Rodney McKay
Member
I worked in a similar open work environment and it really wasn't all that productive for me. The work we did was very easily done from home (document editing), but they felt that it was more efficient to be close to the other editors to ask questions and get feedback.
Thing was, we usually just communicated with instant messengers (like Lync) anyways, so being in the same room just led to lots of chatting. It was fun, and I got to know my co-workers better than I usually do, but I was a lot more efficient when it was quiet at home. Didn't help that they constantly had music playing throughout the office.
I have nothing against Agile workplaces and they can definitely be very productive, but in the case of my old job we just didn't have enough space so everyone just got crammed into the "bull pen." If I didn't get a chair in the room with the other editors, I had to be surrounded by people on the main floor all talking to peopl enext to them, on phone calls, or getting stuck right beneath one of the ceiling speakers.
It also shows the importance of not relying on keeping everything in your head while you work.
I used to do that all the time for equations in Chemistry. I'd have them in my head and start punching the numbers into my calculator until I get the slightest bit distracted and *poof* I'm left with a number with no units and no idea where I was or what it means.
Writing your process down helps with not just losing work due to distractions (which happens all the time; from getting annoying emails, to conversations, to a fly buzzing by your head), but also if you're out sick or leave the company, other people will be able to pick up where you left off.
Thing was, we usually just communicated with instant messengers (like Lync) anyways, so being in the same room just led to lots of chatting. It was fun, and I got to know my co-workers better than I usually do, but I was a lot more efficient when it was quiet at home. Didn't help that they constantly had music playing throughout the office.
I have nothing against Agile workplaces and they can definitely be very productive, but in the case of my old job we just didn't have enough space so everyone just got crammed into the "bull pen." If I didn't get a chair in the room with the other editors, I had to be surrounded by people on the main floor all talking to peopl enext to them, on phone calls, or getting stuck right beneath one of the ceiling speakers.
This image is perfect and explains everything about why some programmers need to have quiet area to actually focus. I think I will print one up for work myself as a friendly reminder.
It also shows the importance of not relying on keeping everything in your head while you work.
I used to do that all the time for equations in Chemistry. I'd have them in my head and start punching the numbers into my calculator until I get the slightest bit distracted and *poof* I'm left with a number with no units and no idea where I was or what it means.
Writing your process down helps with not just losing work due to distractions (which happens all the time; from getting annoying emails, to conversations, to a fly buzzing by your head), but also if you're out sick or leave the company, other people will be able to pick up where you left off.