Make Working From Home Work For You
Amie Devero
I partner with high-growth start-ups to create breakthrough strategy and scale people for 10X growth and value.
This article was first published in 2016, long before the pandemic and all of the remote work it engendered. I was surprised that it stood up so well. I’ve made a few revisions to account for the new normal.
The notion of working from home seems so awesome. No need to dress up. Work with the cat on your lap. Never search for a parking spot. No commute and therefore no sitting in traffic. Plus, no annoying colleagues to stop by and interrupt you. And it’s no surprise that so many employees are no longer willing to sacrifice all of that to come back to the office in the wake of the pandemic.
Yet,?for most people who transition from an office to virtual work – or even harder—to being solopreneurs – it is really tough to strike the right balance of productivity and work-life boundries.
I remember when I first started working from home about 19 years ago. That was the year my house was spotless and I saw every episode of Magnum PI in syndication.
When your home is your workplace, every benefit comes with an inverse challenge. Even if you are content to live in your PJs or running gear?(as I am)?developing and maintaining work habits that maximize your productivity at home is an adjustment. There are so many temptations that you never face in an office:?Pets, children, televisions, the great outdoors and of course, the refrigerator.?
If you are domesticated you may find yourself doing laundry, cleaning the house or grocery shopping instead of meeting a deadline. Own your own business? Well,?making sales calls is easy to delay when there’s a TV nearby or a dog asking to be walked.
Along with everything that undermines productivity,?there is also the danger of working all the time. Most of my clients struggle with that. They are so committed, and the number of things to do so vast, that they never stop working.
It’s not hard to see how that happens. At home there is no natural line of demarcation between your work time and your off time. So it’s a small step from being a good employee or ambitious entrepreneur to corresponding with clients at 10 PM or forgetting to eat, pee or shower. National holidays come and go, and you are oblivious. While working on a presentation you notice your Facebook friends posting topless photos from the Columbus Day Regatta and suddenly realize it’s a holiday weekend. Darn.?
The bleeding of work into personal life is insidious and can quickly turn you into a very boring, blinkered workaholic or someone’s former spouse. Also, if you don’t have a family, it’s all too easy to become completely isolated. That’s my biggest personal challenge.?In the absence of impromptu lunches, happy hours or water cooler conversation there is no built in social component. Without a concerted effort, hermitude will rapidly take hold. That’s especially problematic for fully virtual companies in which people never get the chance to form the kinds of casual friendships that happen during impromptu collisions.
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So how can you accelerate the evolution from office denizen to productive virtual worker or high-charged solopreneur without becoming a workaholic or a pallid ghost who never leaves the house??“Work hygiene” has to become a conscious, methodical choice instead of something automatic that your employer provides.
Here are some work hygiene habits and practices that are worth embracing!
One thing I do to tether my work to a single room is that I still work on a desktop computer with a 22 inch monitor. Yes, I have a great laptop and an iPad and so forth. But doing the majority of my work on a desktop keeps me from roving around the house contaminating every room with work cooties! You can get the same effect by using an external monitor for your laptop – in your designated “office”.
In the same fashion, I am finished taking calls and working at 7 PM.?Do I ever work late? All the time. But the work that I schedule and plan to do, and the calls, meetings and expectations end at 7 unless I am on deadline or simply too engrossed in something creative to stop myself.?Even my dog, Arlo, knows that, and arrives at my desk promptly at 7 for a walk. He’s a tough taskmaster!
I hope these tips help you super-charge your work life at home.
Executive coaching can supercharge your team’s productivity. Contact me to chat about it.