Don’t use kitchen table. It’s good for your mental health to have a dedicated area where you only work and when you’re not “at work” - don’t use that area.
2. Get dressed for “work”, including shoes.
Don’t make you’re comfortable as if you just rolled out of bed and wearing sleep clothes. Get up. Get dressed. Putting on shoes is important. It tricks your mind into thinking your not “at home”.
3. Treat your working time as work.
Just because you’re home, don’t go get the mail. Take out the quick trash. Or other small errands around the house.
You’re work time should be for work. And just because you’re at home, don’t let others (spouse) trick you into doing house hold tasks.
4. Remove distractions.
If you like to game during the day, literally disconnect your Xbox during working hours.
5. Leave for lunch.
You can very easily get cabin fever by staying at home all day and night. Go outside for lunch. Even if you just pack your lunch. It’s important to movement and to get outside.
6. Establish a strong social outlet.
Most people don’t realize that working from home is incredibly lonely. It’s easy to get depressed. Find an outlet to talk to people.
This brain hack never worked for me so I'll give you mostly the reverse advices:
1. Make a very comfy work place at home. It can be at your gaming machine as long as you don't stop work to game or browse HN/Reddit/what-have-you.
2. To build discipline, you have to change your mindset to goal-oriented and not hours-oriented. It's not about putting your arse at the chair at 9:00 and getting up at 17:30. Not at all. It's about "I want to achieve X and Y today".
3. One thing from the other advices I do like is: make sure you get social and human contact every now and then. It's extremely easy to never talk to anyone ever again if you work and rest at the same real estate. Go out for coffee or to pack lunch. Do that to refresh your brain and to have an excuse to exchange a few phrases with people.
4. If you are not a person that has an exact work and rest schedule, that's quite fine; everybody has been telling me that I shouldn't work a minute outside the work hours but I never found this to be productive. I sometimes had days during which my work hours have been all a haze and then I got a power surge at midnight. As long as working at random hours does not depress you (it does depress many though, have that in mind!) then it's quite fine to do it.
5. Dressing for work is something that I, again, found optional. I am quite fine working in my pyjamas and I never felt lazy because of it. Dress comfy! I've spent days with pyjamas and a blanket on my legs.
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Truthfully, your biggest hurdle is NOT to think "I am at home, I can slack". There are multitude of ways to cope with that but mine was to switch to a goal-oriented mindset and not an hours-oriented one.
If you can overcome the laziness because you're at home and are not closely supervised then honestly, you'll be just fine.
I have seriously underestimated how important human contact is, even if just with effective strangers.
If it's not compatible with you, you will start a countdown clock to ??? once you start on this journey.
Working inside an office is apparently like having guard rails for an invisible road that many people do not require, but people like me might not thrive without.
I'm now faced with the awkward fork in the road of going back to my old job, which would (probably? hopefully? gladly?) take me back, or forcing some evolution to make myself compatible with this prison I fought so hard to procure.
My personal advice is to make sure you do not work too much the first couple months. It is easy to let work become a pervasive part of your life when your office is always right there. So find ways to make a clear break between when you are working and when you are not.
At the same time, do not just replicate the office experience in your home. People who set aside a desk, get dressed, and work standard hours from home are completely missing the freedom of the experience. I tend to work in blocks of time over 12 hours each day... I get up early (4 AM), work for a couple hours, then have breakfast with my family... then work more, then go on a walk with my wife, then work more, etc. If I need a break, I will stop and play a game for 15 minutes or so. I take lunches, I run errands, I do things. After 4 PM, I shut work down for the evening and just spend it with family or on hobbies. Find the balance that maximizes your productivity for work, but that also lets you enjoy flexibility and freedom.
On the plus side, I think working from home can bring you much closer to family - it is crazy to think I spent so much time at work!! 9+ hours of my waking life was away from the people closest to me. Working from home gives you _a lot_ more flexibility so make the most of that! Wanna work at a cafe today? Go for it! Wanna sleep in a bit? Go for it! (but do not do this at the cost of a healthy routine). Make it a treat yo' self kind of thing. Good luck and hope you can make the most of this new mode!
There's about eight desks in our room, and during the day, aout 4-5 are in use. It helps me a great deal to go out in the morning, go to my office, and have the luxury of a good desk with a big monitor, an atmosphere that encourages working and sometimes a little chat at the coffee machine.
Working from home is not for everybody, and can create a myriad of unexpected issues, some of which can be easily solved, others require more effort. For others it can be a blessing.
The one thing to bear in mind, though, and which is repeated often in the responses below is that by working from home a lot of necessary actions which force you to structure your daily life suddenly fall away. Getting up, showering, dressing, getting to work, etc, don't just prepare your mind to get into 'work' mode or whatever, but also force you to think about grocery shopping, breakfast, dinner, planning for the weekend, planning recreational activities and more.
I go to a co-working space. It's worth the $150-$300 per month for a shared space.
If you want to do business go to a place where other people are doing business, otherwise you might be like these guys...
For me: what helped was easing into it: I would only work a bit from home for an hour or 2 in the morning before going into the office (it was during my PhD so no one was monitoring my time).
When I got more comfortable working from home I started doing entire days, but not the entire week. Eventually, I started working only from home. This way meant that I could set up good habits (they'll be different for everyone) before doing it all the time.
Going to the gym gets you out of the house, adds the physical activity you might lack, and will help with the weird bouts of depression that _can_ come with remote work.
Since you're on a small team, I'd add that finding a hobby or show everyone likes and can be a safe topic of conversation to bond over, even when things are stressful, will help keep lines of communication open. Making a watercooler Slack channel with that topic helps a lot.
I am very distractible. It was and remains very difficult. However, I think I'm in a zone now where work is a place I go to in my head, rather than a place that exists in reality.
Meta-advice: keep trying things. There is no settled consensus. For now, this is a very individual choice.
How you work at home / live your life:
Some people advise a strict separation between work and home. I don't agree. The best benefits of working from home are cooking more of my own food, doing chores during the day, and working the hours that I choose. Exception: never code from your bed.
I have put some effort into making my desk area nice. It helps.
The real question is staying motivated when you don't see faces, or hear voices, or are even in physical proximity to anyone that you work with. I find that I need voices/faces to believe that anyone cares that I exist. I have a very supportive spouse, so a lot of that is taken care for me. Even so I leave the house once a day, minimum. I often go to the library, cafes, or restaurants. And I have a regular "hack session" with a friend of mine in a similar situation on Mondays. Mostly we just chitchat with the excuse that we might actually hack on something, but it's important.
How you work with co-workers:
General theme: many things that used to happen randomly or accidentally now will have to be done intentionally.
You probably have standups or some other regular way to check in with your co-workers. Keep doing those and take them seriously. Always ask more questions than you think you should. You don't get chances to ask them later.
Build informal and private channels for your team. It's important for your team to have a place where your team talks among yourselves and where you feel you have privacy. My current company isn't that nosey (and we're the Slack admins anyway) so a private Slack channel works. If you have to go to Signal or Keybase, do it and say it's for "emergency ops".
In other companies where I've been remote, or part of a remote office, I've found that the Donut Slack app has been very helpful. It just randomly assigns you a "date" of sorts with a co-worker, and it is almost as good to do over video chat. You need these kind of random unstructured interactions with coworkers both for your social needs and to be effective in a large organization. It may seem weird to take a coffee to your desk and have no official business talking to a coworker, but it really helps.
Communication is the biggest challenge. Try to talk to your co-workers every day and overcommunicate even if it seems too much. Making quick screen recordings and narrating them for even little things is invaluable, it seemed like a hassle at first but soon you get the wrinkles out of the capturing side of it and people really appreciate it.
You want a static IP address for at least one on-all-the-time box to route all traffic through and get a domain pointed at it. You don't want to have to deal with an ISP that thinks they can determine which ports you want open.
https://www.culturefoundry.com/cultivate/digital-agency-life...
Try to avoid/mitigate them :)
Roll out of bed whenever and work in my PJs? Not when my meetings are all over video.
Change up my work hours to take random long breaks and work odd hours? Not when a fair portion of my work is collaborative.
You need to take the time to find out what works for you.
This way your mind and body will be full of energy, sharp and fresh