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5 types of people who kill your time (And how to handle them)

etimes.in | Last updated on - Mar 15, 2026, 11:00 IST
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Types of people who kill your time

We’ve all been there: trapped in a glass-walled conference room (or a pixelated Zoom tile) while our to-do list grows roots. Time is your most precious currency, yet the modern workplace is swarming with "time thieves" disguised as coworkers.

Whether it’s the person who turns a 5-minute sync into a 40-minute podcast or the one who treats every printer jam like a national emergency, these energy vampires don't just steal your minutes—they steal your momentum. The good news? You don’t need to be the "office jerk" to fix this. You just need a few clever boundaries to protect your sanity.

Here are the five classic archetypes and exactly how to handle them.

2/6

The Meeting Drifter

These people kick off a meeting with an update but somehow end up debating about everything happening in the world. They crave connection, but their chaos hijacks your schedule.

The Fix: Claim the first 60 seconds.
Say, "Before we dive in, let’s nail down the one specific decision we need to make today."

Why it works: It brings the conversation to a goal. If they wander, you can gently pull them back by pointing to that goal.

3/6

The Chronic Latecomer

Starting 10 minutes late because you're waiting for "that one person" sends a message: Their time is more valuable than yours. Waiting for them actually trains them to stay disorganized.

The Fix: The "Moving Train" approach.

The Strategy: Start the meeting on time, instead of waiting for them. Don't recap when they breeze in later.

The Result: When they realize the meeting moved on without them, they’ll start syncing up. Punctuality is a culture you build, not a request you make.



4/6

The Over-Explainer

You ask, "How was the client call?" and they give you a three-act play with backstories, subplots, and character arcs. They fear leaving any information out, so they overcompensate with too much unnecessary information.

The Fix: The "Bottom-Line" Interruption.

The Strategy: Interrupt gracefully but firmly.

The Script: > "I love the context, but for the sake of the next steps, what’s the one key takeaway we need to act on?"

Why it works: It forces them to prioritize outcomes over details.


5/6

The "Urgent Everything" Type

To this person, every ping or email is urgent. They are drama amplifiers. If you treat every "fire" like an apocalypse, you’ll burn out before lunch.

The Fix: Prioritise work.

The Strategy: Force them to rank the panic.

Ask them, "On a scale of 1 to 10, what breaks if this waits until tomorrow?

Why it works: Most "emergencies" are actually just "inconveniences." Modeling calm forces them to lower their own temperature.



6/6

The Non-Decision Maker

They love analysis but hate accountability. They’ll "loop in" five more people or ask for "more data" just to avoid saying yes or no.

The Fix: Force the Binary.

The Strategy: Front-load the authority. Before the meeting ends, ask:
"Are we a 'Yes,' a 'No,' or a 'Wait until Friday'?"

The Result: It puts the ball back in their court and documents the bottleneck. They’ll either start making calls or step out of the way.

Remember
Protecting your time isn't about being rude; it's about being effective. When you clear out the noise, you finally get to do the work that actually matters.

Would you like me to help you draft a "Meeting Charter" for your team to set these expectations once and for all?

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Copyright © Jun 10, 2026, 01.59PM IST Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd. All rights reserved. For reprint rights: Times Syndication Service