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Secrets to Designing the Home Office of Your Dreams Part 1
Posted by KC Kudra in Cell Phones
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Setting up a home office is one of the most important tasks you will face when you make the decision to work from your own home. Your home office can be a corner of your kitchen or living room or, if space permits, a former spare bedroom.
The size of your home office is less about the size and more about functionality. When you are deciding where to put your office, think about places that lend itself to being set up as the nerve center of your business. There are many factors to take into consideration when charting your home office organization.
Is the area well lit?
Having the correct lighting is very important when setting up a home office. Eyestrain and eye problems can result if you spend long periods of time in a dimly lit room staring at papers or a computer screen. In order to avoid eventual vision problems, you will want to have a well-lit home office.
Are there plenty of electrical outlets?
Are there enough for the amount of equipment you will be hooking up for your business. At the very least, the home office of today will have a computer system complete with CPU, monitor, printer, and scanner, as well as a fax machine, radio/CD/MP3 player. There may be other ancillary equipment necessary to running your home office and all of these items need to be considered when looking at electrical outlets.
Is the area well ventilated and dust free?
Computer equipment needs to be maintained at a certain temperature in order to work properly. The same can be said of human beings, so you will want to have proper ventilation that is warm, comfy in the winter months, and cool in the summer months. If you are overheated and your computer is overheated, you will pass out and the computer will crash and burn. Dust is another factor to consider. Do not place your computer in a place where the fans are sucking in exorbitant amounts of dust. It is not good for them, and it is not good for you either.
Do you have telephone access?
Depending on your Internet access, you will need either one or two telephone lines in your home office. If you are on dial-up, you will need two phone lines - one for the computer and one for you to talk on. It is also much easier to track your telephone usage if you separate your personal phone line from your business telephone line.
It is also important that your clients can reach you. If your clients have to compete with your teenagers’ telephone habits, chances are they will call someone else. Make certain that this separate line is set up to receive phone calls while you are online. Most major telephone companies now offer that service. You may pay a few extra dollars a month for it, but it will pay for itself over the long haul.
Do you have Internet access?
Most modern home offices will have a decent Internet connection - DSL or Broadband. Gone are the days when dialup access was sufficient, and while it can still be done, most home office business have a fast Internet connection. You may be already DSL-ready and only need to call your telephone company to get it started.
However, if you have a broadband connection you will also need cable access nearby where your computer workstation or desk is going to be for a convent hook up. If you do not have a cable outlet near by you will want to have one installed before you move into your new space. Most cable companies can help with this or you could use a do it yourself kit to accomplish this if you are handy around the house. You will want to make sure it is done right as a poor connection will hinder your productivity.
A third option is that if you are near a WiFi hotspot, you can use the wireless connection via a wireless card and hook up to your main router or broadband connection point. Again, make sure you take the proper security measures because you do not want others in the neighborhood surfing with you.
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