September 12, 2024

How to Work With Irritating People

by Our content team
RCKeller / © GettyImages
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Greg grits his teeth and takes a deep breath. "Be calm," he tells himself. "Don't let it get to you. It's just Carl being Carl."

But Greg has been gritting his teeth for months now, and he's finding Carl's irritating behavior increasingly disruptive and distracting. There's the frequent cursing, the "reply all" to emails, the smelly sandwiches, and the black hole of scattered papers that is his desk.

Greg doesn't know what to do. Should he continue to ignore it and pretend everything's fine? Confront Carl? Talk to his supervisor? Go to HR? Or maybe even look for a job in another department?

Click here to view a transcript of this video.

In this article, we look at the damaging impact that persistent, irritating behaviors like Carl's can have on workplace relationships, team morale, and performance. We'll also explore strategies that you can use to tackle them.

Examples of Irritating or Annoying Behavior

Irritating behavior can be defined as a person's annoying habits that bother you often and, eventually, drain your energy and morale. Examples might include:

  • Talking loudly on the phone.
  • Always interrupting people.
  • Being disruptive during group sessions.
  • Leaving it to others to clear away after a meeting.
  • Failing to file documents correctly.
  • Being persistently late.
  • Eating loudly.
  • Taking frequent cigarette breaks.
  • Wearing inappropriate clothing.
  • Cutting or chewing fingernails.
  • Referring to people in terms they don't like.

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