Top 10 workplaces sins annoying your colleagues

Is your desk a tad messier than it should be? Are you prone to eating smelly lunches in the office?

Top 10 workplaces sins annoying your colleagues

Is your desk a tad messier than it should be? Are you prone to eating smelly lunches in the office? Or, perhaps you’re constantly ignoring your co-workers’ emails?

If so, then you could be committing some of the top workplace sins and risking your professional reputation in process. A report from Vapourcore.com pinpointed the top 10 most annoying office blunders.

Sporting bad body odour was ranked as the worst crime in the office, with 43% of employee naming it the top offender. This was followed by not answering emails and not pulling your weight when it comes to cleaning the office kitchen.

After interviewing over 1,000 employees, the study found that interrupting colleagues whilst they’re speaking was hated by 21% of workers – and sneaking off to the bathroom too much is the most annoying habit for one fifth of staff.

The top ten most annoying office habits are;

1. Offensive body odour

2. Ignoring emails

3. Not washing up

4. Messy desks

5. Interrupting when people speak

6. Staying in the toilet too long

7. Talking loudly on the phone

8. Smelling of cigarettes

9. Cooking smelly foods

10. Wearing the same clothes

 

As offensive body odour was deemed to best the worst, we decided to look into whether or not HR should be considering a fragrance-free office policy. A recent report from Robert Half highlighted that just 42% of offices have a fragrance-free policy. After surveying over 1,000 Canadian workers, the report found that wearing too much body fragrance was the most annoying co-worker faux pas.

“An employee who has a strong odour or often creates them may seem like a minor offence, but things like this should be addressed before it causes a major disturbance to others,” Shelley Passingham, branch manager for Robert Half’s OfficeTeam, told HRD Canada.

“If a manager feels that a worker’s odour is distracting colleagues or negatively affecting their productivity, or if other employees bring it to the manager’s attention, it is a good idea to take the individual aside to discuss the matter.”

 

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