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| THOUGHTS | | | JUNK DRAWER | | | MADE STUFF | | | BORING STUFF | | |
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OFFICE SURVIAL TIPS No one should have to work in an office environment. Open floor plans and cubicles are inhumane. Fortunately I have come up with some tips that may help you though the day WITH your sanity. So until the Supreme Court outlaws offices and we can do our work from our bedrooms or nice parks, read on for some help in surviving the day. Tip One Never learn how to use your phone (beyond the physical picking up of the unit). Need to transfer a call? Tell the person on the line who you're transferring them to, put the phone down on your desk, count to 7, and hang up the phone. Hopefully they will call the person you were transferring them to, thinking you made an error or the system is faulty. If they do happen to call you back, disconnect your phone. This will lend more credibility to their being an actual problem. Tip Two Hand it over to Johnson. When one of the head muckity mucks comes over and asks for this or that, say you handed it over to Johnson for some additional feedback. This will probably keep the big-wigs happy for a while. And it doesn't matter if your company has a Johnson. Your boss probably doesn't know anyway. They probably don't even know your name. Tip Three Look busy. You don't need to do actual work everyday, but you need to look busy everyday. Have a desk with some files and reports on it. Don't have computer programs maximized on your screen, instead keep at least three programs open and overlapping each other, so it looks like you're "multi-tasking". Occasionally print things out. It doesn't matter what but make sure it's work related, and it never hurts to make the occasional copy of something. And a key part of looking busy is not looking like you're screwing around. Don't leave your internet email open on the screen. Instead, compose your emails in a text editor and send those emails off during lunch. Don't make many personal phone calls. And if you're standing around chatting with someone, have a coffee cup in one hand and a notepad in the other (see tip four). Tip Four Have something in your hands. Carry folders and a notepad everywhere you go (Multi-colored folders make it look like you're well organized). Even if you're getting a cup of water or heading to lunch, have some folders in your hand. People will see this and assume you're doing something important. Tip Five Keep your desk neatly cluttered. Just as you want to have your computer screen look busy, keep your desk up to appearances as well. Make sure you rearrange the clutter every so often so it looks like you're working hard. Keep several pen cups full with multi-colored pens and hi-lighters. Have several binders full of paper around (make sure something is on the paper). Keep some vertical files on the side of your desk with full folders in them (remember multi-colored folders make you look organized and efficient). The more you can neatly surround yourself with work materials the better. Tip Six Take some time for yourself. Your mental outlook is important. Hang out in the bathroom sometimes. You're getting paid just the same. Try to time it so it consumes 10 minutes before the end of work or some other fun event. Find a window in the office you can stare out of for a while where and when no one else is around. Take ten or fifteen extra minutes on either side of your lunch. Keep your mind clear, that's the important thing. Because when you have to do real work a clear mind will help it go more quickly. Tip Seven Resist Faking. All of these tips are designed to make others ASSUME that you're working hard. Don't make others suspicious by boasting or faking work. Don't set your email system to send emails to co-workers three hours after you leave. Don't elude to working long hours. Don't refuse work saying that you are too busy to do it. Don't take credit for the work of others. Look busy, let others assume you're too busy to be given any work, and you may be lucky enough to spend weeks or months doing nothing. |
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