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Balancing a
Family and a Home Business:
How to Master
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 basket was hidden under the desk, and my husband (and
business partner) 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 the 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 young 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. Or, if you want to work on the kitchen table most of the time,
set aside one day a week for business meetings and appointments, hire a sitter
or have your spouse be with the children, and work off-site – either at
clients' offices, a coffee shop or a rent-by-the-hour board room.
Part of the solution may also be to turn the problem into
an asset. (After all, one of the important traits of an entrepreneur is to be
able to turn a problem into an opportunity!) Many moms today are
starting businesses whose clients are other moms. They may be selling organic
baby food, baby carriers or organic baby clothing, for instance. Although
customers of these businesses expect and deserve quality products and service,
they may also be tolerant of a higher than usual amount of child
"participation" in the process. You could also enlist your
children's help; depending upon their age, they could run mail through the
postage meter, do filing, or decorate the packaging in which your products
will be mailed.
Equipping
your office with technology (like multi-line phones, call waiting and high
speed Internet access) will also help you communicate a professional image.
With astute use of this equipment, 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 older family members like teens and
spouses 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 newspaper
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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