Murdo
@murdo
How do people approach calendar visibility within their organization? Mine is completely public (title, location, etc.); this makes some people uncomfortable. A side effect is people seem more willing to “just grab 15 minutes” of my time because they see a window. I’m now tempted to show nothing, as an experim
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Harry
@nicholls
We don’t share anything mainly because we don’t all have org emails. Very frustrating for organizing meetings.
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rish
@rish
Public by default
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Rio Akasaka
@rio
"DNS" basically means "it's none of your business, I'm just not going to take a meeting". Maybe a suitable compromise?
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Rio Akasaka
@rio
Agreed on the org norms bit from Kevin. But personally I'm wary of two things: nosy calendar peepers ("I'll let you go because I saw you have an interview in the next slot") and exceedingly private folks (marked as "Busy" from morning to evening). Most of my peers are completely public. But I also have "DNS" blocks.
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coachcoale.base.eth
@coachcoale
I think orgs have an opportunity to establish some norms here. But what I’m more interested in at the moment is what you were looking for. If you had a magic wand and could create the ideal scenario, with calendar visibility, what would it be?
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