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10 No-nonsense Tactics in Promoting Your Home-based Business
No man is an island. This adage is especially true in business. Without the community, you would have no business. Always remember that community members are the customers for life of a home-based business unless these members move out of the...

Home-Based Business on the Rise
As America’s economy stands still, many small businesses and home-based businesses have expanded. These work at home ventures show no signs of slowing down, according to the Home Business Manual. Many Americans dream of being able to make their...

Stay Home Moms Earn A Living!
Recent Statistics show a second income might be detrimental to the financial status of many young couples with children who need daycare. Studies discovered families with one income were already ahead of the financial game, if the second income is a...

Working at Home is a MYTH!
Tell that to me and my wife and we'll laugh at you. We've been working at home for the past nine years now. So what, exactly, does that mean to you? Well, it should alert you to the fact that there are people out there who are doing it every day....

Working At Home While Caring For A Loved One
I often sit and wonder "where did the day go?" I know there are 24 hours in the day, 8 of which I spend sleeping. So that still leaves me 16 hours to get my daily activities done. Funny, how 16 hours sure does seem like 6. But after going...

 
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Five Tips to Stay Motivated When Your Job Stays Home


Q. I am considering a telecommute option, where I’d be working from home. How can I stay motivated?

A. Five tips to stay motivated -- especially starting out.

(1) Build structure into your day.

Create a schedule and To Do list every evening for the next day, before you sign off for the day. (And yes – it is important to sign off, even if you return later to complete a project.) Include breaks and email reading time. Define goals by numbers ("write 1000 words") instead of time ("2 hours on Mega account"). One of the joys of working at home is you get to quit when you’re finished ahead of schedule.

(2) Train friends and neighbors to respect your working hours.

Clients tell me about neighbors who say things like, "I told the UPS truck to leave the package at your house since you’re always home." Discourage phone calls with a prepared response, like "I will call you after four o’clock today." You will be tested. Prepare to hang tough.

(3) Get the family on board.

Deal with their concerns before you start and be prepared to show how you are creating a win-win situation. Clarify what counts as an emergency – a valid reason to interrupt while you are working - and what can wait till dinnertime.

(4) Build breaks into your schedule.

When I started my own business, I was warned, "Plan to get out of the house! Otherwise you'll never leave your desk."

Frankly, I didn’t get it.

Why wouldn’t I take breaks? Now as I find myself answering just one more email, or adding two


more paragraphs to an article, I see the clock move and realize I must stop if I want to get to the gym or the store before closing time.

Bonus Tip: A dog will force you to get moving, no matter what else is going on in your life.

(5) Create reasons to finish your projects.

My weekly ezine motivates me to write at least one article a week. You may be energized by company and client deadlines.

As your responsibilities grow, you will tend to accumulate more and more "real" deadlines and it’s easier to stay motivated. But in the early stages, you’re isolated, you’re working hard and results don’t appear immediately. That’s why some people hire coaches and consultants to create accountability.

Bottom line: Not everyone enjoys the work-at-home option. My clients tell me they need six to twelve months to decide how they are responding to this arrangement. You may decide to return to a workplace where you can see real people everyday. Or you may get hooked on having a dog-friendly, gossip-free workplace where you can open the windows all year round.

Cathy Goodwin, Ph.D., is an author, speaker and career/business consultant, helping midlife professionals take their First step to a Second Career. http://www.cathygoodwin.com.

"Ten secrets of mastering a major life change" mailto:subscribe@cathygoodwin.com

Contact: cathy@cathygoodwin.com 505-534-4294