5 Steps To Help Your IT Team Concentrate Part V
Monday, August 28th, 2006This post is the final installment of the 5 Steps to Help Your IT Team Concentrate series. The overview of all the steps I’ve covered in this series is listed for you here, with links to the previous posts, 0 being the introduction.
0. Coin a cool term for being fully concentrated
1. Identify how your employees concentrate and perform
2. Create a process where team members are most effective
3. Encourage collaboration in the group time, and support total isolation for the individual time
4. Create the appropriate atmosphere
5. Don’t be afraid to change and experiment
Today we’ll elaborate more on the fourth and fifth steps:
4. Create the appropriate atmosphere.
Atmosphere in the workplace can be defined in a number of ways. I like to think about atmosphere in two different ways, the physical and the mental. Physical atmosphere is the obvious environment that you can see, touch and feel just by sitting in the room. I like to think of the mental atmosphere of the employee as the environment perceived after you take away all the physical aspects of the workplace.
Physical atmosphere
The last post in this series probably touched on the physical atmosphere that would help an employee concentrate more than I really wanted it to. What I want to emphasize here is that the appropriate physical atmosphere is not difficult to provide relative to any other job environment factor.
I stumbled onto a great article from Jeff Atwood’s Coding Horror site called The Programmer’s Bill of Rights. The article is geared totally towards programmers, but I find it a very versitile list that could apply to just about any IT employee I can think of since most of them spend a lot of time in front of computers. The bill is pretty specific to physical environment factors that are ideal, if not essential for productive programming:
- Every programmer shall have two monitors.
- Every programmer shall have a fast PC.
- Every programmer shall have their choice of mouse and keyboard.
- Every programmer shall have a comfortable chair.
- Every programmer shall have a fast Internet connection.
- Every programmer shall have quiet working conditions.
I would probably add that some sort of barrier needs to be up to prevent line-of-sight with mobile people that are up and about or standing around that would distract the employee at their seat. If cube walls or something aren’t an option, face chairs toward a wall so that they’re looking at their monitor without a bunch of movement in their peripheral vision if possible.
Bottom line is, a one-time cost of a few things that are shadowed by the wages paid to each member of your team just make sense for the company in the long run.
Mental atmosphere
The mental atmosphere is a much more difficult set of factors to narrow down and adjust for your employees. Creating a positive mental environment can be achieved by taking some of the following into consideration:
- Work to resource ratio. Are you way understaffed? Dumping too much on everyone at one time that they can’t possibly finish without loads of overtime? Keep expectations reasonable with what you have. Overstressing a skeleton crew will turn out even worse if you drive them away.
- Good team dynamics. Do your team members work together well without any mediation? Are your members eager to work with any other members on the team? Try to avoid pairing up people that don’t get along, and most certainly remove personal issues between members from the department even if it’s at the expense of losing someone or transferring them. The ripple-effect of negativity is horribly bad for your team.
- Corporate support. How much does your company really back up your department’s initiatives? Do you struggle getting budget support for simple items? Do other departments meet you half way to collaborate on projects requiring everyone’s involvement? If the support isn’t there from the corporate level, the motivation and departmental/self worth of each on the team can certainly demoralize everyone.
- Interesting projects. Are you tasking talented employees with the same exact work day after day, or are you challenging them with needs that put them on the cutting edge of technology occasionally to deliver a solution. Who wants a boring job? Not anyone that wants higher salaries. Leave the boring repetive work to low-budget help or someone that’s not exposed to it. It’s more fun to get “in the zone” on projects that you have to really apply yourself on.
Basically, creating a proper physical and mental atmosphere for your team allow them to not worry about things that would distract them from total concentration. There are tons of distractions that can stem from the environment they’re in be it the squeaky chair they’re sitting in or the argument happening ten feet away about someone who told a joke that offended the person sitting next to you. Create the proper atmosphere, and you’ll get the most concentration possible from your team.
And the last step to helping your IT team concentrate:
5. Don’t be afraid to change and experiment.
This particular step is kind of a catch-all that I think is necessary as you try to find the “perfect” environment and methods to help your team concentrate. One thing that I can’t begin to emphasize enough is that every individual is different, and finds their best levels of concentration differently.
No corporate dictate on process is going to motivate your creative thinkers faster or better unless all of your employees are exactly the same. So in order to get the most for your team, you have to be flexible, and try out different things as the team grows or changes. Don’t be afraid to try something new and dismiss it if it turns out to royally suck for everyone.
Conclusion
So, to wrap up the series…I’ve described steps to take in order to help your IT team to concentrate. I’ll close with a request for suggestions from you on what other steps YOU have applied and seen successful. The steps I’ve outlined here have worked for me and many others that I’ve seen that needed to eliminate distractions and increase concentration. Hopefully they’ll help you as well.
Darren is at it again with another