Work From Home Pro

Real Work From Home Jobs
  • About
  • Policies
  • Work From Home Resources

Sponsors

Categories

  • blog (5)
  • blogging (9)
  • reviews (4)
  • telecommuting (21)
  • Uncategorized (14)
  • WFH (45)
  • work from home (11)
  • Writing Jobs (8)

Archives

  • May 2012 (1)
  • September 2011 (1)
  • October 2010 (1)
  • August 2010 (1)
  • June 2010 (1)
  • March 2010 (1)
  • February 2010 (1)
  • September 2009 (2)
  • July 2009 (1)
  • June 2009 (1)
  • April 2009 (1)
  • March 2009 (2)
  • January 2009 (3)
  • December 2008 (1)
  • October 2008 (1)
  • September 2008 (2)
  • August 2008 (1)
  • July 2008 (2)
  • June 2008 (1)
  • May 2008 (3)
  • April 2008 (4)
  • March 2008 (6)
  • February 2008 (2)
  • January 2008 (9)
  • December 2007 (8)
  • November 2007 (5)
  • October 2007 (3)
  • January 2007 (1)

Links

    • Development Blog
    • Documentation
    • Plugins
    • Suggest Ideas
    • Support Forum
    • Themes
    • WordPress Planet

Tags

freelance bookkeeper Freelancing goodbye Google Adsense Free Ebook FlexJobs dogs domains eJuror Entrecard home based bookkeeping hosting meetings mobile workforce office machines online jobs Key West Keurig indexing internet assessor Kcup decaffeinated dead body Chesapeake Bay career call center representative caffeine coffee brown bag data backup compensation consulting competitive advantage freelance work blogging jobs get paid to blog get paid to write hubpages home office find work from home jobs make money writing Writing Jobs blogging telework work from home

Find Out if You and Your Current Job are Suitable for Telework

Want an objective opinion on whether you and your job are good candidates for a telework arrangement?

All it takes is 3 minutes to use the Telework Exchange Online Eligibility Gizmo and it will assess and report back to you on your eligibility. It will also aid you in producing a report to present to your manager to help “sell” yourself into a teleworking arrangement.

This is primarily a government-oriented site, but it was interesting to find out my telecommuting cost savings and pollution savings per year working from home:

Commuting Costs

$6,075 – Total amount spent commuting to and from work in a year
10200 – Number of pounds of pollutants dispersed by your car in a year
5.1 – Number of tons of pollutants dispersed by your car in a year

What is Telework Exchange? In their own words:

“Telework ExchangeSM is a public-private partnership focused on demonstrating the tangible value of telework and serving the emerging educational and communication requirements of the Federal teleworker community. The organization facilitates communication among Federal teleworkers, telework managers, and IT professionals.”

Kat
19 December, 2007
telecommuting, WFH
No Comments
Tags: telework

What is Your Reason for Wanting to Work from Home?


I wanted to share the results of this poll that is being run on WorkAtHomeArticles.net regarding the top reasons why people want to work from home. When you get a chance, stop by and participate in the voting yourself. So far, the voting results are what you see above and I thought I’d provide some personal dissection of each of these choices:

“I want financial freedom”
Personally, I don’t associate working from home with a direct path to financial freedom. I equate the lottery with financial freedom. If you did another survey of people who already worked from home asking them if they had reached the promised land of “financial freedom” or not, I would bet that the ratio would be lopsided to the latter. Simply making the switch to work from home won’t assure financial freedom. Maybe this survey choice is better associated with wanting to work for one’s self. “Self-employed people make up less than 20 percent of the workers in America but account for two-thirds of the millionaires” according to the Millionaire Next Door. Most people who work from home actually work for others.

“I hate getting up early”
I can relate to this reason, but I’m surprised it ranked so high. I personally like to work late and get up late, starting around 8:30 or 9:00 with my workday.

“I need to earn extra money to make ends meet”
I’m assuming they’re surveying people who want to take their full-time job and convert it or replace it with one that is 100% working from home. I’m also assuming that the average work from home job earns as much as one that is office-based or potentially less. With that said, I don’t see where there is an opportunity to earn extra money working from home. If you have a day job, whether you work in an office or at home, you should be focusing 100% on that job. The extra money options start at night and on the weekends. You can do that without a WFH career.

“I want more time with my family”
Makes sense – no qualms there. My wife loses about 70 minutes a day with Lizzie and I (maybe that helps with sanity?)

“I want a flexible schedule”
Working from home certainly can provide flexibility in one’s schedule. I think the give-and-take in the flexible hours is generally mutually beneficial between the employee and employer. I’ve always loved this comment about a previous employer of mine made by one of it’s previous employees:

“I spent 12 years at [Company X]. The whole “homeworking” idea was a sham. Largest part-time workforce I’ve ever seen. If I had a nickel for every conference call I was on where someone flushed the toilet, was standing over a putt or was about to finish that third martini on a Wednesday afternoon, I’d be retired!” He goes on to say, “My favorite was this guy knew who moved to Cabo to open a strip club and “work from home”..yeah..right…”

Personally, I think that it all comes out in the wash. It is normal for employees to be working crunch nights around-the-clock on a deadline, flying out Sunday so that they can meet a customer first thing Monday morning, or delaying a vacation due to a critical project.

“There are limited job opportunities where I live”
This is one of the top reasons that Telecommuting is a wonderful arrangement. Another variation of this reason is that “There are unlimited places where I can live“. I like knowing that I can pack up the house and relocate seven states away if I wish to, and still keep the same job.

“I hate my boss/co-workers”
I think this line of reasoning has more to do with wishful thinking. If you hate your boss and co-workers then you should be quitting. Working from home won’t solve that problem. Working with them remotely only means that you don’t need to look at them.

“I’m basically a lazy person and dislike being told what to do”
Working from home certainly will reduce the ability for management to provide constant oversight, but if you’re lazy, that condition will eventually hurt you wherever you are working. You need to win the lottery or inherit a lot of money to remedy that.

Kat
12 December, 2007
telecommuting, WFH
2 Comments

SimplyHired Job Board

I’ve put up a job board on the site powered by SimplyHired and would like your feedback on the quality of the service that they provide.

The job board provides hiring managers the ability to post jobs for a fee of $5 and they will get priority display on this site. As a job seeker you can click on the “View all jobs” button to generate a free job search that will display only telecommuting jobs from around the nation. You also can bookmark the search so that you can conveniently check back in the future as new jobs are posted. That link is here.

I have run a few tests and it appears that all jobs displayed are indeed telecommute-flexible, so take it for a test spin if you are in the market.

Kat
11 December, 2007
telecommuting, WFH
1 Comment
« Previous Entries Next Entries »
  • About
  • Policies
  • Work From Home Resources
designed by createwebsites.pl

Copyrights © 2011