7 Reasons Why I Love SmartWorking

7 Reasons Why I Love SmartWorking

15th December 2018 Off By Thomas Murray

Day 7 of our 12 Days of Christmas series has guest blogger Jonathan deBurca Butler give us his 7 Reasons Why He Loves SmartWorking.

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1. No More Commute

I get an extra hour of life everyday because I donā€™t have to commute. Donā€™t get me wrong, some people use it very productively. I know one person who wrote his first two novels on the DART, but my lack of commute means Iā€™m not grumpy in the morning and bringing that negativity into an office.

2. No More Unnecessary Chats

Chat is lovely and social interaction is great. Some people live for it, and in an office space it can be great for people who are new to a town. But chatting, or as I like to call it ā€˜talking rubbish,ā€™ [edited: not exactly the word he used :)] takes time. Imagine you chat to five colleagues for five minutes every day (a conservative estimate). Thatā€™s twenty-five minutes a day and over two hours a week. At home you chat to nobody unless you want to.

3. No More Office Politics

As a follow on from the point around chat, working from home keeps you away from office politics. You are oblivious to the ins and outs of the everyday workings of the office and so you get on with the job in hand. Iā€™m not aware of any studies that have been done on this but thereā€™s a PhD for someone on the ill effects of office gossip and how much it slows down productivity and can create a toxic environment. That is not to say that every office is a bad place to be, but rumour and chat are again unnecessary distractions.

4. No More “Have You Got Five Minutes?”

ā€œHave you got five minutes?ā€ is something a person working from home never hears. Distractions are at a minimum at home. That might seem unbelievable, but itā€™s not if you make sure to keep it that way. Discipline is the key to making working from home a success.

5. More Productivity

Since I started working from home my productivity has soared. Without wishing to be a complete asocial (I do have friends), the lack of distraction has improved my levels of concentration. I get so lost in my work that I often donā€™t notice the time passingā€“which can be a problem for the people who look after my son in montessori. This has had a knock on effect in that Iā€™m so immersed in my work when Iā€™m alone, that even when on the odd occasion there are others around me, itā€™s as if myself and my work are ā€˜locked togetherā€™ in some third dimension. Even in public situations Iā€™m now so connected to work that I can block out distractions I wasnā€™t able to before.

6. Deadlines Are Easier

Itā€™s easy to leave things on the long finger, but because Iā€™m self-employed I canā€™t afford to. This has taught me that you need to get things done in the time you have allotted yourself, even if there is apparently nothing to do. What I mean by this is if you get something finished within your ā€˜allotted timeā€™ use whatā€™s left to start the next project or to find ideas for the next project. You never know when three articles come in all at once, so get any regular stuff out of the way when you can and keep those ideas popping out. When you work for yourself, there is always something to do.

7. Cost Savings

I have never monitored this but I imagine my costs have come down in terms of my daily spend. No weekly bus fares, no take-away coffees, no ā‚¬6 sandwiches from the deli. It all adds up. Of course, I still nip out for a coffee on occasion but Iā€™m not using it as an excuse to get away from the office so I can have my own space.

Author:

JonathanĀ deBurca ButlerĀ is a media solutionist from Dublin. He has written for scores of newspapers including the Irish Examiner and Sunday Independent for whom he curates the monthlyĀ Book that Changed my Lifecolumn. He is a regular contributor to the Sean Moncrieff show and runs his own media companyĀ audioclub.ie