1. Evaluate every room and ask yourself a few questions:
2. Invest in functional furniture that fits the style of your home. Whether you want a simple writing desk (ideal for a laptop computer) with a lap drawer for supplies, or a large desk with drawers for supplies and files, focus on function, and then decide whether the desk matches your décor. Use an ergonomically correct chair, instead of a kitchen table chair, to keep you from straining your back and neck.
3. Decide which of the five basic furniture arrangements for your home office is best for your space: L-shape, Parallel, U-shape, corner, or reverse corner arrangement. The arrangement you choose depends primarily on the size of your office, the type of furniture you have, and how much work surface you will need.
4. Be creative with file storage. Instead of using a grey, metal file cabinet to store your files, consider other options. You could store files in a wooden or wicker ottoman, below a window seat with file frames inside the drawers, or inside a decorative wooden trunk. A good way to keep files you use often nearby is by using a desk with at least two deep file drawers.
5. Save space within your home office by using multifunction or “all-in-one” equipment that prints, copies, scans and faxes documents in color. The smaller footprint (and often low price) of these machines makes them ideal for most space-challenged home offices.
6. Add a simple bookcase or install shelves to get books and information off the floor. You can also use shelves to hold magazines and office supplies in decorative containers.
7. Design your office to reflect your taste, interests and style. Your home office doesn’t have to resemble your old corporate office. One of my clients, an avid sports fan, framed signed jerseys from various players and hung them throughout his home office.
8. Before you share a home office with your spouse, consider whether you have compatible working styles. One of my clients likes to keep all of his papers out on the desk, while his spouse likes to file everything. By adding another desk for his spouse to use, we’ve made sharing an office easier for both of them.
9. If you are going to meet with clients at your home, set up a space within your home office or next to your office to meet. One of my clients, an accountant, used the dining room next to his home office for client meetings. His family used the dining room twice a year, so the space was clutter-free and available anytime.
10. Set a specific time to work in your home office each day. It’s easy to get sidetracked on your way to work, even if your commute lasts only a few seconds. Be flexible, but have an idea of when you want to work in your home office every day. Otherwise, before you know it, it will be noon and you’ll still be doing laundry, emptying the dishwasher or handling other personal tasks.
Evelyn Roberts BrooksVisitor
Thanks, Lisa! Nice list of reminders. I’ve worked from home for years and I agree you do need to think it through instead of just plunking your computer on a table and then letting the chaos grow up around you as you get busy. Taking time to consider where you’ll put files even before you have that much paperwork to deal with means you’ll be able to grow your business seamlessly.
Evelyn