Childproofing Your Home Office
Junior High and Beyond
Article Tools
Article Contents
As your children get older, the areas that you need to limit in
your home office may change. Jean Bedord, the founder of Cupertino,
California-based eContent Strategies, a consulting business
specializing in online content, found this out as her son became a
preteen. When Brian, now age 11, was younger, Bedord had no
problems with the limitations imposed by only two telephone lines
(one voice and one Internet access/fax). From 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.,
Jean answered the phone in her business persona ("Hello, this
is Jean Bedord"); after 5 p.m., she simply answered
"Hello." As her son become older, however, he began answering the phone
as well, thinking it might be one of his friends. "Somehow,
this kid's voice at the other end of the line didn't
project the right professional image," admits Bedord. To
handle that issue, the family now has four lines: a home telephone,
Bedord's business telephone (which rings only in her office),
her husband's business phone (which rings only in his office)
and their shared fax/Internet access line. Brian, however, still
had to learn that he had to keep his voice down when Mom was on the
phone. Bedord also discovered, as her son grew older, that sharing a
computer doesn't work. "My son absolutely loves computer
games," says Bedord. "Unfortunately, they interfere with
business software and crash machines, plus he would love to camp on
the computer for hours at a time." To avoid that conflict,
their home now houses three computers. Content Continues Below
Space allocation has also been problematic. When Bedord changed
from corporate life to entrepreneurial, homebased work, she needed
a dedicated office which contained only her business stuff.
"I'm trying to keep the 'family stuff'
segregated," says Bedord. The family has accomplished this by
setting up game consoles in Bedord's son's room, having a
separate office for her husband, and keeping the family room clear
of computers and electronic games. Bedord admits that it's an ongoing battle to stay organized.
"But at least now I can shut the door," she says,
"instead of looking at my office during family time."
Joanne Eglash is the author of How to Write a .Com Business Plan: The Internet
Entrepreneur's Guide to Everything You Need to Know About
Business Plans and Financing Options.
 Page 1 | 2 | 3 | 4
|
sponsored by
Security
Resource Center
Protecting your customers' information or preventing physical theft and keeping your company secure is a fundamental part of doing business
More Resources
|