26 September 2023

Tuning out the distractions of remote working

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With working from home now the new normal for many people, Lisa Earle McLeod* has advice for coping with the inevitable difficulties that arise.


I was about to get on to an important client call. I’d done my research, gotten my coffee, and was ready with some thoughtful questions.

Then I heard it — the leaf blower.

It got progressively louder, as the landscaper walked closer and closer to my office window, revving up to a full roar, just as my Zoom meeting began.

At that moment, I found myself fuming at the well-intended landscapers, who were just trying to do their job.

Landscapers that I hired, paid, and am immensely grateful for, suddenly became the bane of my existence.

Could they not read my mind that I was about to hop on to an important call? Alas, they were as focused on their work as I was trying to be on mine.

Sidebar: If anyone wants to invent a silent leaf blower, consider me an investor.

Screaming kids, barking dogs, or the construction across the street can feel like a personal attack when you’re trying to work.

Here are four tips to help:

Get noise-cancelling software

This might not make it any easier to focus, but it will reduce your anxiety that others are hearing whatever chaos is on the other side of your laptop.

Personally, I double up, using both Krisp and the auto-noise cancelling feature on my iMac.

I’ve virtually keynoted during a home renovation.

Trust me, it works.

Test it before you need it, so you have confidence when it’s show time.

Explain…and re-explain the work boundaries to your kid: Growing up, my three younger siblings and I were less than quiet children.

One evening, my mother was about to make a phone call and my father looked at us kids and said: “Your mother is about to get on the phone.

Should I go ahead and send you to your rooms now, or wait until you interrupt her?”

If you’re working from home with children, you must define a workplace boundary.

Kids do best with visual, physical boundaries, like a door.

If having a door that defines your workspace isn’t feasible, literally tape out a square on the floor.

If you have a toddler, I’m sorry, just try your best.

Or, skip to the next tip.

Leave. Even if you just hide in your car

Working from home usually just means you need WIFI and a laptop, no fancy office required.

I can tell you from personal experience, if you park right out in front of your house, your car can be a quiet respite with a decent enough internet connection.

I can also attest that the WI-FI in most cases reaches out into to the parking area.

Thanks, Geek Squad.

No more awkward Zoom meetings in coffee shops.

Remind yourself, it’s happened to everyone

Trust me, you’re not the first person to have a work-from-home snafu.

Just ask the guy whose kid interrupted his BBC interview or the lawyer who couldn’t remove the Zoom ‘cat filter’ during a virtual court hearing.

When it’s happening, sometimes it feels like time moves in slow motion, and that everyone is judging you immensely.

They’re probably not.

In some cases, it’s best to just explain what’s going on and deal with it as best you can.

Chances are, they’ve been there too.

*Lisa Earle McLeod is the leadership expert best known for creating the popular business concept Noble Purpose. She is the author of Selling with Noble Purpose and Leading with Noble Purpose. She can be contacted at mcleodandmore.com.

This article first appeared at mcleodandmore.com

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