okeydokey said:I don't expect a silent work environment. Hearing someone's phone ring doesn't bother me.
I don't expect a silent work environment. Hearing someone's phone ring doesn't bother me.
Well, since most of the phones in my office are company phones, and given than a klaxon is one of the few ringtones pre-loaded, I have to assume someone at a higher pay grade approved that as a ringtone.
Well, since most of the phones in my office are company phones, and given than a klaxon is one of the few ringtones pre-loaded, I have to assume someone at a higher pay grade approved that as a ringtone.
Maybe a klaxon is not the best choice for your ringtone in an office environment....
You'd think this would be obvious....
ETA - this person sits about 30 feet from me and it is still very, very loud where I am.
I hope no one actually spent time approving a ringtone. We provide cell phones to some people but we aren't checking what the ringtones are on each phone.
They do, because when you order 30,000 smart phones at a time they custom program them for you..
But corporate discovered they could save 5 cents in licensing fees per ring tone they eliminated from the programming, for a total savings of $1,500 per ring tone over 30,000 phones. My personal old stupid phone came preloaded with 21 ringtones. Our corporate phones have 5. 16 fewer ringtone times $1,500 equals $24,000 in savings on the order. That certainly is worth the 10 minutes it probably took someone at corporate to pick the ringtones.
(They don't monitor if folks download additional ones at their own expense.)