Tue Mar 11, 2008 7:55PM EDT
See Comments (17)
Fellow Yahoo! Jeremy Zawodny writes about a not-quite-yet-trend that many working folks (including myself) are seeing more and more of: meeting invitations that ask employees to leave their laptops at their desks.
The rationale is pretty obvious: Managers have grown tired of workers who bring their laptops into conference rooms and use them for anything but working. As Zawodny notes, these guys are useless to the proceedings at best, and slow things down by frequently having to be brought up to speed at worst.
Laptops are vital business tools and banning them makes little sense on the surface. That is, after all, why laptops were invented in the first place: So people could take their computer off their desk and into another environment, like a meeting, and be doubly productive. I'm sure many laptop users prefer typing to hand-writing notes, or using their machines to hook up to the conference room projector on an impromptu basis to share a chart or a drawing, or to quickly look up something on the Web.
But in reality, those cases are probably pretty rare. It's just so much easier to print out 10 copies of a spreadsheet than to hook your machine up to a projector, focus it, dim the lights, and listen to people complain about the noise. Ultimately, laptops in conference rooms probably end up doing little actual work, truth be told.
That said, laptops may be more a symptom of meetings that were already useless rather than the cause. How many times have I wished I could catch up on my email instead of having to sit in a crowded conference room and listen to a stuffed shirt drone on about another grand, corporate design that will never come to pass?
More than I can count. Now give me back my Minesweeper.
Join in the discussion. Here you'll see the comments in the order they were posted.
next blackberrys and iphones then phones and then everyone come in swimsuits so the boss knows you are carrying no technologyhahahaha.....
so what's the difference between playing solitaire on your laptop, and doodling on a paper notepad? Either way you can listen and absorb the info being presented... (though for some this is a walking and cewing gum thing)
We don't have that policy at our workplace and quite frankly it is frustrating. At a technical meeting, the experts show up with their laptops and do their email throughout the meeting, responding only when a direct question is asked them, and then usually a "what? Could you repeat that?" I personally consider it a slap in the face to the meeting organizer, and the productivity of the meetings goes down dramatically. Instead of actually getting something done during meetings, they become "catch everybody up and then go off and do work" sessions and usually get nowhere. There are courtesy rules posted in every meeting room, "let everyone talk" and "respect all viewpoints," quite frankly I wish they had a "no laptops" rule as well.
and what next? take away our cellies, what are we 13?
Haha, give me back my minesweeper. As a fresh outta college employee of an English teaching company, I CAN agree that meetings at my place aren't all too important. Time spent handing out awards for blah blah blah, and some "best dresser" award, yadda yadda yadda. Especially when I don't understand the native language of the country, I couldn't care less about all the rambling nonsense that doesn't apply to or concern me. So please...give me back myspace!
This is not a punitive act; It is an act of respect. The speaker%
This is not a punitive act; It is an act of respect. The speaker%
I'm having a problem making the connection. This should be on the worlds dummest rules, not Yahoo! Tech. Also, I have never heard of this, but yes, it is a dumb rule. They start employing this rule in colledg and we're gonna have a revolt! No laptops in a meeting, "How UNPROFESSIONAL!!!!!"
This is almost funny. I know people love to multi-task when given an opportunity. But a meeting is about the subject being discussed, not about checking your email, or your voice mail messages, or playing solitaire. Those "tasks" do not qualify under "multi-tasking", they qualify under goofing off. Several posters have pointed out the necessity of having only pertinent staffers at meetings, that is a great idea. Leave the slackers at their desks with their laptops, then, when the time is right relieve them of their duties permanently. No business needs employees who can't prioritize or are unable to control themselves around a computer game.
The real reason is laptops are recording devices and that scares the stuffin out of some people.
my email is spam1.spam1@yahoo.com. Can someone email me?
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6 Posted by indycat67 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 4:24PM EDT Report Abuse
As they say, adapt and improvise. In case of really dull and pointless meetings that bar employees from bringing laptops, resort to the tried and true pen-and-paper way of distracting oneself! Doodle and scribble! No pens and papers allowed? Well, just daydream Ally McBeal-style--fanciful, silly, and downright funny! Humor aside, this is a two-pronged problem, and laptops are not the cause. As I mentioned above, you can still distract yourself without a laptop in a meeting. First issue is where the meetings are really dull, pointless, and dragging, which challenges even the best employee to stay alert and attentive. Then there are employees who really have low interest in anything the company is doing at all. Worst case of this is a combination of said sickening meeting with ADHD-stricken employees. I say that this is something human resource has to tackle, because either way, it will sabotage the company's success at achieving anything.