Career Advice - Telecommuter Tips

Is Working Out of Your Home Right For You?

By
Relationship Advice Expert April Masini

Dating Tips and Advice

Q: Dear April Masini,

I gave up my full time job many years ago to raise my kids. Now, they're all grown up and busy with school and extra-curricular activities. I don't want to go back to work full-time because I still want to be around for my kids. I've been hearing a lot about telecommuting -- what is it? Do you think it is right for someone like me?

Sincerely,

Mummy Wants A Job

A:

Dear Mummy Wants A Job,

I'm so glad you asked this question! Technology is here to stay, and one of the benefits of technology is telecommuting. And one of the main beneficiaries of telecommuting are working moms!

There are various ways for employees to telecommute. One way is total telecommuting, where employees and employers only communicate by computer and telephone. The other way is partial telecommuting which gives employees the opportunity to work in an office a percentage of their work week, and to work at home as telecommuters the other percentage of their work week.

If you want to convince a hesitant boss that you, as telecommuter, would be good for his/her business, here are some tips towards selling them on the idea.  

The benefit of having employees who telecommute are:

* They work longer hours and are often more productive. Coming into an office takes more hours of energy exertion than just the hours in the office. Dressing, commuting, waking up an hour earlier for commute time allowance — all of this drains energy from workers who might telecommute without expending extra energy on just getting to an office.

* In their own environment telecommuters are more comfortable and therefore, more productive. Because telecommuters are in their own home office or home, they can break up their day by taking care of business at home, too. This may seem like a waste of energy to employers, but the stress it reduces from telecommuters allows them more productivity for work, rather than more time on site and less productivity.

* Telecommuters who work night owl hours will find each other and work together, on a more natural clock than office workers who are forced into a nine to five work schedule. This kind of work dynamic promotes more natural, productive work than a forced schedule.

 

April Masini -- nicknamed "the new millennium's Dear Abby" by the media, is author of the best-selling books Date Out Of Your League and Think & Date Like A Man, the two (just released) step-by-step dating and relationship manuals, Ideas for a Fun Date and Romantic Date Ideas, and the critically acclaimed dating and relationship online magazine www.AskApril.com.

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