). Are we playing the rationalwiki.org/wiki/Euphemism#Euphemism_treadmill game here? If so, count me out please.
– vaxquis
3 hours ago
@vaxquis We are not. I was referring to the emotional intensity rather than the actual words.
– Andrew Morton
2 hours ago
1
@AndrewMorton I think that waiting for 2.5h for a scheduled meeting that was cancelled without being notified what is happening (or at least being notified that it is unknown what is happening) warrants an emotional response; IMVHO OP has every right to be upset. What surprises me is people telling her "nothing happened" or "it's not something that you should be bothered with" or "you should learn to cope with it".
– vaxquis
2 hours ago
add a comment
|
Don't pay attention on all this meetings times at all. Since even management is so unprofessional, that they don't care, why should you?
Concentrate on your stuff and only when meeting actually comes, you come in.
Don't pay attention on all this meetings times at all. Since even management is so unprofessional, that they don't care, why should you?
Concentrate on your stuff and only when meeting actually comes, you come in.
edited 18 hours ago
Community♦
1
1
answered yesterday
Andrei SuvorkovAndrei Suvorkov
4637 bronze badges
4637 bronze badges
4
+1, this. What OP did was professional. What they did was unprofessional. There's no professional way to deal with people who behave unprofessionally, by definition, other than either not giving a flying -d-uck, or switching to another workplace. If a meeting (...) about our team performance and our salary raises is treated like that, it's basically like the top brass is saying "we don't give a flying -d-uck about your salaries, your time, your well-being or you at all" - either you allow it for some reason and ignore it completely - or you don't, and look for other place to work.
– vaxquis
8 hours ago
@vaxquis Thinking "caring" instead of "giving a flying -d-uck" might lead you to writing of a more professional appearance. Without automatically raising even someone else's situation to swearing, you might have a better outlook. (N.B. Not Outlook with a capital "O" ;)
– Andrew Morton
3 hours ago
@AndrewMorton I already used an euphemism (I don't recall "a flying duck" to be a swear word in English - please provide a reference if it is). Are we playing the rationalwiki.org/wiki/Euphemism#Euphemism_treadmill game here? If so, count me out please.
– vaxquis
3 hours ago
@vaxquis We are not. I was referring to the emotional intensity rather than the actual words.
– Andrew Morton
2 hours ago
1
@AndrewMorton I think that waiting for 2.5h for a scheduled meeting that was cancelled without being notified what is happening (or at least being notified that it is unknown what is happening) warrants an emotional response; IMVHO OP has every right to be upset. What surprises me is people telling her "nothing happened" or "it's not something that you should be bothered with" or "you should learn to cope with it".
– vaxquis
2 hours ago
add a comment
|
4
+1, this. What OP did was professional. What they did was unprofessional. There's no professional way to deal with people who behave unprofessionally, by definition, other than either not giving a flying -d-uck, or switching to another workplace. If a meeting (...) about our team performance and our salary raises is treated like that, it's basically like the top brass is saying "we don't give a flying -d-uck about your salaries, your time, your well-being or you at all" - either you allow it for some reason and ignore it completely - or you don't, and look for other place to work.
– vaxquis
8 hours ago
@vaxquis Thinking "caring" instead of "giving a flying -d-uck" might lead you to writing of a more professional appearance. Without automatically raising even someone else's situation to swearing, you might have a better outlook. (N.B. Not Outlook with a capital "O" ;)
– Andrew Morton
3 hours ago
@AndrewMorton I already used an euphemism (I don't recall "a flying duck" to be a swear word in English - please provide a reference if it is). Are we playing the rationalwiki.org/wiki/Euphemism#Euphemism_treadmill game here? If so, count me out please.
– vaxquis
3 hours ago
@vaxquis We are not. I was referring to the emotional intensity rather than the actual words.
– Andrew Morton
2 hours ago
1
@AndrewMorton I think that waiting for 2.5h for a scheduled meeting that was cancelled without being notified what is happening (or at least being notified that it is unknown what is happening) warrants an emotional response; IMVHO OP has every right to be upset. What surprises me is people telling her "nothing happened" or "it's not something that you should be bothered with" or "you should learn to cope with it".
– vaxquis
2 hours ago
4
4
+1, this. What OP did was professional. What they did was unprofessional. There's no professional way to deal with people who behave unprofessionally, by definition, other than either not giving a flying -d-uck, or switching to another workplace. If a meeting (...) about our team performance and our salary raises is treated like that, it's basically like the top brass is saying "we don't give a flying -d-uck about your salaries, your time, your well-being or you at all" - either you allow it for some reason and ignore it completely - or you don't, and look for other place to work.
– vaxquis
8 hours ago
+1, this. What OP did was professional. What they did was unprofessional. There's no professional way to deal with people who behave unprofessionally, by definition, other than either not giving a flying -d-uck, or switching to another workplace. If a meeting (...) about our team performance and our salary raises is treated like that, it's basically like the top brass is saying "we don't give a flying -d-uck about your salaries, your time, your well-being or you at all" - either you allow it for some reason and ignore it completely - or you don't, and look for other place to work.
– vaxquis
8 hours ago
@vaxquis Thinking "caring" instead of "giving a flying -d-uck" might lead you to writing of a more professional appearance. Without automatically raising even someone else's situation to swearing, you might have a better outlook. (N.B. Not Outlook with a capital "O" ;)
– Andrew Morton
3 hours ago
@vaxquis Thinking "caring" instead of "giving a flying -d-uck" might lead you to writing of a more professional appearance. Without automatically raising even someone else's situation to swearing, you might have a better outlook. (N.B. Not Outlook with a capital "O" ;)
– Andrew Morton
3 hours ago
@AndrewMorton I already used an euphemism (I don't recall "a flying duck" to be a swear word in English - please provide a reference if it is). Are we playing the rationalwiki.org/wiki/Euphemism#Euphemism_treadmill game here? If so, count me out please.
– vaxquis
3 hours ago
@AndrewMorton I already used an euphemism (I don't recall "a flying duck" to be a swear word in English - please provide a reference if it is). Are we playing the rationalwiki.org/wiki/Euphemism#Euphemism_treadmill game here? If so, count me out please.
– vaxquis
3 hours ago
@vaxquis We are not. I was referring to the emotional intensity rather than the actual words.
– Andrew Morton
2 hours ago
@vaxquis We are not. I was referring to the emotional intensity rather than the actual words.
– Andrew Morton
2 hours ago
1
1
@AndrewMorton I think that waiting for 2.5h for a scheduled meeting that was cancelled without being notified what is happening (or at least being notified that it is unknown what is happening) warrants an emotional response; IMVHO OP has every right to be upset. What surprises me is people telling her "nothing happened" or "it's not something that you should be bothered with" or "you should learn to cope with it".
– vaxquis
2 hours ago
@AndrewMorton I think that waiting for 2.5h for a scheduled meeting that was cancelled without being notified what is happening (or at least being notified that it is unknown what is happening) warrants an emotional response; IMVHO OP has every right to be upset. What surprises me is people telling her "nothing happened" or "it's not something that you should be bothered with" or "you should learn to cope with it".
– vaxquis
2 hours ago
add a comment
|
... what can I do from my side to cope with this problem. How [can I] continue working normally?
As your manager said, "Don't think about it, just continue working."
Are there any tricks to concentrate and ignore this standby situation?
Yes.
- Know by experience that this type of meeting is fluid, rather than in stone.
- Know that it has nothing to do with you.
- Make notes (questions/comments/suggestions) in your phone.
- You don't have to worry about forgetting them, because... #3
- There is no pressure because nothing you say (no question or comment) will change the outcome, because...
- The outcome is already decided. The big boss is just announcing it.
Nothing from you should indicate that "the big boss" is wasting your time.
Those are what I'd call "career limiting".
You've already mentioned this to your boss, which is fine.
But, don't mention it to your boss again - once is more than enough, since they're already aware.
One more piece of advice: If the big boss asks for questions/comments/suggestions, limit yourself to either zero or one. Especially zero (see #6 above).
add a comment
|
... what can I do from my side to cope with this problem. How [can I] continue working normally?
As your manager said, "Don't think about it, just continue working."
Are there any tricks to concentrate and ignore this standby situation?
Yes.
- Know by experience that this type of meeting is fluid, rather than in stone.
- Know that it has nothing to do with you.
- Make notes (questions/comments/suggestions) in your phone.
- You don't have to worry about forgetting them, because... #3
- There is no pressure because nothing you say (no question or comment) will change the outcome, because...
- The outcome is already decided. The big boss is just announcing it.
Nothing from you should indicate that "the big boss" is wasting your time.
Those are what I'd call "career limiting".
You've already mentioned this to your boss, which is fine.
But, don't mention it to your boss again - once is more than enough, since they're already aware.
One more piece of advice: If the big boss asks for questions/comments/suggestions, limit yourself to either zero or one. Especially zero (see #6 above).
add a comment
|
... what can I do from my side to cope with this problem. How [can I] continue working normally?
As your manager said, "Don't think about it, just continue working."
Are there any tricks to concentrate and ignore this standby situation?
Yes.
- Know by experience that this type of meeting is fluid, rather than in stone.
- Know that it has nothing to do with you.
- Make notes (questions/comments/suggestions) in your phone.
- You don't have to worry about forgetting them, because... #3
- There is no pressure because nothing you say (no question or comment) will change the outcome, because...
- The outcome is already decided. The big boss is just announcing it.
Nothing from you should indicate that "the big boss" is wasting your time.
Those are what I'd call "career limiting".
You've already mentioned this to your boss, which is fine.
But, don't mention it to your boss again - once is more than enough, since they're already aware.
One more piece of advice: If the big boss asks for questions/comments/suggestions, limit yourself to either zero or one. Especially zero (see #6 above).
... what can I do from my side to cope with this problem. How [can I] continue working normally?
As your manager said, "Don't think about it, just continue working."
Are there any tricks to concentrate and ignore this standby situation?
Yes.
- Know by experience that this type of meeting is fluid, rather than in stone.
- Know that it has nothing to do with you.
- Make notes (questions/comments/suggestions) in your phone.
- You don't have to worry about forgetting them, because... #3
- There is no pressure because nothing you say (no question or comment) will change the outcome, because...
- The outcome is already decided. The big boss is just announcing it.
Nothing from you should indicate that "the big boss" is wasting your time.
Those are what I'd call "career limiting".
You've already mentioned this to your boss, which is fine.
But, don't mention it to your boss again - once is more than enough, since they're already aware.
One more piece of advice: If the big boss asks for questions/comments/suggestions, limit yourself to either zero or one. Especially zero (see #6 above).
edited 9 hours ago
JakeGould
8,9451 gold badge23 silver badges43 bronze badges
8,9451 gold badge23 silver badges43 bronze badges
answered yesterday
J. Chris ComptonJ. Chris Compton
8,2921 gold badge20 silver badges42 bronze badges
8,2921 gold badge20 silver badges42 bronze badges
add a comment
|
add a comment
|
It may or may not be applicable in this particular case, but I've found it a lot less stressful to work for an indeterminate time if I know I'll be able to take a minute or so to ‘park’ the work before going off to something else.
Especially if it's a task that involves a lot of thought, or juggling a lot of mental state, knowing I can spend a minute ‘dumping’ that to a piece of paper or text file lets me be much more productive and relaxed.
Of course, that's not always possible. But in my experience, if a meeting is at an indeterminate time or has been delayed, people are generally more tolerant and don't expect you to drop everything instantly.
(Conversely, one of the most frustrating jobs I had was one where interruptions averaged every 10 minutes, and people expected me to drop everything and instantly be not only listening to them, but also remembering exactly what they were talking about… This cartoon explains better than I can just how frustrating that can be!)
You get an upvote just for the cartoon reference!
– stolenmoment
9 hours ago
add a comment
|
It may or may not be applicable in this particular case, but I've found it a lot less stressful to work for an indeterminate time if I know I'll be able to take a minute or so to ‘park’ the work before going off to something else.
Especially if it's a task that involves a lot of thought, or juggling a lot of mental state, knowing I can spend a minute ‘dumping’ that to a piece of paper or text file lets me be much more productive and relaxed.
Of course, that's not always possible. But in my experience, if a meeting is at an indeterminate time or has been delayed, people are generally more tolerant and don't expect you to drop everything instantly.
(Conversely, one of the most frustrating jobs I had was one where interruptions averaged every 10 minutes, and people expected me to drop everything and instantly be not only listening to them, but also remembering exactly what they were talking about… This cartoon explains better than I can just how frustrating that can be!)
You get an upvote just for the cartoon reference!
– stolenmoment
9 hours ago
add a comment
|
It may or may not be applicable in this particular case, but I've found it a lot less stressful to work for an indeterminate time if I know I'll be able to take a minute or so to ‘park’ the work before going off to something else.
Especially if it's a task that involves a lot of thought, or juggling a lot of mental state, knowing I can spend a minute ‘dumping’ that to a piece of paper or text file lets me be much more productive and relaxed.
Of course, that's not always possible. But in my experience, if a meeting is at an indeterminate time or has been delayed, people are generally more tolerant and don't expect you to drop everything instantly.
(Conversely, one of the most frustrating jobs I had was one where interruptions averaged every 10 minutes, and people expected me to drop everything and instantly be not only listening to them, but also remembering exactly what they were talking about… This cartoon explains better than I can just how frustrating that can be!)
It may or may not be applicable in this particular case, but I've found it a lot less stressful to work for an indeterminate time if I know I'll be able to take a minute or so to ‘park’ the work before going off to something else.
Especially if it's a task that involves a lot of thought, or juggling a lot of mental state, knowing I can spend a minute ‘dumping’ that to a piece of paper or text file lets me be much more productive and relaxed.
Of course, that's not always possible. But in my experience, if a meeting is at an indeterminate time or has been delayed, people are generally more tolerant and don't expect you to drop everything instantly.
(Conversely, one of the most frustrating jobs I had was one where interruptions averaged every 10 minutes, and people expected me to drop everything and instantly be not only listening to them, but also remembering exactly what they were talking about… This cartoon explains better than I can just how frustrating that can be!)
answered yesterday
giddsgidds
1,0771 silver badge8 bronze badges
1,0771 silver badge8 bronze badges
You get an upvote just for the cartoon reference!
– stolenmoment
9 hours ago
add a comment
|
You get an upvote just for the cartoon reference!
– stolenmoment
9 hours ago
You get an upvote just for the cartoon reference!
– stolenmoment
9 hours ago
You get an upvote just for the cartoon reference!
– stolenmoment
9 hours ago
add a comment
|
Just filter out the time from the message.
In fact you might as well filter out the complete message, since in your workplace "we have a meeting at 14:30" seems to mean "we may or may not have a meeting sometime today/this week/next year."
When you do finally get called to the meeting, don't feel bad about taking as long as you need to "close down" what you are doing to a state you can recover from.
If the meeting organizer complains that you are "late" for a meeting which actually started an hour late, simply reply "sorry, but your inability to organize your work schedule is not my problem."
Final piece of advice: never set an alarm to remind you about things that might not happen on time.
9
If your bosses boss complained about being late, you would really say that? Do you plan to work longer at such a company, or is that a way to get fired? A meeting with your bosses boss is not when it's "time", it's when the bosses boss has time. And it's up to the underling to make time. Maybe at the expense of a full day of work if that's the state the company is in, but I don't think telling your bosses boss "well, that's your problem" is a solution to any problem.
– nvoigt
11 hours ago
add a comment
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Just filter out the time from the message.
In fact you might as well filter out the complete message, since in your workplace "we have a meeting at 14:30" seems to mean "we may or may not have a meeting sometime today/this week/next year."
When you do finally get called to the meeting, don't feel bad about taking as long as you need to "close down" what you are doing to a state you can recover from.
If the meeting organizer complains that you are "late" for a meeting which actually started an hour late, simply reply "sorry, but your inability to organize your work schedule is not my problem."
Final piece of advice: never set an alarm to remind you about things that might not happen on time.
9
If your bosses boss complained about being late, you would really say that? Do you plan to work longer at such a company, or is that a way to get fired? A meeting with your bosses boss is not when it's "time", it's when the bosses boss has time. And it's up to the underling to make time. Maybe at the expense of a full day of work if that's the state the company is in, but I don't think telling your bosses boss "well, that's your problem" is a solution to any problem.
– nvoigt
11 hours ago
add a comment
|
Just filter out the time from the message.
In fact you might as well filter out the complete message, since in your workplace "we have a meeting at 14:30" seems to mean "we may or may not have a meeting sometime today/this week/next year."
When you do finally get called to the meeting, don't feel bad about taking as long as you need to "close down" what you are doing to a state you can recover from.
If the meeting organizer complains that you are "late" for a meeting which actually started an hour late, simply reply "sorry, but your inability to organize your work schedule is not my problem."
Final piece of advice: never set an alarm to remind you about things that might not happen on time.
Just filter out the time from the message.
In fact you might as well filter out the complete message, since in your workplace "we have a meeting at 14:30" seems to mean "we may or may not have a meeting sometime today/this week/next year."
When you do finally get called to the meeting, don't feel bad about taking as long as you need to "close down" what you are doing to a state you can recover from.
If the meeting organizer complains that you are "late" for a meeting which actually started an hour late, simply reply "sorry, but your inability to organize your work schedule is not my problem."
Final piece of advice: never set an alarm to remind you about things that might not happen on time.
answered yesterday
alephzeroalephzero
4,1341 gold badge11 silver badges20 bronze badges
4,1341 gold badge11 silver badges20 bronze badges
9
If your bosses boss complained about being late, you would really say that? Do you plan to work longer at such a company, or is that a way to get fired? A meeting with your bosses boss is not when it's "time", it's when the bosses boss has time. And it's up to the underling to make time. Maybe at the expense of a full day of work if that's the state the company is in, but I don't think telling your bosses boss "well, that's your problem" is a solution to any problem.
– nvoigt
11 hours ago
add a comment
|
9
If your bosses boss complained about being late, you would really say that? Do you plan to work longer at such a company, or is that a way to get fired? A meeting with your bosses boss is not when it's "time", it's when the bosses boss has time. And it's up to the underling to make time. Maybe at the expense of a full day of work if that's the state the company is in, but I don't think telling your bosses boss "well, that's your problem" is a solution to any problem.
– nvoigt
11 hours ago
9
9
If your bosses boss complained about being late, you would really say that? Do you plan to work longer at such a company, or is that a way to get fired? A meeting with your bosses boss is not when it's "time", it's when the bosses boss has time. And it's up to the underling to make time. Maybe at the expense of a full day of work if that's the state the company is in, but I don't think telling your bosses boss "well, that's your problem" is a solution to any problem.
– nvoigt
11 hours ago
If your bosses boss complained about being late, you would really say that? Do you plan to work longer at such a company, or is that a way to get fired? A meeting with your bosses boss is not when it's "time", it's when the bosses boss has time. And it's up to the underling to make time. Maybe at the expense of a full day of work if that's the state the company is in, but I don't think telling your bosses boss "well, that's your problem" is a solution to any problem.
– nvoigt
11 hours ago
add a comment
|
In general: Write your thoughts and questions down.
(With respect to the upcoming meeting topic, of course.)
- What are your ideas?
- What problems and potential pitfalls do you see?
- What questions could be properly addressed to you?
- What questions do you anticipate (addressed to you others) that you could answer???
- Depending on your role, is there a quick visual (diagram, design, other other imagery) you could sketch up quickly to contribute?
In this particular case, you "kept repeating in [your] mind what [you] would say about [your] projects." So, start by writing down what you're mind already has on repeat. Do this quickly, and make a second pass to flesh out details or prepare for questions you might be asked.
Etc.
This is a really good habit to get into, in my opinion, regardless of whether you have meeting anxiety (or ... we'll just say, flexible meeting start times). One of two things will happen, and often both in my experience:
- You'll be well-prepared for the meeting. You'll look and sound professional and confident. And, you'll impress the shit out of everyone.
- Your anxiety will fade, and you might actually find that after a few minutes of note-taking, your mind has stopped racing and can focus on your assigned work again.
This sort of thing really helped me personally. And at this point, if I know I've got a meeting coming up and I'm already well-versed in the topic — there's not much anxiety. If it's a new topic, I'm likely to take my mind out of that endless thought-cycle by writing my thoughts and questions down 15 to 30 minutes ahead of time. And then I feel OK.
add a comment
|
In general: Write your thoughts and questions down.
(With respect to the upcoming meeting topic, of course.)
- What are your ideas?
- What problems and potential pitfalls do you see?
- What questions could be properly addressed to you?
- What questions do you anticipate (addressed to you others) that you could answer???
- Depending on your role, is there a quick visual (diagram, design, other other imagery) you could sketch up quickly to contribute?
In this particular case, you "kept repeating in [your] mind what [you] would say about [your] projects." So, start by writing down what you're mind already has on repeat. Do this quickly, and make a second pass to flesh out details or prepare for questions you might be asked.
Etc.
This is a really good habit to get into, in my opinion, regardless of whether you have meeting anxiety (or ... we'll just say, flexible meeting start times). One of two things will happen, and often both in my experience:
- You'll be well-prepared for the meeting. You'll look and sound professional and confident. And, you'll impress the shit out of everyone.
- Your anxiety will fade, and you might actually find that after a few minutes of note-taking, your mind has stopped racing and can focus on your assigned work again.
This sort of thing really helped me personally. And at this point, if I know I've got a meeting coming up and I'm already well-versed in the topic — there's not much anxiety. If it's a new topic, I'm likely to take my mind out of that endless thought-cycle by writing my thoughts and questions down 15 to 30 minutes ahead of time. And then I feel OK.
add a comment
|
In general: Write your thoughts and questions down.
(With respect to the upcoming meeting topic, of course.)
- What are your ideas?
- What problems and potential pitfalls do you see?
- What questions could be properly addressed to you?
- What questions do you anticipate (addressed to you others) that you could answer???
- Depending on your role, is there a quick visual (diagram, design, other other imagery) you could sketch up quickly to contribute?
In this particular case, you "kept repeating in [your] mind what [you] would say about [your] projects." So, start by writing down what you're mind already has on repeat. Do this quickly, and make a second pass to flesh out details or prepare for questions you might be asked.
Etc.
This is a really good habit to get into, in my opinion, regardless of whether you have meeting anxiety (or ... we'll just say, flexible meeting start times). One of two things will happen, and often both in my experience:
- You'll be well-prepared for the meeting. You'll look and sound professional and confident. And, you'll impress the shit out of everyone.
- Your anxiety will fade, and you might actually find that after a few minutes of note-taking, your mind has stopped racing and can focus on your assigned work again.
This sort of thing really helped me personally. And at this point, if I know I've got a meeting coming up and I'm already well-versed in the topic — there's not much anxiety. If it's a new topic, I'm likely to take my mind out of that endless thought-cycle by writing my thoughts and questions down 15 to 30 minutes ahead of time. And then I feel OK.
In general: Write your thoughts and questions down.
(With respect to the upcoming meeting topic, of course.)
- What are your ideas?
- What problems and potential pitfalls do you see?
- What questions could be properly addressed to you?
- What questions do you anticipate (addressed to you others) that you could answer???
- Depending on your role, is there a quick visual (diagram, design, other other imagery) you could sketch up quickly to contribute?
In this particular case, you "kept repeating in [your] mind what [you] would say about [your] projects." So, start by writing down what you're mind already has on repeat. Do this quickly, and make a second pass to flesh out details or prepare for questions you might be asked.
Etc.
This is a really good habit to get into, in my opinion, regardless of whether you have meeting anxiety (or ... we'll just say, flexible meeting start times). One of two things will happen, and often both in my experience:
- You'll be well-prepared for the meeting. You'll look and sound professional and confident. And, you'll impress the shit out of everyone.
- Your anxiety will fade, and you might actually find that after a few minutes of note-taking, your mind has stopped racing and can focus on your assigned work again.
This sort of thing really helped me personally. And at this point, if I know I've got a meeting coming up and I'm already well-versed in the topic — there's not much anxiety. If it's a new topic, I'm likely to take my mind out of that endless thought-cycle by writing my thoughts and questions down 15 to 30 minutes ahead of time. And then I feel OK.
answered 22 hours ago
svidgensvidgen
5193 silver badges6 bronze badges
5193 silver badges6 bronze badges
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If I was told there was a meeting about to start shortly, then I would probably do some small tasks until the time the meeting is supposed to start. If there is still no meeting going on, then I would continue with small tasks until ten minutes pass by. Once it is ten minutes after the meeting was supposed to begin, I would probably start working on major task items until I am preempted by the team lead, manager, co-worker, etc. that the meeting is actually about to begin.
New contributor
add a comment
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If I was told there was a meeting about to start shortly, then I would probably do some small tasks until the time the meeting is supposed to start. If there is still no meeting going on, then I would continue with small tasks until ten minutes pass by. Once it is ten minutes after the meeting was supposed to begin, I would probably start working on major task items until I am preempted by the team lead, manager, co-worker, etc. that the meeting is actually about to begin.
New contributor
add a comment
|
If I was told there was a meeting about to start shortly, then I would probably do some small tasks until the time the meeting is supposed to start. If there is still no meeting going on, then I would continue with small tasks until ten minutes pass by. Once it is ten minutes after the meeting was supposed to begin, I would probably start working on major task items until I am preempted by the team lead, manager, co-worker, etc. that the meeting is actually about to begin.
New contributor
If I was told there was a meeting about to start shortly, then I would probably do some small tasks until the time the meeting is supposed to start. If there is still no meeting going on, then I would continue with small tasks until ten minutes pass by. Once it is ten minutes after the meeting was supposed to begin, I would probably start working on major task items until I am preempted by the team lead, manager, co-worker, etc. that the meeting is actually about to begin.
New contributor
New contributor
answered yesterday
Gary DrocellaGary Drocella
1674 bronze badges
1674 bronze badges
New contributor
New contributor
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The meeting is delayed? Just don’t work then.
Look, you are en employee for a company. While interacting with co-workers requires human interaction, I have news for you…
These are not really “human” interactions. These are business interactions.
In your case, your business task is to do work at your workstation until you have to do something else. Like be in a meeting.
If your boss tells you a meeting is happening at 14:30, then guess what? Stop working. Regardless of what is happening, just stop working.
The deal is you are not responsible for scheduling and delays; they are.
If you are being told to be ready for a meeting at a specific time, just stop what you are doing and that’s it.
Believe it or not, waiting for meetings is a part of the job as well. So just don’t worry about it.
add a comment
|
The meeting is delayed? Just don’t work then.
Look, you are en employee for a company. While interacting with co-workers requires human interaction, I have news for you…
These are not really “human” interactions. These are business interactions.
In your case, your business task is to do work at your workstation until you have to do something else. Like be in a meeting.
If your boss tells you a meeting is happening at 14:30, then guess what? Stop working. Regardless of what is happening, just stop working.
The deal is you are not responsible for scheduling and delays; they are.
If you are being told to be ready for a meeting at a specific time, just stop what you are doing and that’s it.
Believe it or not, waiting for meetings is a part of the job as well. So just don’t worry about it.
add a comment
|
The meeting is delayed? Just don’t work then.
Look, you are en employee for a company. While interacting with co-workers requires human interaction, I have news for you…
These are not really “human” interactions. These are business interactions.
In your case, your business task is to do work at your workstation until you have to do something else. Like be in a meeting.
If your boss tells you a meeting is happening at 14:30, then guess what? Stop working. Regardless of what is happening, just stop working.
The deal is you are not responsible for scheduling and delays; they are.
If you are being told to be ready for a meeting at a specific time, just stop what you are doing and that’s it.
Believe it or not, waiting for meetings is a part of the job as well. So just don’t worry about it.
The meeting is delayed? Just don’t work then.
Look, you are en employee for a company. While interacting with co-workers requires human interaction, I have news for you…
These are not really “human” interactions. These are business interactions.
In your case, your business task is to do work at your workstation until you have to do something else. Like be in a meeting.
If your boss tells you a meeting is happening at 14:30, then guess what? Stop working. Regardless of what is happening, just stop working.
The deal is you are not responsible for scheduling and delays; they are.
If you are being told to be ready for a meeting at a specific time, just stop what you are doing and that’s it.
Believe it or not, waiting for meetings is a part of the job as well. So just don’t worry about it.
edited 9 hours ago
answered 9 hours ago
JakeGouldJakeGould
8,9451 gold badge23 silver badges43 bronze badges
8,9451 gold badge23 silver badges43 bronze badges
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Most of the other answers doesn't take into account the update OP gave in their post, so I thought I'd throw in my 5c:
The problem: I cannot work normally when I know I will be interrupted any minute.
How to continue working normally?
Are there any tricks to concentrate and ignore this situation?
That problem is unsolvable. You are a human being. By definition, if you are aware that you can be interrupted with high-priority stuff any minute, you won't be able to work normally. Being aware of a possible interruption raises your adrenaline and/or vasopressin levels, depending on the exact setting.
You will be able to work normally as soon as you forget about the possible interruption, by doing something intellectually or emotionally engaging - but you will still be extremely annoyed by it when the interruption finally happens, and won't be able to work normally for some time after that, due to a sudden drop in adrenaline and vasopressin but also highly evelated cortisol level.
As long as you're a sentient human being and are not using hospital-grade drugs blocking the secretion and/or uptake/reuptake of hormones, there is no real trick here. You're being put in a stressful situation, and you're showing a normal reaction to stress.
This is actually a sign of both mental health and emotional sensitivity. If you really want, you can try to fight with it. I, personally, wouldn't. No job is worth getting numb and empty inside, IMVHO.
How to (...) not waste time waiting?
How to be productive while waiting for meetings to start?
This meeting was about our team performance and our salary raises depending on that. I couldn't stay careless as I kept repeating in my mind what I would say about my projects.
If you really want/need to be productive then, do things that are extremely low-priority and don't require any intellectual or emotional immersion (like mentioned by other people). I would look at other people in my team do, though - if they are slacking off while waiting, I'd also find e.g. a good online game to play or a nice video stream to watch :)
The real problem lies elsewhere, I think.
I talked with my managers, they don't get me seriously and say "Don't think about it, just continue working". They are not willing to change this process, while the only thing I want is to be informed what's going on (Do I have to wait 5 mins or 1 hour for example)
What you did was professional. What they did was unprofessional. There's no professional way to deal with people who behave unprofessionally, by definition, other than either not giving a flying -d-uck, or switching to another workplace. If a meeting (...) about our team performance and our salary raises is treated like that, it's basically like the top brass is saying "we don't give a flying -d-uck about your salaries, your time, your well-being or you at all" in your face - either you allow it for some reason and ignore it completely - or you don't, and look for other place to work.
Being treated like that should light a red light saying STOP in your head.
Also, concerning something I read in one comment here:
Do you plan to work longer at such a company, or is that a way to get fired?
Actually, that's a good point - if you want to continue work in a place when you will be treated like garbage, for any reason (e.g. a very urgent need for money, not being able to switch etc.) raising any concerns is not a good idea.
A meeting with your bosses boss is not when it's "time", it's when the bosses boss has time.
chuckle Nope. A meeting with my bosses boss is when we both have time. I'm not a slave - I'm a valued specialist in a highly competitive market. If my bosses' boss would treat me like OP was treated repeatedly, he would get my notice, as simple as that - and I would essentially expect the same from him. I'm not doing him a favour by working for him, and he's not doing any particular favour for me. We're exchanging my work for his money, and I don't recall anything about "slavery" or "obligatory loss of self-respect" in any contract I had signed :) If he wants me to wait - so be it, I'm still getting paid. If, however, he do[es]n't get me seriously when the subject is our team performance and our salary raises depending on that, then it's high time to update my CV again and browse some nice brand new job offers :)
New contributor
add a comment
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Most of the other answers doesn't take into account the update OP gave in their post, so I thought I'd throw in my 5c:
The problem: I cannot work normally when I know I will be interrupted any minute.
How to continue working normally?
Are there any tricks to concentrate and ignore this situation?
That problem is unsolvable. You are a human being. By definition, if you are aware that you can be interrupted with high-priority stuff any minute, you won't be able to work normally. Being aware of a possible interruption raises your adrenaline and/or vasopressin levels, depending on the exact setting.
You will be able to work normally as soon as you forget about the possible interruption, by doing something intellectually or emotionally engaging - but you will still be extremely annoyed by it when the interruption finally happens, and won't be able to work normally for some time after that, due to a sudden drop in adrenaline and vasopressin but also highly evelated cortisol level.
As long as you're a sentient human being and are not using hospital-grade drugs blocking the secretion and/or uptake/reuptake of hormones, there is no real trick here. You're being put in a stressful situation, and you're showing a normal reaction to stress.
This is actually a sign of both mental health and emotional sensitivity. If you really want, you can try to fight with it. I, personally, wouldn't. No job is worth getting numb and empty inside, IMVHO.
How to (...) not waste time waiting?
How to be productive while waiting for meetings to start?
This meeting was about our team performance and our salary raises depending on that. I couldn't stay careless as I kept repeating in my mind what I would say about my projects.
If you really want/need to be productive then, do things that are extremely low-priority and don't require any intellectual or emotional immersion (like mentioned by other people). I would look at other people in my team do, though - if they are slacking off while waiting, I'd also find e.g. a good online game to play or a nice video stream to watch :)
The real problem lies elsewhere, I think.
I talked with my managers, they don't get me seriously and say "Don't think about it, just continue working". They are not willing to change this process, while the only thing I want is to be informed what's going on (Do I have to wait 5 mins or 1 hour for example)
What you did was professional. What they did was unprofessional. There's no professional way to deal with people who behave unprofessionally, by definition, other than either not giving a flying -d-uck, or switching to another workplace. If a meeting (...) about our team performance and our salary raises is treated like that, it's basically like the top brass is saying "we don't give a flying -d-uck about your salaries, your time, your well-being or you at all" in your face - either you allow it for some reason and ignore it completely - or you don't, and look for other place to work.
Being treated like that should light a red light saying STOP in your head.
Also, concerning something I read in one comment here:
Do you plan to work longer at such a company, or is that a way to get fired?
Actually, that's a good point - if you want to continue work in a place when you will be treated like garbage, for any reason (e.g. a very urgent need for money, not being able to switch etc.) raising any concerns is not a good idea.
A meeting with your bosses boss is not when it's "time", it's when the bosses boss has time.
chuckle Nope. A meeting with my bosses boss is when we both have time. I'm not a slave - I'm a valued specialist in a highly competitive market. If my bosses' boss would treat me like OP was treated repeatedly, he would get my notice, as simple as that - and I would essentially expect the same from him. I'm not doing him a favour by working for him, and he's not doing any particular favour for me. We're exchanging my work for his money, and I don't recall anything about "slavery" or "obligatory loss of self-respect" in any contract I had signed :) If he wants me to wait - so be it, I'm still getting paid. If, however, he do[es]n't get me seriously when the subject is our team performance and our salary raises depending on that, then it's high time to update my CV again and browse some nice brand new job offers :)
New contributor
add a comment
|
Most of the other answers doesn't take into account the update OP gave in their post, so I thought I'd throw in my 5c:
The problem: I cannot work normally when I know I will be interrupted any minute.
How to continue working normally?
Are there any tricks to concentrate and ignore this situation?
That problem is unsolvable. You are a human being. By definition, if you are aware that you can be interrupted with high-priority stuff any minute, you won't be able to work normally. Being aware of a possible interruption raises your adrenaline and/or vasopressin levels, depending on the exact setting.
You will be able to work normally as soon as you forget about the possible interruption, by doing something intellectually or emotionally engaging - but you will still be extremely annoyed by it when the interruption finally happens, and won't be able to work normally for some time after that, due to a sudden drop in adrenaline and vasopressin but also highly evelated cortisol level.
As long as you're a sentient human being and are not using hospital-grade drugs blocking the secretion and/or uptake/reuptake of hormones, there is no real trick here. You're being put in a stressful situation, and you're showing a normal reaction to stress.
This is actually a sign of both mental health and emotional sensitivity. If you really want, you can try to fight with it. I, personally, wouldn't. No job is worth getting numb and empty inside, IMVHO.
How to (...) not waste time waiting?
How to be productive while waiting for meetings to start?
This meeting was about our team performance and our salary raises depending on that. I couldn't stay careless as I kept repeating in my mind what I would say about my projects.
If you really want/need to be productive then, do things that are extremely low-priority and don't require any intellectual or emotional immersion (like mentioned by other people). I would look at other people in my team do, though - if they are slacking off while waiting, I'd also find e.g. a good online game to play or a nice video stream to watch :)
The real problem lies elsewhere, I think.
I talked with my managers, they don't get me seriously and say "Don't think about it, just continue working". They are not willing to change this process, while the only thing I want is to be informed what's going on (Do I have to wait 5 mins or 1 hour for example)
What you did was professional. What they did was unprofessional. There's no professional way to deal with people who behave unprofessionally, by definition, other than either not giving a flying -d-uck, or switching to another workplace. If a meeting (...) about our team performance and our salary raises is treated like that, it's basically like the top brass is saying "we don't give a flying -d-uck about your salaries, your time, your well-being or you at all" in your face - either you allow it for some reason and ignore it completely - or you don't, and look for other place to work.
Being treated like that should light a red light saying STOP in your head.
Also, concerning something I read in one comment here:
Do you plan to work longer at such a company, or is that a way to get fired?
Actually, that's a good point - if you want to continue work in a place when you will be treated like garbage, for any reason (e.g. a very urgent need for money, not being able to switch etc.) raising any concerns is not a good idea.
A meeting with your bosses boss is not when it's "time", it's when the bosses boss has time.
chuckle Nope. A meeting with my bosses boss is when we both have time. I'm not a slave - I'm a valued specialist in a highly competitive market. If my bosses' boss would treat me like OP was treated repeatedly, he would get my notice, as simple as that - and I would essentially expect the same from him. I'm not doing him a favour by working for him, and he's not doing any particular favour for me. We're exchanging my work for his money, and I don't recall anything about "slavery" or "obligatory loss of self-respect" in any contract I had signed :) If he wants me to wait - so be it, I'm still getting paid. If, however, he do[es]n't get me seriously when the subject is our team performance and our salary raises depending on that, then it's high time to update my CV again and browse some nice brand new job offers :)
New contributor
Most of the other answers doesn't take into account the update OP gave in their post, so I thought I'd throw in my 5c:
The problem: I cannot work normally when I know I will be interrupted any minute.
How to continue working normally?
Are there any tricks to concentrate and ignore this situation?
That problem is unsolvable. You are a human being. By definition, if you are aware that you can be interrupted with high-priority stuff any minute, you won't be able to work normally. Being aware of a possible interruption raises your adrenaline and/or vasopressin levels, depending on the exact setting.
You will be able to work normally as soon as you forget about the possible interruption, by doing something intellectually or emotionally engaging - but you will still be extremely annoyed by it when the interruption finally happens, and won't be able to work normally for some time after that, due to a sudden drop in adrenaline and vasopressin but also highly evelated cortisol level.
As long as you're a sentient human being and are not using hospital-grade drugs blocking the secretion and/or uptake/reuptake of hormones, there is no real trick here. You're being put in a stressful situation, and you're showing a normal reaction to stress.
This is actually a sign of both mental health and emotional sensitivity. If you really want, you can try to fight with it. I, personally, wouldn't. No job is worth getting numb and empty inside, IMVHO.
How to (...) not waste time waiting?
How to be productive while waiting for meetings to start?
This meeting was about our team performance and our salary raises depending on that. I couldn't stay careless as I kept repeating in my mind what I would say about my projects.
If you really want/need to be productive then, do things that are extremely low-priority and don't require any intellectual or emotional immersion (like mentioned by other people). I would look at other people in my team do, though - if they are slacking off while waiting, I'd also find e.g. a good online game to play or a nice video stream to watch :)
The real problem lies elsewhere, I think.
I talked with my managers, they don't get me seriously and say "Don't think about it, just continue working". They are not willing to change this process, while the only thing I want is to be informed what's going on (Do I have to wait 5 mins or 1 hour for example)
What you did was professional. What they did was unprofessional. There's no professional way to deal with people who behave unprofessionally, by definition, other than either not giving a flying -d-uck, or switching to another workplace. If a meeting (...) about our team performance and our salary raises is treated like that, it's basically like the top brass is saying "we don't give a flying -d-uck about your salaries, your time, your well-being or you at all" in your face - either you allow it for some reason and ignore it completely - or you don't, and look for other place to work.
Being treated like that should light a red light saying STOP in your head.
Also, concerning something I read in one comment here:
Do you plan to work longer at such a company, or is that a way to get fired?
Actually, that's a good point - if you want to continue work in a place when you will be treated like garbage, for any reason (e.g. a very urgent need for money, not being able to switch etc.) raising any concerns is not a good idea.
A meeting with your bosses boss is not when it's "time", it's when the bosses boss has time.
chuckle Nope. A meeting with my bosses boss is when we both have time. I'm not a slave - I'm a valued specialist in a highly competitive market. If my bosses' boss would treat me like OP was treated repeatedly, he would get my notice, as simple as that - and I would essentially expect the same from him. I'm not doing him a favour by working for him, and he's not doing any particular favour for me. We're exchanging my work for his money, and I don't recall anything about "slavery" or "obligatory loss of self-respect" in any contract I had signed :) If he wants me to wait - so be it, I'm still getting paid. If, however, he do[es]n't get me seriously when the subject is our team performance and our salary raises depending on that, then it's high time to update my CV again and browse some nice brand new job offers :)
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answered 8 hours ago
vaxquisvaxquis
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Productive, that's possible! Just find an activity with the following property:
- leaves you in a state of mind very conducive to meetings right after
Some options:
- read a novel
- meditate
- do a Sudoku
- doodle
- eat a light sandwich
And that's it.
I'm afraid work productivity is not a true possibility, because your manager is explicitly wasting your time. That doesn't mean you can't do something productive for you as a human being, but it will at best have second-order positive effects on your work performance.
More office-styled alternatives are perhaps:
- read lore related to your work, e.g. history of a technology
- play with the product you're making
- urinate
- organize documents
- sleep under your desk
Good luck!
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Productive, that's possible! Just find an activity with the following property:
- leaves you in a state of mind very conducive to meetings right after
Some options:
- read a novel
- meditate
- do a Sudoku
- doodle
- eat a light sandwich
And that's it.
I'm afraid work productivity is not a true possibility, because your manager is explicitly wasting your time. That doesn't mean you can't do something productive for you as a human being, but it will at best have second-order positive effects on your work performance.
More office-styled alternatives are perhaps:
- read lore related to your work, e.g. history of a technology
- play with the product you're making
- urinate
- organize documents
- sleep under your desk
Good luck!
add a comment
|
Productive, that's possible! Just find an activity with the following property:
- leaves you in a state of mind very conducive to meetings right after
Some options:
- read a novel
- meditate
- do a Sudoku
- doodle
- eat a light sandwich
And that's it.
I'm afraid work productivity is not a true possibility, because your manager is explicitly wasting your time. That doesn't mean you can't do something productive for you as a human being, but it will at best have second-order positive effects on your work performance.
More office-styled alternatives are perhaps:
- read lore related to your work, e.g. history of a technology
- play with the product you're making
- urinate
- organize documents
- sleep under your desk
Good luck!
Productive, that's possible! Just find an activity with the following property:
- leaves you in a state of mind very conducive to meetings right after
Some options:
- read a novel
- meditate
- do a Sudoku
- doodle
- eat a light sandwich
And that's it.
I'm afraid work productivity is not a true possibility, because your manager is explicitly wasting your time. That doesn't mean you can't do something productive for you as a human being, but it will at best have second-order positive effects on your work performance.
More office-styled alternatives are perhaps:
- read lore related to your work, e.g. history of a technology
- play with the product you're making
- urinate
- organize documents
- sleep under your desk
Good luck!
answered 5 hours ago
WillemWillem
1133 bronze badges
1133 bronze badges
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6
Spend this downtime to write a program that will predict the actual meeting times.
– Evorlor
11 hours ago
Work on your code. Bring a crossword. Do some knitting. Bring a stress toy. Read the cricket scores. Write anagrams sentences. Just pretend to be alert when the unpunctual managers finally deign to show up. It's all a big phony game. Eventually you can work for a better company.
– smci
6 mins ago
Another tactic is to prominently display a Meeting Clock of how much of people's collective time (/salaries/whatever) is being wasted in each minute of meeting, or each minute of delay.
– smci
5 mins ago