Archive for the ‘working from home’ Category

Oh, the people you’ll meet! (Why social networking is also good for the soul)

Thursday, June 26th, 2008

I met someone through my networking at Biznik who shares my name. Tia’s are pretty hard to come by. She’s not only great because her name is Tia, she’s fabulous because she’s demonstrated the point of networking.

She lives on the other side of the country (really) yet we’ve found some common ground discussing a topic that’s of mutual interest - mastermind groups.

Today, she passed on some information that is priceless to me just because she thought I might find it interesting. Just a simple link to something she found - out of the blue; I didn’t ask for it. She just gave it because we’re in this quest together.

To me, that’s not only the mark of a truly generous person, it’s the mark of a friend and a connection to keep for life. And that, my friends, is good for the soul.

You just never, never know who you might meet in your social networks.

Happy networking!

*Tia*

p.s. membership at Biznik is free and the members are all real people interested in real connections. I highly suggest you join if that’s something that interests you, too.

I don’t want to work from home today

Thursday, June 5th, 2008

Have you ever had one of those days when you just don’t feel like working from home? I’ve only been at this for a little over six months at this point. If you’ve got a lot of experience with this, share some secrets for overcoming the work at home blahs!

I’m thinking trying these. If you have thoughts or advice, please share!

  • Changing the scenery? Maybe moving things around might help.
  • Taking it outside…or away? I could go work from somewhere with Wi-Fi today just to break up the monotony a bit.

–Tia

Spring Fever

Friday, May 30th, 2008

Is it too late for a spring fever post?

This image by Don Li-Leger is courtesy of allposters.com. Go buy it! It’s beautiful.

Here in Erie, I feel like spring is just now rolling around. My allergies are kicking in (that’s a sure sign), it’s incredibly green, it’s finally warm, and there are a whole lot more cars out driving in the middle of the day.

Today is definitely a Spring Fever Friday. In the world of working from home - spring fever, in my opinion, means shutting down/hibernating the ‘puter, buckling my son into the car seat and heading out shopping for a few hours for summer clothes and that new swimsuit.

It feels great to get out and about, set work aside for a bit and enjoy being whole, happy and successful in life. Spring and summer are great seasons to celebrate who you are beyond what you do - you’re a mother or father, son or daughter, sister or brother, best friend, mentor, buddy, neighbor, caretaker, etc. These things describe who you are a person in relation to the “others” in your life - the ones that make it all matter.

The seasons, the weather, the people you choose to spend your days around…spend some time celebrating and enjoying it all. Take time this spring and summer to plan some truly remarkable (but inexpensive) weekend getaways:

  • explore that children’s museum in your home town you’ve never been to (even if you don’t have children!);
  • take your digital camera to the nearest state park and click away, then create a neat photo blog to share it;
  • invest in your extended family by buying a plane ticket and taking a long weekend (leave the laptop behind).

Remember that all of our days are numbered. Try and make the most of each one this season. I know I will!

Cheers,

Tia

Work from home tip: The laundry can wait

Monday, May 19th, 2008

Does this seem familiar to you?

  1. Wake up.
  2. Start working (notice I skipped brushing teeth, getting coffee, getting dressed…)
  3. Stop working to open the door/gate/whatever for UPS/FedEx/USPS person.
  4. Resume working
  5. Stop working to get dressed/brush teeth/eat breakfast
  6. Resume working
  7. Stop working to pick up the clutter, start a load of laundry, feed the dog.
  8. Resume working
  9. Stop working to [fill in random household chore here]

It can be extremely tempting to tend to household chores and similar things when you work out of your home. But have you ever considered the real impact on your productivity that comes as a result? It’s major. It can take me twice as long to do something if I keep stopping to tend to the house.

The laundry can wait. If you didn’t work from home, it would have to anyway. You work from home because it’s a nice perk, not because you can work and do the dishes and dust the living room and make the kids’ beds.

I suppose you might work from home so you can do those things, but I challenge you to spend one weekday brushing off all that stuff until 5 PM. Then, stop working and tend to your home. You’ll be surprised that you accomplished way more when you focused on just one thing at a time.

To our success,

Tia

Nice girls don’t get the… “home” office?

Friday, May 2nd, 2008

This blog is particularly written with virtual assistants in mind.

Anyone reading this blog has probably heard of or read the book Nice Girls Don’t Get the Corner Office by Lois P. Frankel. The book highlights some common mistakes women naturally make that may prevent them from breaking through that highly controversial notion of the “glass ceiling.” The book is very good, actually, and if you haven’t read it, you should, particularly if you have been or plan to ever be part of “corporate” America.

But I have another angle on this that I’ve been thinking about recently. What about the home office? Is there a difference when it comes to women’s natural tendencies (to bring cookies and other goodies and leave them at our desk, to bring in our kid’s fundraisers, to put others first, etc) in the home-based business realm, vs corporate America?

I’d love to see some responses and comments to this. Women in home-based businesses tend to be in industries we expect them to be in - virtual assistants (like myself), home/personal products, shopping, etc. Some of the very successful are in more mixed pools - graphic design, coaching/consulting, etc. A lot of men in home-based businesses are found in major money-making MLM businesses, finance (like home-based accounting and tax services), real estate investing, technology and media. Of course, all of this commentary is without research into this - this is just my observation. Click here to read the Good Morning America article on Virtual Assistants written last September.

Case in point: I’ve never been a “brick-and-mortar” administrative assistant professionally (a few times during college temporarily). I have a BA in technical writing and until recently worked in IT as a tech writer, then product manager, and then lead business analyst. But when I decided to work from home, I chose virtual assistance. Why? I don’t really know. I just enjoy it a lot. That’s all I can offer for an explanation.

Women seem to thrive in “helping” businesses like virtual assistance. Does that make us servants? Most definitely not! But if you ever find yourself feeling that way a bit, don’t fret, I’m sure we all do at some point. I recently came into negotiations with a potential client that didn’t go very well. The essence of the conflict was a philosophical one. The potential client (a man) worked from home and probably enjoyed a lifestyle that anyone would - lots of income, low overhead and free time. But he didn’t anticipate that I would be in the same position as he is. When it came to negotiations in terms of my rate and my work schedule, he expected me to work 24/7 for peanuts. That’s ridiculous. Needless to say it didn’t work out between us.

Anyway, the issue I’m really getting at is that it’s obviously possible for women to be very successful in home-based business (many, many women do - just look at Ali Brown and her prodigies), but it isn’t by giving stuff away, acting like a servant, lowering our rates or devaluing our services. It’s by sticking to your guns. Set a price and a schedule that you want and that reflects your desired lifestyle (see my blog about Lifestyle Entrepreneurs) and then don’t waver. Men rarely do that (in business or in life) but as women we’re so good at rationalizing our changes that we talk ourselves into things like “I’ll lower my rate for just this one client” or “It really shouldn’t take 2 hours to do this task so I’ll only charge him for 1 1/2 hours.” Resist the temptation to do this!

Whether or not you believe in “you reap what you sow”, law of attraction, karma, “you get what you ask for” or something similar, the truth is that you will get out of life exactly what you expect to get. So set your expectations high! If you want lots of money and a 2 hour workday, expect that. You will then find yourself researching businesses that allow this sort of lifestyle and the next thing you know it will be yours.

So be nice, but be real. Don’t bend down for clients, reach up for them.

To our success!

Cheers,

Tia