The best sounds for working in an open office
The #1 complaint in open offices is noise. Conversations you can't unhear, phone calls you can't ignore. Your brain automatically processes intelligible speech — you can't opt out.
How sound helps
How Sound Masking Works: Your brain is wired to monitor for unexpected sounds - it's an ancient survival mechanism. When a dog barks, a door slams, or a neighbour's TV bleeds through the wall, your auditory system flags it as a potential threat, triggering a micro-stress response. Continuous ambient sound (rain, pink noise, brown noise) creates a consistent "floor" that makes these interruptions less detectable. The disruptive sound doesn't disappear - it becomes lost in the background, like a whisper at a party.
Source: General acoustic masking principles
Setup guide
Over-ear headphones. In-ear buds provide less isolation. If your office allows it, a small desk speaker at 45 dB can create a localised sound zone.
추천 사운드
brown noise
Creates an immersive "cone of silence" that makes nearby conversations unintelligible. You don't need silence — you need the speech to become non-decodable.
Recommended: 50-60 dBpink noise
If brown noise feels too heavy, pink noise provides lighter masking that still covers speech frequencies. More comfortable for 8-hour workdays.
Recommended: 45-55 dBrain sounds
Natural masking with the added benefit of parasympathetic activation. Reduces the stress response that open-office noise triggers.
Recommended: 45-55 dB지금 시도
Listen on Softly
프로 팁
The irrelevant speech effect makes overheard conversations the single biggest productivity killer in open offices. Even modest masking at 45 dB renders most conversations indistinguishable.
자주 묻는 질문
Why can't I just use earplugs in the office?
Earplugs create near-silence, which triggers auditory hypervigilance. Sound masking provides the "floor" your brain needs. It also lets you hear fire alarms and your name being called.
How does sound help with open office?
How Sound Masking Works: Your brain is wired to monitor for unexpected sounds - it's an ancient survival mechanism. When a dog barks, a door slams, or a neighbour's TV bleeds through the wall, your auditory system flags it as a potential threat, triggering a micro-stress response. Continuous ambient sound (rain, pink noise, brown noise) creates a consistent "floor" that makes these interruptions less detectable. The disruptive sound doesn't disappear - it becomes lost in the background, like a whisper at a party.
What volume should I use for open office?
For open office, set your volume to 50-60 dB. This range is based on acoustic research — loud enough to mask distracting noise, quiet enough to avoid auditory fatigue during extended listening.