No, I don’t have some sinister predilection for pyjama-clad home workers. I just like to keep abreast of developments in the home-working arena. Honest!
I thought this was an interesting idea. I think I mean “interesting”, but maybe I mean “inexplicable”.
I’m not sure whether most merely start the working day accoutred thus before changing in to something perhaps a little more in harmony with a professional environment - and I would like to state here and now that I really am not at all interested – but it does highlight one of the benefits of working from home: the freedom it gives you from some of the conventions of corporate life. Why don a suit, when the only sentient being you are impressing is the dog? He’d probably anyway be more impressed by a biscuit or a W-A-L-K.
I have to date tried to resist the temptation of letting sartorial standards slip too far when working at home, but I do have to confess to having periodically talked to clients in other time zones in a state of disarray one would find wholly unacceptable outside the home. It’s not a regular occurrence, and I’m not proud if it (well, maybe a little bit), but “needs must” and all that.
Maybe we’ll have something similar on the ClickNwork website…but, then again, perhaps we won’t!
]]>They are very different: from the busy Chennai street market scene seen by Ravi to the sort of vista you would design for yourself (if you had the opportunity) that is enjoyed by Dave in New Zealand.
They could be working on the same project, doing the same sort of work, while all around them their very different lives are carrying on. I find it fascinating – perhaps I need a hobby? – and it underlines how rapid communications have brought the disparate parts of the world together, to some extent.
I thought I’d add a picture from my window – just to prove that the sun does shine in England. The outlook is a bit short-range when you compare it with my colleague John’s view from his 17th storey office window, overlooking Central Park in New York. But he doesn’t have a shed!
The point is, you can work pretty much anywhere, but I would have thought that there would need to be some fairly specific reasons for the working environment arrangements below to be appropriate!
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My office is at the back of the house on the ground floor and I can’t resist checking emails if I’m anywhere on the ground floor of the house.
My view from the window isn’t horrible, but could be improved with slightly better positioning.
Having the office outside in the garden has been on my mind ever since I saw a friend of mine use a large wood cabin as his office in his garden.
I like the idea and the look of it. The company claims it’s environmentally-friendly, in reducing CO2 emissions, and provides an extra room (if you’re constrained for space in the house) away from any distractions in the house. It’s not as cheap as setting up a desk in the house, but if that’s not an option, then maybe this is.
So, I started looking around for other similar products, such as the range of buildings from Kithaus.
And there’s the Qube too.
Actually, there are lots of “garden sheds” that I wouldn’t mind working in either!
]]>Consumer Reports in the US recently ran an article about current scams being. The FBI also recently gave guidance on what to look out for.
The Federal Trade Commission has since 2001 warned of the dangers of work-from-home scams and provides a categorization of work-at-home schemes (nicely using the term ‘flop-potunities’), but people are still being caught.
Two essential pieces of advice:
1. Don’t pay upfront, whether it’s for inventory or “how to” information; most scams require you to pay for something that usually turns out to be worthless.
2. Avoid network building and multilevel marketing schemes.
It’s so easy to be seduced by promises of a fast buck, pound, euro, or yen, especially when you need to earn money, so always have in mind the time-honored maxim: if it looks too good to be true, it is.
The only money we receive is from the clients whose work the ClickNworkers deliver, and also a little bit of advertising revenue, since we put Google Ads on the site.
If you know of a scam and want others to know, please contribute to the comments.
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His basic idea is that technology and social change mean we have evolved from settled careers at one place of work to frenetic lives with no work-life boundaries. And in parallel, economic uncertainty has risen, increasing stress and the need to focus on work. At times he is pretty dour:
Leisure? The “good life”? What are those? Work is the central aspect of our lives. We are lucky that it is fulfilling work—work that we will probably continue to do until we are no longer capable—but it is, unlike that of my parents, all-consuming work.
He interviews well and his central observation about the disrupting impact of technology is solid but I think he is wrong about core elements. Yes, technology is allowing work to spread outside the workplace and this is causing some people to constantly check email and to be available 24/7. Part of that is personal style but as I look at it, the same technology has given great opportunities we otherwise wouldn’t have had. In my case, because I work from home I can be with my children and help them get to school every day, I’m around during the day if I need a distressing wrestle with my two year old (I have to wait until afterschool for the more challenging higher weight groups), I’m there to cook and eat with them and put them to bed. None of that would have been possible without the technology I rely on. But there’s more – I can go for rides in the park as time permits, do my shopping at off hours, and on and on. All of this means I am happy to let work intrude at other times and so I don’t begrudge talking to clients in London at 6:00am my time, or talking to a West Coast client at 10pm, it all comes with the territory and I want it like this – the thought of getting on a train and being out of town or at work from 7:00am to 8:00pm every day isn’t for me.
As I see it, if you can offer valuable services to companies that you can deliver from your home (which is what ClickNwork is about), then I think you can get the best of the work environment (intellectual stimulation, community, pay) with the benefits of home life (more leisure, better family interaction, less hassle). Conley fails to bring out these positives and sold us short.
At one point in the interview, Leonard Lopate, the interviewer asked – ‘most of these developments have had a negative affect, is there a way to reverse any of it..? and Conely falters: “Well, if I communicated completely negative affects I want to correct that”. He then goes on to explain how some of the change is “demand driven”, how a lot of people, especially professionals love their work and so on – all good but a bit late for print!
I looked on the web and see he has many of positive reviews, but others aren’t so sure. Janet Maslin in the New York Times (and International Herald Tribune) had some funny moments, saying that “Conley spends part of his time out on a limb, sawing”. She adds:
“But this book’s greater problem is the thin, iffy nature of its extended arguments. To back up the familiar claim that we have allowed merchandising to invade our private lives, he invokes (in no particular order) the selling of formerly free snacks on airplanes, slogans on T-shirts (with a thumbnail history of the T-shirt thrown in for filler) and the perils created by the bottling and marketing of water.
.. But Mr. Conley has no big new point to make. He awkwardly coins new locutions (“weisure” to conflate work and leisure, “convestment” to do the same with consumption and investment). He struggles with jargon while trying to interject the term “intravidual” into our collective conversation. Beware an “of course” when a point is anything but self-evident: “The irony, of course, is that the intravidual is just as much an ‘intervidual’ (inter meaning ‘between’), since it is the networked nature of our new, Elsewhere economy and the penetration of others into us that shatters the individual.
…He dutifully travels to Mountain View, California, to note the Orwellian nature of life at Googleplex, Google’s corporate headquarters. A pox on Mountain View: It is now the destination of choice for writers seeking to pad books with sci-fi visuals and newish-sounding but already conventional wisdom.”
Don’t get me wrong, the book is worth a read but I do think it needs better research and balance.
He’s done the rounds and in case you’re interested, here’s another interview with Neil Cohen on NPR.
]]>Working from home gets easier and easier: technology advances rapidly, while its cost falls. My first laptop cost around £2000, but its spec was far inferior to the one I just bought for a few hundred pounds. Fast Internet connections are becoming increasingly available around the world, and their price has been falling too. Mobile technology allows even ever increasing mobility and location-freedom.
Not only is it relatively easy and cheap to acquire the technology to work from home, consider the benefits to you of setting up a business at home. Here is a far from exhaustive list:
I’m not the only one who thinks like this. Take a look at the stories of some of the people that have worked from home with ClickNwork (http://www.clicknwork.com/profiles.asp), and see why they have chosen to work from home, and the reasons why they probably won’t go back to the old way of working.
In the next blog post, for balance, I’ll talk about some of the possible downsides of working from home.
]]>We’re in the process of making some major changes to ClickNwork and the money we make from the ads (and believe me, it wouldn’t go far in Starbucks!) will pay for some ongoing services we think will be useful for people seeking work at home opportunities, so on balance we think it worthwhile.
So please bear with us as go through our changes and, if you get a chance, click on some.
Thanks!
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