You don’t necessarily have to be a road warrior to be considered a digital nomad. You can create you own opportunities and telecommute from a home office and develop online income .
Telecommuting is becoming more and more popular with both business owners and entrepreneurs looking to create their own financial freedom. But there’s a lot to consider before deciding if it’s right for you.
By Linda Orlando
Telecommuting On the Rise

With the growing business use of e-mail, the Internet, fax machines, teleconferencing, and other high-tech marvels, many companies are allowing employees to work in their own homes, away from the office. The increasingly portable nature of computer and communications devices has made telecommuting cost-effective and viable enough to attract the attention of both large and small organizations.
Benefits of Telecommuting For Employers and Employees
The most obvious advantage to employers is the savings in expenses that they can realize. Fewer employees in the office means less need for desks, chairs, bathrooms, computers, copy machines, parking spaces, heating and lighting, telephones, and everything else required for maintaining a working office.
Telecommuting opportunities also make it practical for an organization to reach out another 20 or 30 miles or more to find qualified people to fill important posts, and makes it possible to locate individual workers near important clients. Studies have shown that workers who successfully telecommute are 10-15% more productive than those who do not. Because of less interference with co-workers and less "water-cooler" time, telecommuting employees have more time and attention to actually devote to their work.

The most obvious benefit for employees in telecommuting is the elimination of the time, trouble, and expense of physically commuting to work. This gives the average person about an extra hour each day to use for the thinking, writing, telephoning, planning, and paperwork that keeps the wheels of business turning. More control over their time allows employees to take short breaks during the day to have lunch with a friend, pick up the kids from school, or cook dinner for the family. Working at home also saves money – less gasoline, less wear and tear on dress clothes, and lower food costs due to being able to eat at home.
A personalized work environment with no distractions from other employees or office politics gives individuals more freedom and control over their work, making them significantly more productive and efficient. And employees can spend part of their evening or nighttime hours working, so they can do their shopping, banking, and other personal business during the day.
Not every personality is suited to telecommuting, however. The best telecommuters are independent enough to work without a supervisor, and self-sufficient enough to stay productive without the feedback and support of colleagues. Well-developed time management, organization, and planning skills help telecommuters deliver their results on time.
Is Telecommuting Right For You?
Before accepting a telecommuting job, you should consider the main issues that will affect your success or failure. Do you have the organizational skills and self-discipline necessary to work effectively at home? Will your personality adapt working alone, with less face-to-face interaction with co-workers? Working at home, will you be able to maintain a high enough profile to advance to the position you desire in the company?
Success at telecommuting seems linked to employees who have a stronger-than-average motivation and drive to succeed. The best telecommuters are independent enough to keep working without the eyes of a supervisor upon them, and self-sufficient enough to stay productive without the constant feedback and support of colleagues. Well-developed time management, organization, and planning skills help telecommuters deliver their results on time so that others can rely on them to fulfill their responsibilities. The most effective telecommuters are those who develop specific goals to achieve, and who have their importance to the company measured by results rather than by meetings attended or hours clocked.
Telecommuting Resources
A good way to learn more about telecommuting and what it involves is to read about others’ experiences. There are thousands of web sites devoted to all aspects of telecommuting, from how to set up a home office to how to find companies that are amenable to telecommuting. For example, The American Telecommuting Association (www.knowledgetree.com/ata.html) is a good place to start. On their site you can read current and past issues of their newsletter, Tele-News, as well as basic information about the history of telecommuting. Their Instant Telecommuter Information Pak,; available for a small fee, provides a copy of their official policy on telecommuting, a "how to" guide for approaching your boss with the idea, a "how to" guide for successful telecommuting, and the current issue of their newsletter.
The ATA has also developed a unique Telecommuting Affinity Index that helps individuals and organizations do a quick evaluation on the likelihood of success for any person or group of people. Another good source of information is The Telecommuting Knowledge Center (www.telecommuting.org), a not-for-profit organization that provides a comprehensive online sourcebook and information center for telecommuting technologies. TKC participants have access to an extensive resource of telecommuting literature, vendors, consultants, products, services and events, all categorized to make it easy to research specific telecommuting topics.
Telecommuting is one of the fastest-growing shifts in traditional working patterns, and it’s far more effective than wearing sneakers and t-shirts for improving employee morale and efficiency. Millions of people in the United States and around the world are discovering the power, pleasure, and increase in productivity that comes with telecommuting to work.
Although some employers still think that workers who are not subject to direct daily observation by front-line supervisors will not be productive enough to justify their employment, years of research have demonstrated that telecommuting, properly planned and administrated, is actually a very efficient alternative to the traditional office.
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If you have a great job already, moving your job to your home is an opportunity that you should explore before seeking new employment.
| By Buzzle Staff and Agencies Published: 1/19/2005 |
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