10 Tools for Work-from-Home / Remote Workers
Mark Anthony Dyson
“The Job Scam Report” on Substack | "The Voice of Job Seekers" | I hack & reimagine the modern job search | Freelance Careers Writer | Thinker | Speaker | Features: Forbes, Business Insider, Fast Co., LinkedIn News | ΦΒΣ
I remember traveling to an east coast client meeting in 2010 and needing a document I forgot to bring with me.
Fortunately, I had a copy in my Dropbox app (more below).
I went to a desktop computer, accessed Dropbox, and downloaded that file.
Everyone looked at me like I had superpowers then because many people had not seen anyone use the Dropbox app.
Today, with the growing concern about avoiding exposure to the Coronavirus (COVID-19), working from home (a.k.a. “remote work” and “telecommuting”) is becoming more popular with both employers and employees.
But, working outside of an office may be very challenging without the right tools to use.
Working From Home Is Increasingly Popular
World at Work reports 43% of U.S. businesses will allow remote Work within the next year. Another report, from the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis, states older workers (ages 40-65) are more likely to work from home.
As you can see in this chart, working from home is growing in popularity.
The percentage of people working from home has increased by 159% in the last 12 years.
This increase in remote workers requires the right tools to meet or to exceed productivity and connectivity expectations from employers.
9 Tools for Work-from-Home / Remote Workers
The best tools for the modern remote worker can destroy the ceiling on limitations. As a remote worker, you will be responsible for ensuring your work products, communications with your distributed team, stakeholders, and clients are as seamless as possible.
These tools are essential, not just a luxury, to bring value to your Work and the virtual workplace.
Working remote tools are mobile-friendly and cloud-based yet easily accessible to you, your team, and your clients.
Below are nine apps for both laptops and mobile phones, Mac and Windows, that I find helpful.
To Stay Organized and Up-to-Date
Slack
Slack is a chat room or workspace for team members to communicate on a project continuously. The project management app Trello can be used with Slack to include remote clients.
This article explains how both apps work together on projects when multiple people are collaborating and sharing ideas, can exchange files and links in real-time. Remote workers can also converge on concepts, work products, or casual conversations using video.
Zoom/Skype/FaceTime/Google Duo
Working away from the human, face-to-face touch of team members can be very lonely. For a remote worker, seeing someone’s face is the best connection you can have to conduct business without a personal touch.
All four apps are useful to distributed teams for face-to-face communication for real-time conversations. Only Zoom offers FREE audio and video recording for a one-on-one discussion. Zoom also provides 40 minutes FREE for multi-users.
Dropbox
Where will you store the volume of Work you are doing as a distributed worker? A virtual file cabinet!
I’ve been a Dropbox user since 2010 and have files safely stored and secured since. It’s similar to a file cabinet, but it’s portable.
If you or your team needs a cloud solution for file storage, they offer a free version or, for a small cost, a version multi-user business account. Both are excellent ways to maintain private files and to keep them accessible to clients.
It syncs all mobile devices. The mobile app offers additional password security, primarily when files exist on your mobile device.
Evernote
If Dropbox is like a file cabinet, then Evernote is a portable note pad or notebook.
For years I used the free version, but a year ago, I caught the yearly $40 special and bought the subscription. With its scanner, you can store multi-page documentation in a digital format.
The search for terms makes it easy to save passwords, credit cards, or documents, and it’s as secure as Dropbox’s settings for security. You can even send your remote work team notes from your Evernote.
WhatsApp (messaging across the world)
Remember those expensive phone calls and text messages from your mobile phone plan? Yeah, me too.
The solution to an international distributed team is the WhatsApp that allows you to text, video message, or share links to anyone. The big draw for this app is the money it saves on international text messaging, voice, and video calling.
Signing Documents
Receiving digital documents are annoying if you need to print, physically sign, and scan to send the signed document back. DocuSign is my personal choice for a mobile app to help you sign documents, business or personal, on the go.
DocuSign is easy to implement when receiving a PDF file or Word document, signing it, and sending it back. Or import documents from cloud services such as Google Drive, Evernote, or Dropbox to sign and save to the portal of your choice.
To Communicate Securely
Virtual Private Network (VPN)
Your company or client may provide some security software making your work products more secure. But, anytime you work away from home on another WiFi network, for additional security, you need to use a VPN.
I have a subscription to IP Vanish, making my IP address invisible on any WiFi network safe from predators who want to attack you via your Internet use.
Norton LifeLock has a suite to include a VPN and a security suite to use its software on all of your mobile devices. Your device can reach the network and encrypts your IP to protect against cyber predators, and conceals your personal information.
WiFi Map
Even when on vacation, a client or coworker may need a signature, confirmation, or a video call from you.
WiFi Map helps you find the nearest available WiFi network. Although the strength of WiFi signals are not created equally, at least the app will provide options.
I was once at a Starbucks near a wireless mobile store where the mobile WiFi signal was so powerful, and it was much faster to connect using it rather than the Starbucks one. Both showed up on the map, but, in my case, it did not matter which had a more reliable signal.
Password Manager
Add another layer of security by using LastPass free version. It allows you to store passwords through all of your devices.
Since safety and personal information for all apps are essential, strong passwords are a crucial part of maintaining security. If you have more than one device, this is a helpful app to use.
You may consider their low price of $3 per month for the premium, but read this article to understand the difference between free and premium versions.
Back up
IDrive has been around for some time now, but if you get in now, it can back up 5 TB of cloud space for $6.95 (regularly $69.95). Not only I found it easy to download and install. You can also back up your tablets and phones, too!
The Bottom Line:
These tools will provide a powerful distributed work experience for remote workers when time is invested. They are not just productivity tools, but also communication necessities needed across all mobile devices. Most of the useful mobile tools are budget-friendly and, usually, adaptable to the remote work experience you desire.
The original article was published on job-hunt.org!
Transformative Instructional Trainer & Designer | Driving Career Growth Through Strategic Learning and Development
4 年I downloaded the WhatsApp. I have used Slack a time or two. I am sure we will see more usage of these apps.