3 Major Distractions in Your Workplace (and How to Beat Them)

Are you setting goals that are simply too ambitious? This is one of the things that can distract employees big-time.

learn more about Andre Lavoie

By安德烈·拉瓦

Shutterstock.com

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

Every office runs into some form ofdistractionthat plagues the workplace. Distractions are incredibly common and can damageproductivity,focusand employee morale.

In fact, a 2015surveyfrom Oxford Economics found that employee satisfaction and productivity are affected quite negatively by distractions in the workplace specifically caused by cubicle setups. However, cubicle farms aren't the only reasons distractions occur.

这里有一些of the most common distractions plaguing the workplace and how employers can easiy overcome them.

Related:5 Distractions That Are Productivity Poison (and How to Avoid Them)

Overly strict policies

When it comes to culture, a lot of employers like to enforce a set of policies to encourage employees to arrive on time. Punctuality is obviously important to consider in order to run a successful organization.

However, overly strict policies can be more stress-inducing. If employees are worried and hurry during their traffic-heavy commute, they're starting off the day on a bad foot. This can hurt overall employee morale, especially for those who travel long distances five days a week. They may be showing up to work already drained and frustrated, as a result.

Instead, focus more on building a culture that celebrates employees who are productive and "A" players. A strong message employers can send is that punctuality is important, but what's more important is performance.

Encourage punctuality, but recognize that resorting to harsh punishments for tardiness may be extreme. Instead, offer flextime or show more flexibility, as long as tardiness doesn't impact productivity. In fact, an April 2016surveyfrom Fairygodboss found that flexible hours were nearly as important to those surveyed as compensation is to surveys specializing in female respondents.

如果你冲裁的灵活性角度,are several ways you can add flexibility to the workday. For example, some companies set "flex hours," where employees can come in during a certain time frame in the morning and stay earlier or later, depending on when they arrive. For example, an employee could arrive between 9:30 and 10:30 am and then stay until some time between 6:30 and 7:30 pm. This would allow the employee an opportunity to pace his or her day in a way that's comfortable.

Related:Distractions Are the Enemy of Good: 3 Ways to Minimize Them

Office politics

While noise can certainly impact an employee's ability to focus, what's even more distracting is office politics. Simply put, favoritism and politics have no role in the workplace.

If certain staff members are trying to undermine others and gain favor, employees will lose their concentration. Plus, a dog-eat-dog mentality will be created and damage employee morale.

Instead, stick to the facts -- use performance data to reward those who actually deserve it. Performance metrics help highlight the true "A" players. When employers compare levels of productivity, it's clear who deserves praise.

Recognition and advancement opportunities belong to the best workers, not those who "suck up" to management. Let each employee's performance numbers speak for himself or herself.

Related Video:Experts Share Ways to Filter Out Distractions: Weekly Tips

Unrealistic expectations

Many employers hide behind a common misconception: If they set big goals, employees will be pushed to exceed expectations and reach peak performance. These are commonly referred to as "stretch goals," which are set beyond current capabilities.

As a Junestudyfrom theInstitute for Operations Research and the Management Sciences found, stretch goals actually undermine performance for most organizations -- 80 percent of participants at the companies surveyed had failed to reach their assigned stretch goal.

These kinds of expectations actually hurt employee morale and may even negatively impact productivity. Employees may become preoccupied with worrying about unrealistic objectives instead of focusing on their performance. They may feel that they've been set up to fail.

Instead, collaborate with your company talent to set goals those employees agree on. Talk with each employee about what goals are more realistic, then schedule ongoing discussions. This way, they can speak up if they're feeling overworked, and continually look at their performance to track their progress toward goals.

Organizations should make employee morale a priority. If they build a culture on unrealistic demands, strict policies and politicking, talent gets distracted and their performance suffers.

Related:3 Ways to Avoid Distractions and Be More Productive

However, if employees feel excited about their goals and engaged in a positive culture, and if they can feel less stressed about policies, they can concentrate on what matters most -- their work.

安德烈·拉瓦

Entrepreneur; CEO and Co-Founder, ClearCompany

安德烈·拉瓦is the CEO ofClearCompany, the talent-management solution that helps companies identify, hire and retain more A players. You can connect with him and the ClearCompany team on Facebook LinkedIn and Twitter.

Related Topics

Editor's Pick

The Co-Founder of a Fashion Retailer With a Nearly 100% Retention RateReveals the Secret to Happy Employees
Everything You Need to Know AboutFiling Your Taxes in 2023
These 6 Leadership Skills Are Undervalued— But They Shouldn't Be, According to Employees
Want to Become a Franchisee?Run Through This Checklist First.
You Know Your Love Language, ButWhat About Your Money Language?
A U.S. Company With Thousands of Employees Just Adopted a 4-Day Workweek —Here's the Innovative Blueprint Up for Grabs
Living

Hustle Culture 'Sucks' — But One Entrepreneur's 'Laziness Principle' Can Make You More Money With Less Work

Dave Asprey, biohacking entrepreneur and author of 'Smarter Not Harder,' reveals how to stop wasting your time and start achieving your goals.

Business News

Carnival Cruise Wants Passengers to Have Fun in the Sun — But Do This, and You'll Get Burned With a New $500 Fee

The cruise line's updated contract follows a spate of unruly guest behavior across the tourism industry.

Management

How to Avoid Becoming a Villain — 6 Leadership Traits You Must Avoid

Learn essential leadership traits you must avoid to be an effective and successful leader and avoid the six most damaging traits that can lead you down the path of becoming a villain.

Business News

Walmart Pulls Crude T-Shirt From Its Stores. 'This Was Not Intentional.'

A swear word was spotted by a customer, Twitter went nuts, and the retail giant quickly remove the merch.

Science & Technology

3 Data Gathering Strategies That Benefit Both Businesses and Consumers

Data gathering is getting tricky. Here are three ways companies can gather consumer data in a mutually beneficial manner.

Business Solutions

How to Think Outside Your Industry and Revolutionize the Customer Journey

Follow these four lessons from travel tech startups on revolutionizing the customer journey.