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How To Succeed Working
at Home
When you have kids
climbing all over you.
By Dr.
Kevin Nunley
I get a BIG chuckle out of experts who preach the joys of
working from home. Magazines often feature a photo of a nicely
dressed model with her full attention focused on a client on the
phone. Her equally nicely-dressed child quietly explores an
educational toy on the floor beside her.
That's never the way it works at my house. As I write this from
home, my 15 year-old is bouncing a basketball off the outside of
my office, my 12 year-old is blaring her new Back Street Boys
CD, the kindergartner has just let the neighbor's dog into the
living room, and my toddler is trying to climb onto my shoulders
while attempting to shut the computer off.
Experts advise this isn't the way a successful work-at-home
business is supposed to operate. The professional home-worker is
told to make clients think she is in a big, plush office in a
mirror-covered professional building. "Never allow noise from
kids and pets and never answer the phone 'hello.' Clients won't
take you seriously," they write. Uh oh, I'm in trouble.
Let's be realistic for a second. Of the six million North
Americans who work from their houses, I'll bet more than half
have noisy kids, dogs, and unfolded laundry competing for their
attention. Yet, studies routinely show work-at-homers often get
as much or more done than those in the office.
Here are a few ideas to help you succeed with a home business
when you have lots of family responsibilities to deal with at
the same time:
1. Don't worry about kids interrupting a phone call. Being there
for family is cool these days. The vast majority of business
people wish THEY were at home with their kids.
More often than not, when a small voice starts demanding a
popsicle in the middle of an important negotiation, the client
on the other end will be delighted. "Are you working at home?
How neat! Isn't it wonderful that you can be there for your
kids," your client will say.
2. Working non-stop with full concentration is only for people
locked in a corporate office. Get used to working in a
start-and-stop fashion. When you see your work is about to be
interrupted, don't stop at a natural place. Stop in the middle.
It will help you get re-started when time allows.
The feeling you MUST be constantly productive at all times is
a recent invention of our industrial societies. The majority of
the world's people are much more laid back. Take a little more
time to get a project finished. Oddly, your productivity will
increase.
3. If you are a firm of one, promote your one-ness to the world.
Every customer wants to feel like they can talk to the person in
charge. That's never a problem for people who do business with
you.
Think of all the big corporations that strive to be identified
with their founder. Microsoft has Bill Gates, KFC has the
Colonel, and Wendy's has Dave. They spend millions to insure you
identify their mammoth corporation with a single individual in
charge.
4. Get over the idea that TV is bad for kids. It is a popular,
healthy, worthwhile activity when used wisely in moderate
doses. Most of TV's criticism is perpetrated by people who sell
books. There are a lot of terrifically educational TV programs
and videos that kids love to watch. Plan to get a project
underway while the kids (we'll include spouses, too) engage in
some quality TV consumption.
A few hundred years ago people ALWAYS worked with their kids
under foot. It was only when business became dominated by
factories that workers were forced to leave their children at
home (and even then, it took at least 100 years to make workers
change).
You certainly CAN be a success working at home while taking care
of children--even if your children are rowdy, noisy, and
demanding. The articles I've written (which are read by 1
million people each week) were all written with various children
sleeping on my lap, pulling my hair, or trying to delete the
file.
I earn a good living working at home and YOU CAN TOO! Just don't
expect me to always pick up the phone when you call. It's not
that I don't want to talk with you, but probably that my 2
year-old has just swiped my keys and is heading for the garage.
Kevin Nunley provides marketing advice and copy writing for
businesses and organizations. Read all his money-saving
marketing tips at
http://DrNunley.com/
. Reach him at
kevin@drnunley.com
or (801)253-4536. |