New Hires Told To Stop Cannonballing Into Office Drama And Paper Shortages
KEY POINTS
- ā¢Nikki Sawhney from the New England School of Protocol advised new hires to pace themselves instead of making disruptive moves immediately.
- ā¢Etiquette expert Mariah Humbert warned against engaging in workplace gossip and urged professionalism during remote video calls.
- ā¢Both experts emphasized respect for administrative staff and proper replenishment of shared office supplies like printer paper and water cups.
Business Insider consulted Nikki Sawhney, founder of the New England School of Protocol, and Mariah Humbert, etiquette book author, to prevent new hires from detonating their first-week reputations. Sawhney warns against trying to be a 'cannonball' ā apparently, bringing tsunami-level energy to a quiet office is frowned upon. She also advises against changing workflows without context or hijacking the last cup at the water cooler without refills (sorry, paper hoarders). Meanwhile, Humbert emphasizes that spilling tea (gossip) isn't your ticket to friendship or promotions, and donning pajamas for video calls wonāt pass as professionalism, even if your cat co-stars. The TL;DR: ease up, ask questions, respect admin staff who secretly run everything, and donāt treat the office like your personal paperless wilderness.
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(1 of 3)Source: Businessinsider | Published: 4/7/2026 | Author: Alyssa Towns Swantkoski