Mindset, Learning, Collaboration

The importance of a clearly defined workspace

 Put on your work hat

It is very important to have a clearly defined workspace where you can put all your work stuff when you work from home. Somewhere where you can get in the zone and put on your work hat. When you get up in the morning to go to the office you need to be able to clearly walk into your workspace.

You also need to have a place for all your papers and files. You need a dedicated workstation that ideally doesn’t double as a “play” computer for the family. If this happens you will always feel your space is being invaded.

When you walk away from “work” at the end of the day, being able to close up the office is important too or you will always pulled towards checking one more email.

Home office clearly defined workspace

Here are some suggestions for making the space your own:

Office in a space in a room that can be shut up when you are not there.

Office in a space in a room that can be shut up when you are not there.

Office in a separate room

Office in a separate room

Office in a sleep out or out building

Office in a sleep out or out building

 

 

 

 

 

Check out other ideas in Pinterest.

Next: making most of your time

 

Kerri Bainbridge

Home Business Coach

Digital Kickstart

Anywhere Team NZ

How do I get the knowledge about social media?

gaining knowledge of social mediaThe best thing to do is to learn about all the ways to market on the internet because most people are searching online before they buy these days and you want to be seen by your audience. This is not a matter of reading an article and then you know it all. Markets need to be tested and you need to understand how to be effective. This takes time. If you don’t want to be bothered with it, you can hire someone to do it for you. I recently had someone offer to do this for me. This is how much it was going to cost me:

$299 one off fee, no contract so could cancel when I wanted.

$85 per month

$15 per week, minimum in advertising on one social media platform

I said thanks but no thanks. I know can invest $135 NZD per month in myself to learn all these skills with the Digital Business Lounge and be mentored by those who are experts at Six Figure Mentors.

Your options are:

  1. Pay someone to do social media for you.
  2. Learn yourself.

Where to?

  1. Digital Kickstart

If you want to go through your options then book a one-on-one session with me and we’ll see what option is right for you, your business and your budget.

Digital Kickstart is a product of Anywhere Business Network. Kickstart your digital marketing journey with an hour one to one session with Kerri.

This is an intensive one-on-one consultation giving you insights into digital media specifically for your business. This consultation is held with Kerri Bainbridge via the online Zoom Meeting platform.

Kerri will:

  • help you identify your target market
  • review your current online presence
  • help you understand the digital media tools that would benefit your business
  • provide you with a summary of the session notes
  • provide you with an action plan from the session discussion.

Book your session today -click here to confirm your payment has been made and your available times.  This session costs $100.00

2. Check out the FREE 7 day video series that will introduce you to the Digital Experts Academy. This is an online, self paced learning platform that helps you to earn while you learn. Get one month free and try it out. You have nothing to loose.

Next: How do you communicate with your audience on social media?

Kerri Bainbridge

Home Business Coach

Digital Kickstart

Anywhere Team NZ

Being productive in your home office 

To-Do-ListIn my first blog I suggested you have a diary. This is your first tool. Google has a great diary app for smart phones that will sink with your home computer. You will always know what appointments you have. Now you need a to-do-list.

To-do-list

 Step 1- choose a medium

If you like to use paper and pen then making a list is going to work for you. If you like to use an electronic system you will find there are lots of options. Just choose one and get started.

Step 2 -analyse the list

When you do your first ever list just do a dump of all you can think of. Then once you have made your list check it over and write beside each:

  1. Do immediately-If a task feeds my priorities, my time is justified.
  2. Delegate– Someone else can and should do these to save me time. Even micro-business owners can benefit from an intern or temp.
  3. Drop– ask yourself,“will this make money for me right now or anytime in the future? Does it fulfil my current priorities?”If the answer is no, dump it.
  4. Defer -Some items might appeal but aren’t time-sensitive or high-priority. Delay them to a more convenient time.

You may now have to start your list again. This is where an electronic system will save you time but if you don’t have one just get on and make your new list. See the next step about how to do this.

Step 3- Prioritise the list

This is your main list and will be added to from time to time that will be the basis for your daily to-do-list. You will need 2 columns. Column 1 sets its priority and the second one lists the task.

Stephen Covey developed a quadrant into which to priories your tasks.

Urgent and important Important but not urgent
Urgent but not important Not important and not urgent

Go here to read more about that: https://www2.usgs.gov/humancapital/documents/TimeManagementGrid.pdf

Step 4- Write today’s to-do list

Once you have your master list you can write todays list. Have 2 columns. The first column will have a number in it to indicate in which order you will do the tasks. The second column will be the task. Any tasks you don’t get done today need to be transferred to tomorrows list at the end of the day. You can add to tomorrows list from the main list. Be realistic and always refer back to step 2 and 3 when deciding what goes onto the main list and the daily list.

Next blog: Why use Social Media ?

Kerri Bainbridge

Home Business Coach

Digital Kickstart

Anywhere Team NZ

Setting goals and having a plan

Many who work from home have other income coming into the household from a partner so the amount of money generated is not always important. If it is your sole income for example you may feel more pressure about this.

It is still important no matter how much you are making to work efficiently. This will give you a sense of achievement and purpose. Without goals you may spend more hours than you need to working on your business and achieving very little.

There is a tendency to feel like you can never get away from work when you work from home because it’s always there. There’s always one more thing to do. Today I want to talk about goals.

Goals

If you haven’t sat down and written down the goals you have for your business, then you need to do that now. When you are selling anything it seems impossible to predict how much you will sell since you cannot control the economy or how people spend their money. But you have to start with a goal. There are many great books, websites and blogs about this so start by investing time in working out what you are trying to achieve. I recommend a few on our website.

Your goals should be SMART -Specific Measurable Achievable Relevant Time bound

It’s a good idea to set business and personal goals since the reason for you working from home is often motivated by your personal goals.

Goal Example: It might look like this for a T-shirt business

Make $x per month selling 50 t-shirts through my online shop.

Business plan

Next you need a plan. Here’s a free business survey to help you get started. You now have to have a plan for making this goal come to reality. You need to know you’re your strengths, weaknesses, risks and opportunities are. You need to plan for marketing and taxes. You need to plan for production time and delivery. Once you have done this planning your will know if your goal is realistic and achievable.

Invest time in yourself every day to become an efficient entrepreneur.

Kerri Bainbridge

Anywhere Team New Zealand

Coming up in my next blog find out how to manage the distractions of working from home.

Doing personal stuff during work hours?

Working from home

Yesterday I talked about the importance of having a diary and setting your core business hours to ensure your home business has the time and attention it deserves.

But what if something comes up and you need to do something personal in your business hours? That’s easy. This is benefit of working for yourself. Being flexible is one of the biggest perks.

Mark yourself as “busy” in your diary

Any person in business will tell you that when you run a diary it’s as easy as marking yourself out as “busy” in your diary when you have either business or personal things to attend to. Nobody will know that you are not just busy on the business. Think about it. If you were a real estate agent. Most people would expect you to be available when they want to go an inspect a house but you can’t be available if you are already with a client can you. So why is it any different if you are unavailable for any other reason? It shouldn’t be.

Altering your work/life balance

In saying all this. If you do too much personal stuff in your core work hours your business will suffer and you will feel you are not achieving much. So, it is important not to schedule lots of personal things during your core work hours. Make it a rule you don’t do it often. You may have to do some extra hours on another day to make up for these hours but you don’t need to let any else know about it. It will be more efficient if you don’t. If the time you allocate to do the “make-up” hours is when others normally expect you to catch up with them, you just use the same tact with them. You are doing something else and make a different time to see them. If you have too many “make up “hours to do you will find your work/life balance suffers. You will be stressed with the kids for interrupting you and you are likely to mistakes.

In summary:

If you were working for a boss, you would have set hours but you would negotiate with your boss for time off and either take paid/unpaid time or make up the hours. Treat your core business hours the same in a home business.

  • One of the perks of working from home is that you can be flexible and fit in personal things
  • The problem with doing personal things during business hours is you alter the work/life balance you have created when you set up your ideal work hours

In my next blog: the importance of a clearly defined workspace.

Kerri Bainbridge

Anywhere Team New Zealand

Is it possible to have a work/life balance?

Work/Life balanceIf you are like me, the idea of working from home is very appealing. Setting your own hours, no commute and time for the things that are important to me. I have worked from home for 12 years and it has given me the freedom and flexibility to work around my growing family. This flexibility has also come at cost. Finding a job that can be done from home that pays the bills (and more) is not always easy and I haven’t always been efficient with my time.

If you work from home too or want to, you might imagine that working from home means you could easily work around the kids, fit in social time with friends and family, and exercise too? Let’s look at this a bit closer at this work/life balance.

What are the distractions? Here are just a few:

  • Friends wanting to catch up for coffee
  • Sick children
  • Household chores
  • Running errands
  • Paying bills
  • Gardening
  • The dog needs a walk
  • Going to the gym

Achieving a work/life balance

Having a work/life balance is possible when you work from home. If you are going to achieve your goals of running a successful business from home, you need to set goals and manage the distractions that some with working from home. In this series of blogs, I am going to show you how to run a successful business from home. Stay with me. Next up I look at setting goals and having a plan. The following blob will be on managing distractions.

Kerri Bainbridge

Anywhere Team NZ

Managing the distractions

1Working from home

In my second blog I talked about the kinds of distractions you might experience when working from home. These are the things that will prevent you from achieving your goals. So, how do you manage these distractions? It is going to take more than one blog post to cover all this so I aim to do a few of these to help you out.

Make sure you have a diary in which you set up some core hours you will dedicate to your business.

Get a diary. It will be up to you to decide if this is an electronic diary or physical one. If you don’t have a diary you will always feel torn when you are asked by friends to join them for coffee, exercise, lunches etc.  An electronic diary is more portable and lighter. You can set up your to-do-lists in there too.  Check out our website for ideas for diaries and to-do-lists.

Set your core business hours. The distractions -Groceries still need to be bought, cleaning, washing, school drop offs, after school activities and lunches and dinners need to be made. All this needs to be considered when you are planning your working week from home.

Consider working longer some days so you have days available for the odd lunch or coffee date. Or start later so you can start the day doing exercise or catching up with friends. Working for yourself often means we can fit in work after hours when the kids are in bed or on the weekends when your partner is home or you know the kids will play happily for an hour.

When you look at the core hours you have to work with, ask yourself if that is enough time to get all you need to get done, done. If not, you may have to change some of your social time hours. We think it will be easy to fit all our friends in for coffees but in reality it’s still often better to leave our social time to after school or the weekends. Until you do this exercise you won’t know what is possible. Your week might look like this:

Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday Sunday
10-3 9-11 10-3 9-12 9-12 2-4
2-3 2-3

 

Let family, friends and clients know your core hours. It is useful for your clients too to know when they can easily get hold of you. The sooner people who know you know your “work hours” the less they will ask you to join them during those times. Less distractions.

In summary:

  • Have a diary
  • Decide on your core hours each day
  • Let family, friends and clients know what your core hours are

What if something comes up and you need to do something personal in your business hours? I will discuss that in my next blog post. The following blog will be on setting up a dedicated space for your home business.

Kerri Bainbridge

Anywhere Business Team

Working from home- Welcome

Working from home

Welcome to my first blog about working from home. I will be writing a series of blog posts about working from home and ultimately these tips will help you work from anywhere. Working for yourself can be really rewarding but frustrating at the same time. Whatever your reason for wanting to work for yourself you will need to be as disciplined as you would be if you worked for someone else about your time and productivity.

Instead of someone else setting your objectives and tasks, you have to define them. I want to share what I have learnt over the last 12 years of being in business for myself, to help you stay focused and be productive. If you are not careful you will work 24/7 (at least in your mind) and feel like you never have “time” away from the business.

I am going to cover things like goal setting, business planning, time management, customer management, social media marketing, money and lots of tools for stream lining your business.

So get ready….

 

Kerri Bainbridge

Anywhere Team NZ

 

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