SERIES: Part Four of a
Five-Part Article
Executive Summary: Fast, non-threatening, tactical ways to
transition what may be a time-wasting interruption into a productive, polite
engagement.
When a friend stops
by, calls or sends you an e-mail, it is not noticed or seen as an interruption.
When anyone else stops by, calls or sends an uninvited e-mail, it is seen as an
interruption and causes most people in the workplace to go ballistic!
Both are interruptions
and cause American businesses and government agencies millions of dollars in
lost productivity and mental peak performance every day.
Here are some fast,
non-threatening, tactical ways to transition what may be a time-wasting
interruption into a productive, polite engagement. Consider:
1.
Telephone
Interruption – “Thank you for calling. I want to give you my
undivided attention, and this is a bad time. What is your number, and when is a
good time later today to call you back?” If the caller is a telemarketer, you
can always play the Jerry Seinfeld game: “If you will give me your name and home
phone number, I will call you back later…”
2.
Telephone
Call Lasting Too Long
– “I appreciate the
opportunity to talk with you, but I know you are a very busy person with a lot
to do, so is there anything else (insert specific topic or question) before I
let you go?”
3.
Walk-in
Traffic – When someone comes to your desk unannounced,
immediately stand up and ask, “Yes? How can I assist you?” This change in
posture will, in most instances, evoke from the other party a question like,
“Do you have a moment?” This is your opening to be polite yet stern by saying,
“Yes, I have a second. What specifically do you need?” This will
conversationally direct them to get to the point and not go into idle,
brainless diatribes.
4.
Walk-in
Traffic That Does Not Leave – Several tactical
engagement interventions can be deployed here. Start by not making your work
area conducive for people to gather: remove chairs; put our jacket, brief case
or something else in the chair so you control when you want someone to sit in
it; angle seating so you get the good view, and they get the wall; shut your
door with a sign that mentions it is your “Quiet Time.” Another powerful
conversion tactic is to grab something that needs to be filed, hand them part
of the stack and politely say something like, “Here, let’s walk, talk and head
to the cabinet. I need to file these while we are talking, and you can help
me.”
5.
Uninvited
E-mails – You have two options. You can outright
ignore the sender and hope they will get a clue that you respond to business –
not personal – e-mails and eventually reduce or eliminate the use of e-mails on
a personal basis. You can also gather all of their uninvited e-mails and
respond to them one at a time, thus blitzing their e-mail box!
6.
Mail – If you know mail is unsolicited, don’t even waste your time
opening it. Rather, simply throw it all away. If it is important, you can
bank the fact it will be mailed to you again!
7.
Meetings – At the precise moment you realize there is nothing else on an
agenda that involves you, politely look for a conversational opening and say
something threatening like, “Unless you all really need me, I don’t want to
hold you back. Should I should be getting back to work?”
Undesired
interruptions can derail mental creativity, concentration and overall
productivity in the workplace every day. As a leader, how you
non-confrontationally manage the environment and situations will drive the
daily output.
Tell
us about how you have handled situations at your place of business.