At home at work
Inside a bright, open office in Newport Beach, Scott Burris wears a
white T-shirt with no jacket and designs an advertisement with
nothing but a mouse and a monitor in front of him.
On a typical day, Burris’ workstation at HeilBrice retail
advertising is abuzz with office chatter.
His refuge: listening to a 4,000-file, 31-gigabyte collection of
songs on his computer that, he determined, would play for 127 days
straight without repeating.
Throughout the workday, Burris is plugged into iTunes, a media
player produced by Apple Computer Inc. that organizes digital music
and hooks up to the portable iPod.
“I’d die if they took it away from me,” said Burris, 25, a junior
art director. “My creative ideas come when I can zone out, as opposed
to having to hear people clicking on their mouse pads all day.”
The higher-ups at HeilBrice aren’t opposed to employees listening
to music during work. They too have methods of relaxing.
A pool table sits in the middle of the multi-wing building. A
plush lounge with small sofas and a television is tucked away in the
corner. A full drum set is planted between desks in the top
executives’ room.
The company is located on Corporate Plaza, a seemingly
inappropriate street name for an office that lacks the usual
stiffness associated with corporate culture.
Discussions don’t take place by any water cooler here. They start
up in the music studio or in the edit room, and often spill over into
real-time online conversations called instant messages.
In 21st century office life, 9-to-5 is a vanishing concept, and
feeling comfortable at work has become a necessity.
“When you spend a lot of time in your office, you have to Feng
Shui it out,” said agency producer Marcus Vadas. “We have a lot of
cram sessions. I let the tunes flow if it gets a little nutty in
here.”
THE PLUGGED IN
AND THE UN-PLUGGED
Employees such as Burris and Vadas often turn to technology to
stay relaxed during business hours. And in recent years, their
options have expanded.
A wave of sleek music players now on the market make it easy for
employees to look casual while listening to their favorite bands.
Instant messaging software, made famous by AOL and Yahoo, allows
computer users to carry on a conversation without picking up the
phone.
The popularity of these products has left company executives
wondering: Are music players and instant-messaging programs
relaxation devices or modes of distraction?
Jone Pearce, a professor at UC Irvine’s Paul Merage School of
Business, said it’s a question that many offices are starting to
answer.
“More organizations are looking at their policies and asking, ‘Is
this necessary to get the work done?’” said Pearce, who researches
organi- zational behavior and strategy.
For smaller companies, the rules tend to be unwritten, because
bosses can oversee their employees’ productivity and make
case-by-case decisions, Pearce said.
That’s the case at OC Web Logic, an Irvine-based Web design
company that has an office in Costa Mesa. Partner Rich Stark said he
doesn’t have a problem with employees wearing headphones or typing to
friends, as long as the work gets done.
Stark said for his designers and for those in creative fields,
listening to music can be a mood-setter. He said he tries to create a
relaxed office atmosphere.
“Sometimes these choices reflect the owners’ personality. They
don’t want to be seen as stuffy,” Pearce said.
Stark said he hasn’t seen a lag in productivity from most
employees who use music players or instant messaging.
There was one instance, he said, in which an employee was
reprimanded for spending too much of his time downloading music and
clogging up server space on the company computer.
“That forced us to look at how that person was using his time,”
Stark said.
Pearce said it’s natural for organizations to deal with problems
as they arise. Still, some companies are sticking to strict,
office-wide codes to eliminate any gray areas.
At Newport Beach-based Pacific Investment Management Co., instant
messaging is banned because all forms of communication have to be
stored for retrieval, a company spokesperson said.
Electronic devices -- including cell phones and instant messaging
programs -- must be turned off during business hours at Pacific Life
Insurance Co., whose headquarters are in Newport Beach.
“Our culture is very business-focused,” said company spokesperson
Milda Goodman. “We are focused on getting the work done and don’t see
instances of people pushing the limits.”
NEW USES
FOR NEW TOYS
Still, some offices are getting creative with technological tools.
PIMCO founder and chief executive Bill Gross is preparing to post
his monthly newsletter on the company website so that it can be
downloaded into iTunes.
A music composer at HeilBrice is making the company’s advertising
jingles available to employees through iTunes, as well.
Instant messaging is often the preferred method of communication
at OC Web Logic and HeilBrice, one of whose clients is the Los
Angeles Times, parent company of the Daily Pilot.
The Newport-Mesa Unified School District is also taking advantage
of the technology.
Portable music players are being used to tape expulsion hearings
or to record meetings, said Steve Glyer, the district’s director of
educational technology.
And though students are typically banned from using instant
messaging and listening to music during school hours, teachers are
encouraged to use them in the classroom.
Eva Wagner, a teacher at Woodland Elementary School in Costa Mesa,
uses iPods to record her first- and second-grade students reading
books.
“They know they have an audience and are excited to hear
themselves,” Wagner said.
Added Glyer: “If kids can record a lecture and use these tools in
the right way, that’s an asset to the classroom.”
‘EVERYTHING’S ABOUT COMFORT’
Along with jeans and short-sleeved shirts, headphones are part of
the office attire for many HeilBrice employees in the creative
departments.
Composer and audio engineer J.P. Parenti keeps a pair of guitars
on display in his first-floor studio, where commercials are recorded.
“Everything’s about comfort,” he said. “We’re trying to create an
atmosphere where musicians feel no pressure and have the freedom to
take risks.”
Cubicles are nowhere to be seen at HeilBrice. Pets are allowed to
roam free. UC Irvine’s Pearce said it’s all part of what some
companies are doing to placate their employees.
“That’s what makes it fun around here,” said Robert Guevarra, the
company’s director of operations. “As much stress as we go through
here, these things make it easier to get through the day.”
WHAT’S AN EMOTICON?
In the absence of body language, instant messaging parlance has
adopted a new way to display emotion -- the emoticon.
HAPPY
:-) smiling; agreeing
:-D laughing
TEASING
;-) winking; just kidding
:-T keeping a straight face
AFFIRMING
:{circ}D “Great! I like it!”
:-o “Wow!”
UNHAPPY
:-( frowning
:-< really sad
:’-( crying and really sad
:-| grim
ANGRY OR SARCASTIC
:-@ screaming
:-r sticking tongue out
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