Why millennials use headphones and what harm it is bringing to organizations?
While proponents of new-age collaboration were building dreams of greatly interconnected office space, new-age workers had something else in their minds. To combat this decision, in which they had a little say, latter brought in headphones and earplugs with them: innocuous looking weapons made of two plastic pieces. These became the new walls and pardon us however innocent they look they are far more difficult to get dismantled.
We have all worn headphones sometime or the other but millennials have taken it to the next level. A study by Digital Music News 2016 says that on an average day millennials listen to 75.1% more music than baby boomers and 55.4% of employees use headphones daily at work. Here are their reasons:
30% use it to negate outside noise.
46% use it to avoid conversation at work.
These stats leave us in a conundrum. Where while on one hand, they reinforce the need for a personal solitary productive state, on the other, they hurt the collaboration among team members.
Let’s look at the two sides of this dubious coin.
The Melodious Benefits:
Modern workplaces are noisy. There are no two views upon it. Constant overhead phone calls, water cooler discussions, coughing, sneezing and throat clearing colleagues, ringing and vibrating cell phones, that one colleague with the loudest laugh and outside traffic and construction noises. To top it all there are no doors that you can shut and clamp your sanity.
A study from Oxford Economics 2018 found that the need to “focus and work without interruptions” is a top concern among 2/3rd of respondents and this number trickles through different generations. Millennials have their reason: “music makes them focus and perform”. Music has also been linked to reducing stress. In another study music actually helped surgeons and nurses focus better in the operating room.
Not everybody is keen on joining talks at all times. It may disturb their focused and urgent work. Even if they’re not bugged by it, conversations may still detract the employee from work at hand, even when the conversation might be work related and can help her in the future.
Those who prefer music find it improving their productivity. 80.5% of audio-book listeners and 81% of retail workers in cloudcovermusic.com survey 2019, affirm this. Only 3% think it does otherwise.
The Grating Flaws:
Researchers at Fu Jen Catholic University 2011 in Taiwan conducted a study on the percentage of workers with strong feelings (love or hate) to music while working and its correlation with their productivity. The results showed they scored lower on attention compared with the people who were oblivious to it. The study added that it is natural for people to get diverted to music if they strongly like or dislike it. This hurts their ability to focus on the task at hand. Another research by Robert Desimone n.d., former director of the McGovern Institute for Brain Research at MIT, confirm that music with lyrics (words in a language the worker understands) draw away a person’s ability to concentrate.
Wearing headphones or earphones are also seen as “a major office- etiquette problem”. This is seen as a damper in spontaneous creativity, idea exchange and teamwork which naturally follow conversations in the workplace.
Evaluating the Balance:
Throughout history, music has always been the subtle root connecting people at different levels and now it has become the prime disconnect factor among the workforce. While in the past it helped make friends, now it is making us friendless. It’s time we demarcate the extent of these fences that we keep building around us. Who can lay a human resource plan better than HR's? Here’s what we suggest:
We all love that personal space so it will be unfair and audacious to ask others to forsake it for whatever gains it might bring. Instead of banning headphones or earplugs strike a balance.
Fixing a relaxation or downtime for employees to chill and interact openly will ease collaboration woes.
Help employees understand the downside of using headphones. For instance, you might say, “When you’re doing simple data entry, it’s absolutely ok to listen to music. But while we’re working on this planning, let us all be available for conversations.”
Sporadic lunches that cut across hierarchical levels will improve physical interactions. Group gaming activities like softball, Oscar pools or fantasy football encourage bonding.
Meet employees often instead of simply texting or emailing them.
But most of all don’t take it personally. If millennials love music and sweet escapes, let them have it their own way. Create a balance. As long as they do great jobs, their proclivities shouldn’t matter.
Originally published here: https://www.topchro.com/article/headphones-at-workplace-a-productivity-drive-or-a-sweet-escape
Top comments (3)
I see headphones as a response to cost-cutting decision such as open office floor plans, which are less costly but have increased noise levels and disruptions. Simply stuffing more people in the same space (another cost-saving measure) will increase noise levels as well. If 2/3 of respondents worry about the capacity to work concentrated and without interruption, I think there's something odd going on - the workplace doesn't seem to be well thought out for actual work. There is a reason why libraries enforce silence. To read, absorb and retain information you need to be relatively free of outside stimuli.
Also, if about half of the people use them to avoid conversations, maybe what needs to be done is to implement rules about when and how to discuss things, eventually carving out quiet times in the day or week, such as Intel's no talk Tuesdays or quiet Thursdays.
As an aside, for neuroatypical people noise-cancelling headphones can be a requirement to be able to achieve any sort of concentration and avoid burn out due to overstimulation. If you implement solutions such as wanting workers to remove headphones, please consider those with special needs.
Great article. I completely agree with you. Though, a fun fact I discovered for myself is that in an open space office I can concentrate easily without headphones. Of course there is noise, but once you get used to it - it simply blends. Whereas, in a standard office there is no easy way to ignore what the colleagues next to you are talking about - there is not enough noise to blend with. That is when the headphones come to rescue 😄
Thanks Kristina! You liked my article. :)