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![]() > I was used to working in an
> "office"-type environment (as a > university academic).... I would talk to > people throughout the day, people would > "drop into" my office, and I'd > "drop into" theirs.... One possible solution would be to set a standard "luncheon date" with another business person in your local area. In some cities some business people are located in "incubators" small offices which they rent in a larger office. But for those without the money or who prefer to work from home they will have to use other telecommunication tools(as suggested by Julie in her post) When I managed a small retail store in a local community; many home business operators, seniors(who also deal with this problem) and new mothers would get out "daily" and take a walk and come by just to chat. I was able to connect with many jewelry craft artists this way... Visualize your community as one large office building and the different store owners and or home business owners are in "seperate cubicles"(their homes and offices etc) and "reach out" and commune... What's interesting about your analogy to the university office setting is: you still got the work done and obviously did not spend 8 grueling lonely hours doing it. Many who work in offices realize about 2-3 hours is lost in "decompression time": talking to others, taking breaks, going to lunch etc.... So my question is : when you're working from home why not build this decompression time into your daily work life? Another thing: for" some" a middle ground might be to work "part time" in a business field and work part time from home.... For "some" it might be to realize that working as a "solo" entrepreneur is not for you. Perhaps enlisting the help of a friend, or becoming a mentor to someone else interested in your line of business is the way to go... I guess there is no "one answer"; you have to find your own style and what works for you , change your production goals and or be objective enough to assess whether being in a "solo" business is working for you at this point in time.... > Then, I started working from home. And I > found.... loneliness. Somehow, a computer > screen can't replace a friendly human face. > My remedy was to socialize more outside of > work hours.... But, I'd like to know - what > do you do about this if you work from a > home-based business? Did you encounter this > when you first started? I've never read > about this elsewhere - but it's a real > phenomenon.... Maybe we can help those who > are just starting to go into business for > themselves.... |
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