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Overcoming Isolation
in Your Home Business
by Elena Fawkner
More Details at: http://www.fawkner.com
Before
long, though, you may begin to think back to your previous life and realize you
actually miss those umpteen visitors who were constantly interrupting you when
you were trying to work, the walk in the park at lunchtime with your best
work-friend, drinks on Friday night after work, and being able to run an idea
past a colleague for instant, valuable feedback.
Like most
people, when you think about what it would be like to work from home, you
probably think of the obvious benefits such as working your own hours, not
having to face a stressful, tedious commute every day, actually seeing what
your garden looks like in daylight hours, not having to answer to a boss, being
home when your children are, working in a comfortable environment and so on.
These are, of course, some of only many wonderful benefits of working from
home.
Before long,
though, you may begin to think back to your previous life and realize you
actually miss those umpteen visitors who were constantly interrupting you when
you were trying to work, the walk in the park at lunchtime with your best
work-friend, drinks on Friday night after work, and being able to run an idea
past a colleague for instant, valuable feedback.
Now,
everything is just, well, quiet. And there's no-one down the hall to go visit
who's over age four. You find yourself checking your email constantly, wanting
to connect to someone. You find yourself wishing the phone would ring. You! The
person who, when you worked in a job, cursed constant telephone interruptions
and thought voice- and e-mail was the greatest invention since sliced bread.
Welcome to another reality of home-based business ... home alone.
Here are
some ways to avoid the isolation trap when running a business out of your home:
Establish
a Structure -- Nothing is surer to
reinforce feelings of isolation as time that stretches as far as the eye can
see like a straight, one lane highway through a flat, barren landscape. Don't
start each day without a plan of what you intend to do. You need to structure
your time so that it is not some endlessly vast terrain you must traverse
alone. So write a to-do list, preferably at the end of the day before, so that
when your work day starts you get productive straight away, before the
isolation blues have a chance to take hold.
Reach
Out -- When writing your to-do list,
make sure you include at least two things every day that require you to
interact with another person. Networking is a vital skill, whether you work for
someone else or for yourself. So make contacts with people who can add value to
your business, as well as connecting you with the outside world.
Joining a
professional group or club, attending seminars and trade shows relevant to your
business are all great ways to meet new people who have similar interests and
challenges. Participate in the activities organized by these groups and take a
good supply of business cards with you.
Establish
Joint Ventures -- Another way to keep
the isolation blues at bay is to joint venture with other home-based business
owners. Team up with other businesses that offer complementary services to your
business. Not only will you send additional business each other's way in the
form of referrals, you are establishing professional relationships with your
joint venture partners.
Organize
Your Own Functions -- Once you have
joined various associations and formed joint venture partnerships, take the
initiative and organize functions that bring you all together. These could be
business-oriented networking sessions or purely social get-togethers such as a
barbeque in the local park. Either way, you are forging a relationship with
people in your new arena, just as you did when you were working in a corporate
office. The only difference is that now you must take the initiative to forge
these relationships. These are not people you are going to be seeing every day
at the office.
Join
a Gym -- You are, of course, health
conscious and physically active, right? Of course you are! So, why not kill two
birds with one stone ... stay fit and meet new people. If you establish a
routine that allows you to be at the gym at the same time every day, you will
run into many of the same people and get to know them.
Use
the Internet -- Making online friends
is another way of staying connected with the outside world. Be very disciplined
here though. It's way too easy to spend a lot of work time on social email
exchanges and in chat rooms. Don't fritter away your time, but do seek out and
maintain internet friendships.
Background
Noise -- Sometimes, it's only silence
that reminds you you're alone. If you come from a corporate environment, your
workday was punctuated by the constant background noise of telephones ringing,
other people's conversations, hysterical laughter from the other end of the
office and lunch trolley pages over the intercom system. If you find absolute
quiet irksome, turn on the radio and have it playing in the background while
you work. Talk stations are good because it's like having other people in the
next room, but if you find yourself becoming so engrossed with the talk topics
that you stop working and start listening, switch to a music station.
There
is no avoiding the fact that making the transition from a corporate environment
to a home-based business is just that ... a transition. Most people will have
to grapple with the isolation monster in the early days of their work-from-home
career. But, as you can see, there are many ways of keeping isolation and
loneliness at bay just by reaching out and forming new
associations. Remember, just because you work alone doesn't mean you have to go
it alone.
Elena
Fawkner is editor of the award-winning weekly ezine, A Home-Based Business
Online, a down-to-earth publication containing practical home-based and online
business ideas, telecommuting job listings, original articles, free e-books and
much more. She also runs the A Home-Based Business Online website at http://www.fawkner.com
. You can subscribe to her newsletter at the site.
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