Ask HN: Any tips for someone working from home for the first time?
14 points| liface | 12 years ago
Some stuff about me:
- I'm 26 and live in the Bay Area
- Just moved into a new apartment with lots of natural light
- I have a decent desk but my chair is not ideal. Suggestions for office chair solution would be awesome.
- I will be doing a lot of conference calls and demos with clients
- We use Asana and HipChat for internal company communication
Advice I'm looking for:
- Productivity tips
- Organizational tips
- How to separate work from real life (one of the first things I've done is set up VirtuaWin with two desktops: "Work" and "Play" to have a physical separation)
- Setting up a home office
- Tools/hacks/applications you guys use
- Taxes/deductions/how to handle being a 1099-MISC employee
And basically any other advice you guys can give out. Thanks in advance!
stevejalim|12 years ago
* If you share your home, make sure that your cohabitors understand you really are working when at home. While that may sound obvious, it will help you draw a line in the sand should they ask you to be in for a delivery or repair person, etc - those things can be a real flow killer.
* Make your home office a separate room, if at all possible. If the door locks, so much the better: there will be times when a locked door will help you (either keeping others out or giving you that extra subtle indicator that stuff needs to get done).
* Have a clock on the wall - it's a cheap, simple, subtle way to increase the 'work' feel of the room you're in, plus it's a change in the depth of focus after hours of screen-distance reading.
* Take breaks, get out of the house.
* Participate in some kind of community chat (IRC, HipChat, Campfire whatever) to prevent going insane. Consider rationing your time on that chat, rather than having it as an open channel.
stevekemp|12 years ago
Otherwise you want to get a good routine; none of that making coffee for hours, or doing the laundry. During the working-day you're supposed to work.
Otherwise the single biggest thing I needed was to leave the house every day - Regardless of how much food I had at home I'd always go out to the sandwich store every day to make sure I had some away-time, and a little conversation. (Granted most evenings I'd see people, but working day-in, day-out at home "alone" contact is important.)
gbrhaz|12 years ago
caw|12 years ago
My suggestions:
* A dedicated space is a nice to have. It helps separate the work/not-work relationship
* I have two computers for 3 reasons. First is work/not-work balance. Second is related but there's a clause in my employment contract that's basically "work done on company's computer is owned by work". Lastly, the company paid for the computer.
* I have a Herman Miller Embody chair though I've also used a Steelcase Leap (v1, v2) in my last job. Regardless of what anyone tells you, go sit in the chairs at a store. I found the Aeron to be uncomfortable for myself, even though everyone seems to love them.
* On setting up the office, make sure it's ergonomic. Get a monitor riser, laptop riser, footrest, or whatever else you need to avoid destroying your body while sitting all day.
* Make sure you take breaks. My last workplace used "Wellnomics" on Windows for break alerts, but it gets moderately annoying at times.
* I've been meaning to get a whiteboard for myself, just to get some doodling space. A notebook or similar would probably also be fine if you work with images or anything spacial.
centdev|12 years ago
ScottWhigham|12 years ago
I like the idea of just replicating "my desk" from my job at home and just "pretending" I'm actually at work.
jaachan|12 years ago
blakesterz|12 years ago
elwell|12 years ago
mattwritescode|12 years ago