Mastering
Home Office Spillover
by Wendy Priesnitz
The
electronic cottage may not be as peaceful as the smiling faces
in photographs in the burgeoning number of glossy
“mompreneur” magazines and websites might have us
believe.
About
30 years ago, our self-employed family was featured in a local
magazine. The photograph was lovely. It depicted two shiny
faced little darlings perched on either arm of their
mother’s desk chair, as hubby looked on smilingly and
supportively. The reality is that it took over an hour to get
child number one to stop crying, child number two had just
thrown up on another part of the rug, the laundry basked was
hidden under the desk, and my husband and I hadn’t spoken in
two days.
In
spite of that chaos, my home business has survived and thrived
(so have the kids and marriage!). But it has taken some
planning, organization and creativity.
The
home business owner wears many hats and has to deal with many
conflicts between home life and business life – especially
with children at home. Spillover is the term I use to describe
the creeping, oozing migration of business into personal space
and of family life into business space.
Spillover
is the pit bull answering the door when a client arrives.
It’s that final client report with happy faces drawn in the
corners. It’s when your two-year-old beats you to the
business phone and won’t give it up without a temper
tantrum. It’s when you want to work quietly and your
teenagers want to party with their music at full blast.
The
solution is separation. I don’t mean to divorce your spouse
and send the kids to an orphanage (however attractive that
might seem some days). I mean to create a separate workspace
with a door, a lock and sound proofing if necessary.
Equip
your office with technology (like multi-line phones, call
waiting and highspeed internet) to help you communicate a
professional image. The client really doesn’t have to know
you’ve just stepped out of the shower, have a kid hanging on
one leg and a kitten clawing its way up the other and that the
smoke alarm is just about to go off because the toast is
burning in the kitchen.
It
may be difficult, but you will need to cultivate the ability
to ignore distractions if you plan to get any work done.
Personally, I've never had much trouble ignoring the dusting,
but one home business owner I know says, “When I worked in
an office and went for a drink, the water cooler didn’t say
‘clean me’; my refrigerator does. I have learned to ignore
it.”
You
also need to learn how to deal with people who think because
you are at home you are not working. Don’t let friends keep
you on the phone for hours during your working day. Try to
have family treat you as if you weren’t home during your
working hours. Don’t be available to take out the trash or
go to the grocery store...until you take a scheduled break.
Obviously,
the support of your spouse and/or children is very important.
If possible, include family members in the planning phase of
your home business, so they realize what will be involved.
Don’t just let them come home one day to find you’ve
turned the TV room into an office. Keep them in touch with
your business successes, but don’t bore them with extended
dinner table discussions of the intricacies of your enterprise.
Home
business spillover is just one of the psychological issues
that challenge home business owners, such as loneliness and
isolation, motivation and procrastination, and workaholism.
But keep the ooze in control and you’ll be well on your way
to mastering the rest.
Wendy
Priesnitz is a writer, editor and entrepreneur. She has worked
at home since she and her husband launched their magazine
publishing business in 1976. Having founded The Home Business
Network in 1986, she is a pioneer in legitimizing home-based
business in Canada. In addition to managing her company Life
Media and editing Natural Life magazine,
she has hosted her own television and radio shows, written a
weekly small business column, and authored nine books,
including Bringing It Home - A Home Business Start-Up Guide
for Your and Your Family. Here are more of her articles on small, home-based and green business.
copyright (c) Wendy Priesnitz 2008
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