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Reduce
home interfering with business
by Tash Hughes of Word Constructions
Not everyone who works from home has the luxury of having a separate
room to dedicate to their business. Yet, the more you can separate
work and home, the easier it is to feel professional and work effectively.
The following ideas won’t suit every situation, may they
may give you some inspiration on how you can run a business and
still have a house that feels like a home.
- Set up your desk and materials in a cupboard of some description
so that it can be closed away at the end of business. You may be
able to open up a built in wardrobe, enclose the space under the
stairs or buy a desk unit that has cupboard fronts.
- Use a decorative screen – it could be timber, cloth, a
photo rack, a plant stand or lattice work. Behind the screen is
your business and in front is your home.
- Add in a temporary wall. Being at least shoulder height will
be more effective as it will cover your desk and computer, but a
lower one will still make boundaries. The front of the wall could
be painted or be a new place to hang photos or drawings, or add
shelves. On the business side, the wall could hold a white board
or noticeboard for messages or be a set of shelves to store materials
and references.
- If you are working on the kitchen or dining table, get a nice
cupboard or dresser to store business items nearby. Otherwise, set
up a system of coloured boxes to store different items (eg stationary
in a blue box, client paperwork in the yellow box and business magazines
and article in the red box.)
- Keep one side of your desk for business and the other side for
family and personal things so they don’t get confused.
- If you have to move your business things around because you work
in different places or use your work space for other purposes, a
set of drawers on wheels may the solution. There are many styles
available now, but the open mesh baskets make it easy to see what
is in each drawer. Then just wheel your business to your work area
when you’re ready to start.
- Make use of tablecloths and runners if you are storing your business
things in main living areas. They brighten the room up and help
differentiate between home and business.
- Make things reversible so that they are functional for business
and attractive for your home. For instance, put a nice poster on
one side of a notice board to hang in your lounge room; when it
becomes your work space, turn it around to see your work notices
and messages. A low filing cabinet can double as a coffee or side
table out of business hours, as can covered storage boxes.
- Set up a garden shed as office or storage space. Alternatively,
is there room in the roof for a small workspace or perhaps the veranda
could be enclosed? If you can find an extra room, remember that
it might suit another purpose better and your work space can be
in an original room. Perhaps the shed could become a cubby so the
space near the kitchen can be an office instead of a play area,
or the attic space becomes a new bedroom and you work in the old
one.
- Separation doesn’t have to be complete; it is more to highlight
the boundaries between home and business. So you could hang some
sheer curtains across the room to make a work space that is visible
to the rest of the room. Sheer curtains look deliberate and attractive
compared to just hanging up a sheet or old curtains as a visual
boundary.
Tash Hughes is the owner of Word Constructions and is available
to solve all your business writing problems! From letters to policies,
newsletters to web content, Word
Constructions writes all business documents
to your style and satisfaction.
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