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Taking your work at home career on the road
by Work-at-Home.org
To people who aren't able to work at home and are still hopelessly trapped by their heartless alarm clock, the grueling daily commute and seemingly never-ending office politics, the sheer freedom of being able to work at home is already a dream vacation.
But those of us who work at home know that what we do is still work and can sometimes feel just as trapping as that old office job if we allow ourselves to get stuck in a rut.
Maybe it's time for us to take our work at home jobs to the open highway.
Work at home case history: Carolina Sweenee, an Ohio-based graphic designer and writer, fell in love with a computer programmer by the name of Andy. The two began planning a life together. Carolina was fed up with the office politics of her current job and was dreaming about being able to work at home. It wasn't long before one of them had the idea to convert her office job to a work at home job and take it on the road. Having an aptitude for computers and networks, Andy told Carolina that if they really wanted to, he could rig a system that would allow both of them to work at home... regardless of where 'home' was. An RV. A hotel room. A condo on the beach. Home is where the heart is, right?
Andy didn't have to tell Carolina twice!
Carolina made a presentation to her boss showing him how she could work at home and be more productive than she was currently having to commute. She showed him how converting her job to a work at home job would give them more room in the office to hire another artist and increase the department's productivity without adding to its overhead. She offered to work as an independent contractor if the company preferred (even though they did agree to keep her on salary), and carefully and thoroughly explained to her manager how they would still be able to reach her anytime they needed to, how there would be virtually no interruption in her work and how she felt the quality of her work product could improve if she was able to work at home. She obtained a special cellular telephone to use just for her work at home job, an 800 number where anyone in the company and/or clients could reach her at no cost during office hours the same as if she were sitting in the old office, and she explained how she would email scanned images of her work product for approval and deliver finished art to the office herself, by service bureau or by courier or send the images by email for her office to finish.
After a respectable honeymoon period during which Carolina got the bugs worked out of her new work at home job, Carolina and Andy took a trip. Their first trip was only for two work days and they didn't go far. They bought special luggage for their work at home gear... battery charger, laser printer, fax machine, scanner, special suitcase for art supplies, reference materials and Andy's tools. The 800 number was set up to ring on the cell phone which offered free voicemail and paging and she turned it off at 5:00 pm every work day. Hotel rooms with high speed internet access were chosen and Andy rigged up all the equipment so they could both correspond with their home bases any way they needed to. Andy and Carolina brought new meaning to the term 'work at home'. They worked at home in Ohio and many other states, even Canada when they worked at home all the way to see Niagara Falls. They worked at home on the beach. They worked at home in the mountains of Colorado. Thanks to Andy's ingenuity, all they needed to work at home was electricity and a phone line.
Now they talk about saving up money to work from an RV.
If you work at home you know that sometimes you've just got to get out. When getting out takes you on vacation, remember that there are ways you can take your work at home job with you. Once you learn how to work at home on the road, you can take longer vacations and in some cases, still be able to make money while you're on vacation.
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Here are some tools that may help you take your work at home career on the road:
- Laptop computer with all your usual software loaded on, and a way to make backups.
- Cellular phone and battery charger. Select a carrier with large calling areas and good rates on long distance.
- Combo office machine that offers laser printer, fax machine, photocopier & scanner all in one, wonderful, compact machine. Select one that offers remote fax retrieval so you can retrieve faxes that are received when your machine isn't on.
- 800 number(s) that ring on your cellular telephone. When you work at home on the road, forward your calls to the cell phone. When you return to your regular work at home office, un-forward the calls to ring on your regular work at home phone.
- Email service that can be downloaded from virtually anywhere
- While you're on the road, find hotels, cabins or other accommodations that offer an extra phone line and/or high speed internet access. Most hotel chains print directories you can carry along with you on your trip and thousands of hotels also accept pets if you want to travel with your pets.
- Local dial-in numbers from your ISP so you can use local telephone numbers to dial in with instead of dialing long distance. If you have an ISP who does not provide this service, you may be faced with paying very expensive hotel long distance rates for every single minute you're online. NOT GOOD. Find out if your ISP offers nationwide local phone numbers. Print out their list and keep it with you or save their URL. If your ISP doesn't provide this service, consider a different ISP unless paying long distance while you're online is not a problem.
- You will need the standard work at home set of supplies: paper clips, mini stapler, pens, highlighter, notes, files, postage stamps and any tools related to your profession.
- Reference materials, such as your rolodex or PDA so you can look up passwords, phone numbers, names, account numbers or anything else you may need in your work at home job. Remember, once you're away from your normal work at home environment you don't know what may come up that you'll need to handle. The longer you can perform your work at home job on the road, the longer you can stay away if you wish.
- We recommend running a backup of your entire system before you leave. Run another back up when you return and then copy everything back to your main system.
- Backups of your most needed software and drivers can be very helpful.
- Take everything you need to be able to cash your paychecks and/or do your banking when you're not at home.
- If you use snail mail in the performance of your work at home job you should already use a rented mailbox to protect your personal privacy. If you don't already have a rented mail box at a private mail center (not a P.O. box) get one. These types of services can hold your mail while you're away and forward your mail to you when you're on vacation.
- Phone line splitter so you can run various machines (such as your fax machine up to phone lines.
- Telephone extension wires and adapters so you can adapt to virtually any hotel room. Some hotel rooms locate the desk far away from the telephone jack; you may need extra wire to run across the room.
- Surge protector with several outlets so you can hook up your equipment to one electrical plug.
- Category 5 crossover wire (network wire) to connect your laptop to high speed internet access if the hotel offers it.
- Paper for your fax machine. Toner you can buy on the road if you need to.
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And if you have pets, consider taking your pets on vacation with you. Meet two rescued dogs that spend about six weeks a year on vacation in hotels rooms all over the country and for great work at home travel tips.
Another advantage to people who work at home and learn how to take their work at home jobs on vacation is that they can get lots more use out of family vacation homes. They don't have to be just for vacation anymore if you work at home.
Remember to be professional when you take your work at home job on the road. Just because you're writing emails in your swimsuit on the beach doesn't mean your emails should be any less professional. And don't make business calls with your cell phone from a night club, just because you can. Even if you're unprofessional with just one colleague from your company or just one client with whom you feel you can be casual you could get the reputation for being irresponsible now that you work at home and you could lose your work at home job. You should never-never-never be anything less than totally professional when you perform your work at home job on the road.
Having said that, we hope you have a great time turning your work at home job into an on-the-road-work-at-home-job-opportunity. Maybe you'll send us an email or a picture of you performing your work at home responsibilities from a convertible on Route 66 with your hair blowing in the wind.
Happy working at home, on the road.
TIME SAVING WORK AT HOME ON THE ROAD TIP: If you're driving with a companion, you can save time by drafting your emails off-line in the car using the 'send later' feature of your browser. When you arrive to a phone jack and go online, just send out all your emails at once.
TIME SAVING WORK AT HOME ON THE ROAD TIP: If your calls are rarely urgent, let your cell phone's voicemail feature take messages most of the time so you can feel free to be in noisy places without fear that your boss or an important client will call at an inopportune time. That way you can return all the calls when you're in a quiet place with pen and paper if necessary. Warning: Don't overuse this strategy. It won't be good for your work at home career if you get a reputation for being unavailable when your company needs you!
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