More Resources

Home > Hiring Telecommuters

Hiring Telecommuters

Before you set up employees in their own home offices, make sure you can handle the costs.

Things are going well for your homebased business. So well, in fact, that you've decided to hire your first employee. But you like working from home, so you've decided to allow them to do the same. Before you do, make sure you're only hiring employees capable of handling the responsibilities of working from home. There are many things to consider, and job fulfillment is just the beginning--make sure you're ready to handle the costs involved, too.

But working from home is supposed to be cheaper, right? Well, you won't have to pay an office lease, but you'll still have to equip an office. For Lisa Wilson, founder and CEO of VisiTech PR in Denver, whose eight employees work from their homes, the process of finding the right employees hasn't been easy, nor has it been cheap. After leaving a traditional office-based high-tech PR firm to start her own firm in 1998, Wilson decided she would only hire people with eight to 10 years of experience in the high-tech PR niche, counting on their experience and maturity to ensure that they would be working when they were supposed to. Even though Wilson is not paying the lease on an office, she figures her costs are about the same because she provides all her employees with individual office furniture and equipment, phone lines and high-speed Internet access as well as a budget for office supplies. Plus, because her employees have more experience, she also pays higher salaries and offers competitive benefits. And even though all but one of her employees is within a 30-minute drive from Wilson's home office, providing IT support can also be an issue since not everyone is in one place.

So before you start establishing "satellite" home offices, think about what systems you'll have to implement to keep in contact with your employees, including how employees will access vital company documents, whether it be through a hosted computing company or via a company intranet. Wilson keeps templates, calendars and other crucial documents online (using Intranets.com) so that all her employees have access to them. Providing IT support for the inevitable system crashes or for when the next e-mail virus hits is crucial as well; VisiTech employs independent tech consultants as needed.

Content Continues Below


So what makes the ideal work-at-home employee? "You have to have someone who is self-motivated, experienced, and you can't really have employees who need heavy amounts of training," says Wilson. "Some people I've interviewed didn't want to work at home--they weren't sure they could motivate themselves. And if they say that, they're probably right."

For Wilson, it all comes down to results-based management. VisiTech PR employees work in teams and sign off on goals they will accomplish each month. And because they bill by the amount of hours it takes to fulfill certain jobs, each hour of work is accounted for. By letting employees know what's expected of them, they're held accountable for the tasks they're required to complete.

The expectations that Wilson has set for her employees may be helpful to keep in mind: All employees are expected to be at home, working diligently and available to each other and to clients via telephone during regular work hours, and they must have a separate room they can use as a home office. They are also discouraged from running errands or taking care of children during work hours.


Marketplace

Learn how to distribute a press release

Try our new online printing. theupsstore.com/print
Today on Entrepreneur
Entrepreneur Connect
What makes a good client gift?
What guidelines do you follow when buying gifts for your clients? Have you ever received an unusual or inappropriate gift?
Resource Centers
Where Business Gets Done
Revisit the lost art of the meeting, the pitch, the presentation and the all important handshake to close the deal.

Insurance Center
Review your company's needs, save on workers' comp, protect your business from lawsuits and more.

Startup How-To Guides
Step-by-step guides to launching your business.

Commercial Vehicle Center
Get the right ride for your business.


Sign Up for the Latest in:
e-Business & Technology
Franchise News
Business Book Sampler
Starting a Business
Sales & Marketing
Growing a Business

E-mail*
Zip Code*