Tips for Working Remote Successfully

Home Office Setup

Working remote can be a great thing for so many people. If you live in a rural community with few job opportunities, bad weather, illness (can you say COVID-19?), handicapped in some way, need flexibility – the reasons go on. But working from home does require WORK and effort. One needs to be accountable and trustworthy. Here are a few tips from my experiences working remotely.

  1. Have a defined office space. The couch or chair in the living room does not count as a defined office space. Have a desk, with all the tools you need at hand – printer, paper, pen, whatever else you require. If you do not have living space for an “office”, then force one in. They make remarkably compact desks nowadays that can fit anywhere. Have multiple monitors if you can – this can really increase your effectiveness and speed. Sure, you can tap away at your laptop from your couch, but you will likely work twice as fast if utilizing a full mouse and multiple monitors (depending on your job that is). Plus, slouched over in a chair or couch WILL wreck your back and neck.

  2. Stick to a schedule. Get up at the same time every day, do the things you must get done, and then get to your office to work. Set “office hours”. I like the idea behind the Pomodoro method: work for 25 minutes and then take a 5-minute break. After four “pomodoros”, take a 20-minute break. It is also helpful to log what you will do in each “pomodoro” and check it off after each time. Each day when you begin, make a list of what you plan to get done. Include any house chores or family matters in your list so you can account for everything.

  3. Be accountable & be seen. This means having meetings with people, be it online or on phone or even in person. Having to check in with another person helps a great deal to keep you focused and on task. Attend webinars – another great way to be accountable and learn something at the same time. Take notes and share them out later with your team. Being “seen” and checking-in with coworkers and supervisors is even more important when you are not physically together.

  4. Keep distractions to a minimum. This means no, the TV is not on. Maybe some music but be careful with podcasts or talk-radio programs that can be distracting. I save podcasts for walk-breaks or in the car so I can listen. Keep the pets away. A cat on your keyboard can be very sweet, but also highly frustrating and will distract you from work. Your dog barking will interrupt calls. Is there a nice quiet place your dog can go while you have calls?

  5. Set clear boundaries. All those endless house chores should be done at set times, not just whenever you feel like it. Stick to work while it is work time, and house chores after. Do not mix the two or you will become distracted and ineffective. A solid 30 minutes of house chores, food prep, animal care will do wonders – the same as a solid 30 minutes of working will do wonders. Keep them separate.
Cute cat, but not helpful!

Is Working Remote for You?

Many of us may be forced to work remote soon. Hopefully these tips can help set you on a path to success. Remember to set a schedule and stick with it! Creating a list of what you need to do each day will be invaluable. And let friends and family know when you are working and that you are not available. Take breaks, and do not isolate yourself! Online chats, phone or in person will help you feel included.

About Digital-Melissa: I am a veteran of all things internet, located in Rhinelander, WI. 20 years in eCommerce with everything from design to copy, social media, marketing, project management, website help & management plus more. Contact me today if you’d like to talk about how I could help your business.

Remote Job Links & Resources

Below is a list of websites and businesses that hire for remote work. These remote job links are meant as a quick link checklist for ease:

  1. United Health Group https://careers.unitedhealthgroup.com/
  2. Gitlab https://about.gitlab.com/jobs/apply/
  3. Amazon work from home https://www.amazon.jobs/en/search?offset=0&result_limit=10&sort=relevant&category_type=Work%20from%20Home&distanceType=Mi&radius=24km&latitude=&longitude=&loc_group_id=&loc_query=&base_query=&city=&country=&region=&county=&query_options=&
  4. Thinkful https://www.thinkful.com/about/#careers
  5. Nash https://jobs.lever.co/nash.io
  6. Helpscout: https://jobs.lever.co/helpscout
  7. HotJar, but check timezone requested https://careers.hotjar.com/
  8. Lambda https://lambdaschool.com/careers
  9. Buffer https://journey.buffer.com/#vacancies
  10. Nightwatch https://nightwatch.io/jobs/
  11. StichFix https://www.stitchfix.com/careers/jobs
  12. 10up https://10up.com/careers/
  13. Aha https://www.aha.io/company/careers/current-openings
  14. Articulate https://articulate.com/company/careers#openings
  15. Doist https://doist.com/jobs/
  16. Hubstaff https://hubstaff.com/jobs
  17. Invision https://www.invisionapp.com/about/#jobs
  18. Scrapinghub https://scrapinghub.com/jobs
  19. Seeq https://www.seeq.com/about/careers
  20. Siege media https://www.siegemedia.com/careers#open-positions
  21. Toggl https://toggl.com/jobs/
  22. Toptal https://www.toptal.com/careers#remote-team
  23. Zapier https://zapier.com/jobs/#job-openings

Remote Job list sites:

And never forget… Reddit. Reddit r/workonline, r/workathome, and r/beermoney

Transcribing work:

These transcribing sites don’t pay a high rate, but is an option for some.

Teaching/Tutoring:

The teaching & tutoring sites don’t pay a high rate, but it can be a decent side hustle.

Customer Service:

During my search for remote jobs, I started accumulating this list of links on Trello (a great project management tool I highly recommend and even better it is free!). Each time I found a new place that commonly hired for remote workers, I added it to my card in Trello. I finally decided it would be easier to put a blog post together with the links for ease. Some of the links are more for side-gig jobs such as the Tutoring type jobs, but they still qualify for remote work so I added them. Word of advice though: even if a position isn’t advertised as open for remote, if you are the perfect fit for the job, you should inquire just in case! Some places hire remote but do not advertise it.

I hope some remote job hunter out there finds this list of links helpful.

About Digital-Melissa: I am a veteran of all things internet, located in Rhinelander, WI. 20 years in eCommerce with everything from design to copy, social media, marketing, project management, website help & management plus more. Contact me today if you’d like to talk about how I could help your business.

Learning to Be at Home

The dog on the dock

I have officially been unemployed for six weeks! That seems like a long time now that I type it out, but it has not FELT like a long time.

The first two weeks I was home was like a mini-break from work. I did all kinds of things around the house, yard, garage. Spent lots of time with the dog, cats, visited my parents, had lunch and breakfast with friends. Then I had a quick getaway for a long weekend, and back to the grind of being home for a few days. Then I departed for an 11-day trip to visit my brother and sister-in-law in Denver, CO for my 3rd Denver Pop Culture Con, along with time spent working on my sister-in-law’s public art project, the Selfie Sofa. (Check it out!)

And now I am home again.

And starting to go a little crazy.

In fact, I just watched a video on YouTube of Pugs on video during the day while their owner was at work. And found the cat her own YouTube channel to watch. See what I mean? Crazy.

How to fight the crazy though?

Well, I need to find a job. That would solve so many things. But, my goal is a remote job, so what it won’t solve is the being alone all day factor. So I need to work on that. I also need to get in a better schedule.

I do currently get up between 6 and 6:30am, and take care of the pets as well as some cleanup in the kitchen and get some food ready for Kevin. But after that… I really need to lay down the law for myself. This week I have been taking the dog for a morning walk, which has been really great I am going to continue to do.

Then I think I need to schedule in more time for job hunting, and preparing for interviews. I am not as prepared there as I should be. I do a lot of job hunting, and usually all of it on Monday, but this week I have been plugging away all week long because, like I said, I am starting to go a little crazy.

And write more blog posts! Maybe more informative blog-posts which would inspire somebody to hire me. But for, we’ll just have fun.

Off to walk the dog!