S5E11 - Working From Home: What We’ve Learned - “If I spend one more hour in this room… I will lose my mind”
43 Minuten
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vor 5 Jahren
In This Episode:
Void and Beej are here with hard earned tips and tricks for
working from home. We’ve done this off and on for years at
this point so we wanted to let everyone know some of the things
we’ve figured out that a lot of you are dealing with for the
first time.
Separate Work Space From Home Space
If you don’t have enough room for that… then you need a “work
mode” and “home mode” for your setup.
Void has always had a work desk and a home desk in different
areas of the house. His home desk has his gaming PC while the
work desk is only set up for a laptop with work stuff on
it.
Beej does, this, too. He has both a laptop and a desktop and
finds that when he needs to really work, he can get on the laptop
to be less distracted from stuff than on the gaming pc. The
Macbook is set up solely for work, while the gaming PC can be
used for both.
When You're Done, Be Done
No one is watching you as closely as you think they are. Bosses
included. You have to work and hit your deadlines, but when your
day is supposed to be over, then truly disconnect and let it be
over.
If you have a Do Not Disturb function (Slack does, for instance),
use it. Some jobs might not have this luxury, but if you do, set
a time for DND mode and abide by it.
Beej, for instance, stops working around 5pm but keeps Slack on
DND past 7pm. That way, communication can still happen and
handled when necessary, but it's on his terms. After 7pm, it can
wait until 8am.
Take Breaks From Your Workspace
In the office, this happens organically through a lot of
interruptions, casual chats, trips to the water cooler, and
things like that. It won’t happen as much at home. Things will
distract you, yes, but they won't be "breaks" as often.
We've found that these are the best ways to disconnect for us.
But yours might be different. That's okay. Just make sure you're
taking breaks and disconnecting from work at regular intervals.
15-minute walk around the block, house, yard
Play a video game for half an hour
Take an actual hour break for lunch and make yourself some
home-cooked food
Beej suggests In The Floor Time with your pets. It really
brightens the day.
Communication is the Most Important Skill for Remote Work
You need to stay in contact with your co-workers and supervisors.
But it doesn't have to be constant. If you’re responding to
people in an hour or less, you’re typically doing just fine.
Emails can even wait longer because most people don't check them
constantly.
Don't be afraid of phone calls. Casual chats can’t happen so
sometimes it’s a lot easier to get on the phone instead of
sending 15 emails back and forth.
Video chats actually do help, too. One-on-one calls with
supervisors or employees with video make you feel much less
alone.
Talk to Other Humans. Regularly.
No matter what kind of communication it is, make sure you're
talking to other human bei
Void and Beej are here with hard earned tips and tricks for
working from home. We’ve done this off and on for years at
this point so we wanted to let everyone know some of the things
we’ve figured out that a lot of you are dealing with for the
first time.
Separate Work Space From Home Space
If you don’t have enough room for that… then you need a “work
mode” and “home mode” for your setup.
Void has always had a work desk and a home desk in different
areas of the house. His home desk has his gaming PC while the
work desk is only set up for a laptop with work stuff on
it.
Beej does, this, too. He has both a laptop and a desktop and
finds that when he needs to really work, he can get on the laptop
to be less distracted from stuff than on the gaming pc. The
Macbook is set up solely for work, while the gaming PC can be
used for both.
When You're Done, Be Done
No one is watching you as closely as you think they are. Bosses
included. You have to work and hit your deadlines, but when your
day is supposed to be over, then truly disconnect and let it be
over.
If you have a Do Not Disturb function (Slack does, for instance),
use it. Some jobs might not have this luxury, but if you do, set
a time for DND mode and abide by it.
Beej, for instance, stops working around 5pm but keeps Slack on
DND past 7pm. That way, communication can still happen and
handled when necessary, but it's on his terms. After 7pm, it can
wait until 8am.
Take Breaks From Your Workspace
In the office, this happens organically through a lot of
interruptions, casual chats, trips to the water cooler, and
things like that. It won’t happen as much at home. Things will
distract you, yes, but they won't be "breaks" as often.
We've found that these are the best ways to disconnect for us.
But yours might be different. That's okay. Just make sure you're
taking breaks and disconnecting from work at regular intervals.
15-minute walk around the block, house, yard
Play a video game for half an hour
Take an actual hour break for lunch and make yourself some
home-cooked food
Beej suggests In The Floor Time with your pets. It really
brightens the day.
Communication is the Most Important Skill for Remote Work
You need to stay in contact with your co-workers and supervisors.
But it doesn't have to be constant. If you’re responding to
people in an hour or less, you’re typically doing just fine.
Emails can even wait longer because most people don't check them
constantly.
Don't be afraid of phone calls. Casual chats can’t happen so
sometimes it’s a lot easier to get on the phone instead of
sending 15 emails back and forth.
Video chats actually do help, too. One-on-one calls with
supervisors or employees with video make you feel much less
alone.
Talk to Other Humans. Regularly.
No matter what kind of communication it is, make sure you're
talking to other human bei
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