What can I do to prepare for working remotely?

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Background info:
I currently work on site (database developer) but will be moving to another state in a month. My boss has given me the okay to work remotely. I'll be the first remote worker in my office, and I've never worked remotely before. I've been in my position for a year, and this is my first job out of college.



We are working on getting all the equipment I need. I'm more concerned about setting up expectations. What do I need to discuss with my boss before moving to make the transition as smooth as possible and alleviate any concerns he may have?



Here's what I've come up with so far:



  • Communication expectations

  • Working hours and availability

  • Overtime

  • Travel expectations

  • Reimbursement for business expenses

  • Time frame for reviewing the remote arrangement to make sure it's working out for me and him.






share|improve this question




















  • Nice question. Browse through these other questions for suggestions
    – Jan Doggen
    Dec 5 '14 at 13:23






  • 2




    Could you please clarify what do you mean by overtime? Did you offer him overtime work? I think it's not a good idea unless you've been working overtime before. (Which probably you did, but I wanted to be sure)
    – Areks
    Dec 5 '14 at 14:35






  • 1




    I get compensated overtime, and I currently work OT as needed, usually <8 hours per week. I know this will continue, but want to make sure he doesn't expect me to work more hours just because I won't have to commute.
    – taffy
    Dec 5 '14 at 14:42











  • That you have asked this and are thinking about how your workplace will be affected bodes well for your ability to successfully work remotely.
    – HLGEM
    Dec 5 '14 at 22:36
















up vote
18
down vote

favorite
3












Background info:
I currently work on site (database developer) but will be moving to another state in a month. My boss has given me the okay to work remotely. I'll be the first remote worker in my office, and I've never worked remotely before. I've been in my position for a year, and this is my first job out of college.



We are working on getting all the equipment I need. I'm more concerned about setting up expectations. What do I need to discuss with my boss before moving to make the transition as smooth as possible and alleviate any concerns he may have?



Here's what I've come up with so far:



  • Communication expectations

  • Working hours and availability

  • Overtime

  • Travel expectations

  • Reimbursement for business expenses

  • Time frame for reviewing the remote arrangement to make sure it's working out for me and him.






share|improve this question




















  • Nice question. Browse through these other questions for suggestions
    – Jan Doggen
    Dec 5 '14 at 13:23






  • 2




    Could you please clarify what do you mean by overtime? Did you offer him overtime work? I think it's not a good idea unless you've been working overtime before. (Which probably you did, but I wanted to be sure)
    – Areks
    Dec 5 '14 at 14:35






  • 1




    I get compensated overtime, and I currently work OT as needed, usually <8 hours per week. I know this will continue, but want to make sure he doesn't expect me to work more hours just because I won't have to commute.
    – taffy
    Dec 5 '14 at 14:42











  • That you have asked this and are thinking about how your workplace will be affected bodes well for your ability to successfully work remotely.
    – HLGEM
    Dec 5 '14 at 22:36












up vote
18
down vote

favorite
3









up vote
18
down vote

favorite
3






3





Background info:
I currently work on site (database developer) but will be moving to another state in a month. My boss has given me the okay to work remotely. I'll be the first remote worker in my office, and I've never worked remotely before. I've been in my position for a year, and this is my first job out of college.



We are working on getting all the equipment I need. I'm more concerned about setting up expectations. What do I need to discuss with my boss before moving to make the transition as smooth as possible and alleviate any concerns he may have?



Here's what I've come up with so far:



  • Communication expectations

  • Working hours and availability

  • Overtime

  • Travel expectations

  • Reimbursement for business expenses

  • Time frame for reviewing the remote arrangement to make sure it's working out for me and him.






share|improve this question












Background info:
I currently work on site (database developer) but will be moving to another state in a month. My boss has given me the okay to work remotely. I'll be the first remote worker in my office, and I've never worked remotely before. I've been in my position for a year, and this is my first job out of college.



We are working on getting all the equipment I need. I'm more concerned about setting up expectations. What do I need to discuss with my boss before moving to make the transition as smooth as possible and alleviate any concerns he may have?



Here's what I've come up with so far:



  • Communication expectations

  • Working hours and availability

  • Overtime

  • Travel expectations

  • Reimbursement for business expenses

  • Time frame for reviewing the remote arrangement to make sure it's working out for me and him.








share|improve this question











share|improve this question




share|improve this question










asked Dec 5 '14 at 13:15









taffy

1,70711117




1,70711117











  • Nice question. Browse through these other questions for suggestions
    – Jan Doggen
    Dec 5 '14 at 13:23






  • 2




    Could you please clarify what do you mean by overtime? Did you offer him overtime work? I think it's not a good idea unless you've been working overtime before. (Which probably you did, but I wanted to be sure)
    – Areks
    Dec 5 '14 at 14:35






  • 1




    I get compensated overtime, and I currently work OT as needed, usually <8 hours per week. I know this will continue, but want to make sure he doesn't expect me to work more hours just because I won't have to commute.
    – taffy
    Dec 5 '14 at 14:42











  • That you have asked this and are thinking about how your workplace will be affected bodes well for your ability to successfully work remotely.
    – HLGEM
    Dec 5 '14 at 22:36
















  • Nice question. Browse through these other questions for suggestions
    – Jan Doggen
    Dec 5 '14 at 13:23






  • 2




    Could you please clarify what do you mean by overtime? Did you offer him overtime work? I think it's not a good idea unless you've been working overtime before. (Which probably you did, but I wanted to be sure)
    – Areks
    Dec 5 '14 at 14:35






  • 1




    I get compensated overtime, and I currently work OT as needed, usually <8 hours per week. I know this will continue, but want to make sure he doesn't expect me to work more hours just because I won't have to commute.
    – taffy
    Dec 5 '14 at 14:42











  • That you have asked this and are thinking about how your workplace will be affected bodes well for your ability to successfully work remotely.
    – HLGEM
    Dec 5 '14 at 22:36















Nice question. Browse through these other questions for suggestions
– Jan Doggen
Dec 5 '14 at 13:23




Nice question. Browse through these other questions for suggestions
– Jan Doggen
Dec 5 '14 at 13:23




2




2




Could you please clarify what do you mean by overtime? Did you offer him overtime work? I think it's not a good idea unless you've been working overtime before. (Which probably you did, but I wanted to be sure)
– Areks
Dec 5 '14 at 14:35




Could you please clarify what do you mean by overtime? Did you offer him overtime work? I think it's not a good idea unless you've been working overtime before. (Which probably you did, but I wanted to be sure)
– Areks
Dec 5 '14 at 14:35




1




1




I get compensated overtime, and I currently work OT as needed, usually <8 hours per week. I know this will continue, but want to make sure he doesn't expect me to work more hours just because I won't have to commute.
– taffy
Dec 5 '14 at 14:42





I get compensated overtime, and I currently work OT as needed, usually <8 hours per week. I know this will continue, but want to make sure he doesn't expect me to work more hours just because I won't have to commute.
– taffy
Dec 5 '14 at 14:42













That you have asked this and are thinking about how your workplace will be affected bodes well for your ability to successfully work remotely.
– HLGEM
Dec 5 '14 at 22:36




That you have asked this and are thinking about how your workplace will be affected bodes well for your ability to successfully work remotely.
– HLGEM
Dec 5 '14 at 22:36










3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes

















up vote
13
down vote



accepted










I was in your boat about 8 years ago. I decided I did not want to live in the city my company moved to, so I moved back to where it started. They allowed me to do so. However, the dynamic is different.



Here's a list of everything you will need to be proactive about:
1: EVERYTHING



This is the biggest thing you may not be prepared for. If you have no physical presence, your battles are harder to win, and you will have to give way more effort to get the information you need. In short, basically assume that nobody will go out of their way to get you the information you need. You will have to become a squeaky wheel. In my experience, certain things I thought needed to be done didn't get done, as I was the main advocate, and I was on the other side of the planet.



Your list is good, and communication expectations is the most important one. It does tie in a bit with what I previously stated. Not sure if your group has regular meetings. If not, I highly recommend them. If not a quick 15 minute one per day, then a longer one a couple of times a week.



Combining availability with communication: Make sure everyone knows when you start, when you go to lunch, when you're back, and when you're done for the day. If an issue happens and you're unavailable, it looks twice as bad as if you work in the office, but are away from your desk.



Again, these are based on my experience. Your mileage may vary, of course.






share|improve this answer






















  • Thank you for sharing your experience! Currently I am the only developer here and don't go to many meetings. My boss and I meet daily which will hopefully transfer well to a phone call. I don't have much influence over business decisions, but I'll keep that in mind for the future.
    – taffy
    Dec 5 '14 at 18:17






  • 3




    Nail on the Head: The Trinity of Working Remotely = Persistence/Proactivity, Availability, Communication.
    – Mike
    Dec 5 '14 at 18:39










  • Google around for "stand up meetings". If you're the only developer and your boss likes you, you're in a good position. Just be proactive... make sure you talk daily if possible, and don't be afraid to be verbal (phone/Skype) with other colleagues. Best of luck. Working at home can be liberating. :)
    – kiss-o-matic
    Dec 5 '14 at 20:07






  • 2




    +1,000,000 fro mentioning avaiablity. The biggest thing that I have seen torpedo people who work remotely is that some of them dont; respond to IMs, phone calls emails in a timely manner and teh boss then thinks they are not working. Yes it is annoying to get out of the zone to do those things, but when you aren't in the office, you must be perceived as being on the job and working. This iespecially true of tehy need something urgently from you (it may not be somethign you think of as urgent) and you don't see it for hours.
    – HLGEM
    Dec 5 '14 at 21:23

















up vote
7
down vote













I've been doing the same for a few years with various companies. One of the main things I've struggled with is getting connected. There's nothing wrong with my Internet access, but some companies are trying to increase their network security and remote workers get hit the hardest. Here are potential policies to be concerned with:



  1. Must use company hardware to access network. You may have a company PC but enjoy using your laptop occasionally. You could lose that.

  2. Two-Factor Authentication. You can use a cell phone for some of these, but there could be a connection issue or message expense. Some have a key-fob with the security numbers generated. All of this is great when it works, but if things fail, being away from the office can limit your support option. If you go a week without access, that could be a problem.

  3. Other security issues accessing servers and databases. It could be some strange think like working with linked servers and the credentials don't carry-over.

I know these examples could all be resolved, but it could take time or hinder your ability to perform. Early on, you're going to be very paranoid that others will think you've slacked off since the move.



Keep positive and always communicate. Pick the phone up and call more than you did at the office. You don't have as much face to face as you use to. There will be little jokes about how you're not working or sitting there in your underwear, etc. Laugh them off initially, but make sure your supervisor knows you're getting things done and as many others as possible. Don't let the haters who are back at the office take it out on you. Let them know you're setting the standard and if everyone believes this worked out, it could lead to more people working from home even if it is just a day or two a week.






share|improve this answer




















  • True as well. In fact, just before I stopped working remotely (b/c the company shut) I spent an entire Saturday w/ the network admin guy while he was configuring the HW Firewall he had sent me. (Firewall at my house, he in another country). Big fun.
    – kiss-o-matic
    Dec 5 '14 at 21:58










  • Very good point about the hardware, this is one of the things I'm most worried about since without server access it's impossible to do my job.
    – taffy
    Dec 6 '14 at 17:02

















up vote
6
down vote













Be proactive about communication. Talk to people at the company on a regular basis. It's easy to assume you're not doing anything if the person you're reporting to doesn't understand what you do, and isn't getting updates.



Make sure that these meetings actually happen. Often they'll be pushed off, forgotten, and eventually ignored. See the first point.



Also, talk to your family. When you're working, you're working. It took a very long time for my wife to get this.






share|improve this answer




















  • +1 for the family dynamic. If you don't go out during work hours to buy some milk, you do not do so when you are working remotely.
    – Nelson
    Oct 23 '15 at 6:03










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3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes








3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes








up vote
13
down vote



accepted










I was in your boat about 8 years ago. I decided I did not want to live in the city my company moved to, so I moved back to where it started. They allowed me to do so. However, the dynamic is different.



Here's a list of everything you will need to be proactive about:
1: EVERYTHING



This is the biggest thing you may not be prepared for. If you have no physical presence, your battles are harder to win, and you will have to give way more effort to get the information you need. In short, basically assume that nobody will go out of their way to get you the information you need. You will have to become a squeaky wheel. In my experience, certain things I thought needed to be done didn't get done, as I was the main advocate, and I was on the other side of the planet.



Your list is good, and communication expectations is the most important one. It does tie in a bit with what I previously stated. Not sure if your group has regular meetings. If not, I highly recommend them. If not a quick 15 minute one per day, then a longer one a couple of times a week.



Combining availability with communication: Make sure everyone knows when you start, when you go to lunch, when you're back, and when you're done for the day. If an issue happens and you're unavailable, it looks twice as bad as if you work in the office, but are away from your desk.



Again, these are based on my experience. Your mileage may vary, of course.






share|improve this answer






















  • Thank you for sharing your experience! Currently I am the only developer here and don't go to many meetings. My boss and I meet daily which will hopefully transfer well to a phone call. I don't have much influence over business decisions, but I'll keep that in mind for the future.
    – taffy
    Dec 5 '14 at 18:17






  • 3




    Nail on the Head: The Trinity of Working Remotely = Persistence/Proactivity, Availability, Communication.
    – Mike
    Dec 5 '14 at 18:39










  • Google around for "stand up meetings". If you're the only developer and your boss likes you, you're in a good position. Just be proactive... make sure you talk daily if possible, and don't be afraid to be verbal (phone/Skype) with other colleagues. Best of luck. Working at home can be liberating. :)
    – kiss-o-matic
    Dec 5 '14 at 20:07






  • 2




    +1,000,000 fro mentioning avaiablity. The biggest thing that I have seen torpedo people who work remotely is that some of them dont; respond to IMs, phone calls emails in a timely manner and teh boss then thinks they are not working. Yes it is annoying to get out of the zone to do those things, but when you aren't in the office, you must be perceived as being on the job and working. This iespecially true of tehy need something urgently from you (it may not be somethign you think of as urgent) and you don't see it for hours.
    – HLGEM
    Dec 5 '14 at 21:23














up vote
13
down vote



accepted










I was in your boat about 8 years ago. I decided I did not want to live in the city my company moved to, so I moved back to where it started. They allowed me to do so. However, the dynamic is different.



Here's a list of everything you will need to be proactive about:
1: EVERYTHING



This is the biggest thing you may not be prepared for. If you have no physical presence, your battles are harder to win, and you will have to give way more effort to get the information you need. In short, basically assume that nobody will go out of their way to get you the information you need. You will have to become a squeaky wheel. In my experience, certain things I thought needed to be done didn't get done, as I was the main advocate, and I was on the other side of the planet.



Your list is good, and communication expectations is the most important one. It does tie in a bit with what I previously stated. Not sure if your group has regular meetings. If not, I highly recommend them. If not a quick 15 minute one per day, then a longer one a couple of times a week.



Combining availability with communication: Make sure everyone knows when you start, when you go to lunch, when you're back, and when you're done for the day. If an issue happens and you're unavailable, it looks twice as bad as if you work in the office, but are away from your desk.



Again, these are based on my experience. Your mileage may vary, of course.






share|improve this answer






















  • Thank you for sharing your experience! Currently I am the only developer here and don't go to many meetings. My boss and I meet daily which will hopefully transfer well to a phone call. I don't have much influence over business decisions, but I'll keep that in mind for the future.
    – taffy
    Dec 5 '14 at 18:17






  • 3




    Nail on the Head: The Trinity of Working Remotely = Persistence/Proactivity, Availability, Communication.
    – Mike
    Dec 5 '14 at 18:39










  • Google around for "stand up meetings". If you're the only developer and your boss likes you, you're in a good position. Just be proactive... make sure you talk daily if possible, and don't be afraid to be verbal (phone/Skype) with other colleagues. Best of luck. Working at home can be liberating. :)
    – kiss-o-matic
    Dec 5 '14 at 20:07






  • 2




    +1,000,000 fro mentioning avaiablity. The biggest thing that I have seen torpedo people who work remotely is that some of them dont; respond to IMs, phone calls emails in a timely manner and teh boss then thinks they are not working. Yes it is annoying to get out of the zone to do those things, but when you aren't in the office, you must be perceived as being on the job and working. This iespecially true of tehy need something urgently from you (it may not be somethign you think of as urgent) and you don't see it for hours.
    – HLGEM
    Dec 5 '14 at 21:23












up vote
13
down vote



accepted







up vote
13
down vote



accepted






I was in your boat about 8 years ago. I decided I did not want to live in the city my company moved to, so I moved back to where it started. They allowed me to do so. However, the dynamic is different.



Here's a list of everything you will need to be proactive about:
1: EVERYTHING



This is the biggest thing you may not be prepared for. If you have no physical presence, your battles are harder to win, and you will have to give way more effort to get the information you need. In short, basically assume that nobody will go out of their way to get you the information you need. You will have to become a squeaky wheel. In my experience, certain things I thought needed to be done didn't get done, as I was the main advocate, and I was on the other side of the planet.



Your list is good, and communication expectations is the most important one. It does tie in a bit with what I previously stated. Not sure if your group has regular meetings. If not, I highly recommend them. If not a quick 15 minute one per day, then a longer one a couple of times a week.



Combining availability with communication: Make sure everyone knows when you start, when you go to lunch, when you're back, and when you're done for the day. If an issue happens and you're unavailable, it looks twice as bad as if you work in the office, but are away from your desk.



Again, these are based on my experience. Your mileage may vary, of course.






share|improve this answer














I was in your boat about 8 years ago. I decided I did not want to live in the city my company moved to, so I moved back to where it started. They allowed me to do so. However, the dynamic is different.



Here's a list of everything you will need to be proactive about:
1: EVERYTHING



This is the biggest thing you may not be prepared for. If you have no physical presence, your battles are harder to win, and you will have to give way more effort to get the information you need. In short, basically assume that nobody will go out of their way to get you the information you need. You will have to become a squeaky wheel. In my experience, certain things I thought needed to be done didn't get done, as I was the main advocate, and I was on the other side of the planet.



Your list is good, and communication expectations is the most important one. It does tie in a bit with what I previously stated. Not sure if your group has regular meetings. If not, I highly recommend them. If not a quick 15 minute one per day, then a longer one a couple of times a week.



Combining availability with communication: Make sure everyone knows when you start, when you go to lunch, when you're back, and when you're done for the day. If an issue happens and you're unavailable, it looks twice as bad as if you work in the office, but are away from your desk.



Again, these are based on my experience. Your mileage may vary, of course.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Dec 5 '14 at 20:06

























answered Dec 5 '14 at 16:56









kiss-o-matic

35125




35125











  • Thank you for sharing your experience! Currently I am the only developer here and don't go to many meetings. My boss and I meet daily which will hopefully transfer well to a phone call. I don't have much influence over business decisions, but I'll keep that in mind for the future.
    – taffy
    Dec 5 '14 at 18:17






  • 3




    Nail on the Head: The Trinity of Working Remotely = Persistence/Proactivity, Availability, Communication.
    – Mike
    Dec 5 '14 at 18:39










  • Google around for "stand up meetings". If you're the only developer and your boss likes you, you're in a good position. Just be proactive... make sure you talk daily if possible, and don't be afraid to be verbal (phone/Skype) with other colleagues. Best of luck. Working at home can be liberating. :)
    – kiss-o-matic
    Dec 5 '14 at 20:07






  • 2




    +1,000,000 fro mentioning avaiablity. The biggest thing that I have seen torpedo people who work remotely is that some of them dont; respond to IMs, phone calls emails in a timely manner and teh boss then thinks they are not working. Yes it is annoying to get out of the zone to do those things, but when you aren't in the office, you must be perceived as being on the job and working. This iespecially true of tehy need something urgently from you (it may not be somethign you think of as urgent) and you don't see it for hours.
    – HLGEM
    Dec 5 '14 at 21:23
















  • Thank you for sharing your experience! Currently I am the only developer here and don't go to many meetings. My boss and I meet daily which will hopefully transfer well to a phone call. I don't have much influence over business decisions, but I'll keep that in mind for the future.
    – taffy
    Dec 5 '14 at 18:17






  • 3




    Nail on the Head: The Trinity of Working Remotely = Persistence/Proactivity, Availability, Communication.
    – Mike
    Dec 5 '14 at 18:39










  • Google around for "stand up meetings". If you're the only developer and your boss likes you, you're in a good position. Just be proactive... make sure you talk daily if possible, and don't be afraid to be verbal (phone/Skype) with other colleagues. Best of luck. Working at home can be liberating. :)
    – kiss-o-matic
    Dec 5 '14 at 20:07






  • 2




    +1,000,000 fro mentioning avaiablity. The biggest thing that I have seen torpedo people who work remotely is that some of them dont; respond to IMs, phone calls emails in a timely manner and teh boss then thinks they are not working. Yes it is annoying to get out of the zone to do those things, but when you aren't in the office, you must be perceived as being on the job and working. This iespecially true of tehy need something urgently from you (it may not be somethign you think of as urgent) and you don't see it for hours.
    – HLGEM
    Dec 5 '14 at 21:23















Thank you for sharing your experience! Currently I am the only developer here and don't go to many meetings. My boss and I meet daily which will hopefully transfer well to a phone call. I don't have much influence over business decisions, but I'll keep that in mind for the future.
– taffy
Dec 5 '14 at 18:17




Thank you for sharing your experience! Currently I am the only developer here and don't go to many meetings. My boss and I meet daily which will hopefully transfer well to a phone call. I don't have much influence over business decisions, but I'll keep that in mind for the future.
– taffy
Dec 5 '14 at 18:17




3




3




Nail on the Head: The Trinity of Working Remotely = Persistence/Proactivity, Availability, Communication.
– Mike
Dec 5 '14 at 18:39




Nail on the Head: The Trinity of Working Remotely = Persistence/Proactivity, Availability, Communication.
– Mike
Dec 5 '14 at 18:39












Google around for "stand up meetings". If you're the only developer and your boss likes you, you're in a good position. Just be proactive... make sure you talk daily if possible, and don't be afraid to be verbal (phone/Skype) with other colleagues. Best of luck. Working at home can be liberating. :)
– kiss-o-matic
Dec 5 '14 at 20:07




Google around for "stand up meetings". If you're the only developer and your boss likes you, you're in a good position. Just be proactive... make sure you talk daily if possible, and don't be afraid to be verbal (phone/Skype) with other colleagues. Best of luck. Working at home can be liberating. :)
– kiss-o-matic
Dec 5 '14 at 20:07




2




2




+1,000,000 fro mentioning avaiablity. The biggest thing that I have seen torpedo people who work remotely is that some of them dont; respond to IMs, phone calls emails in a timely manner and teh boss then thinks they are not working. Yes it is annoying to get out of the zone to do those things, but when you aren't in the office, you must be perceived as being on the job and working. This iespecially true of tehy need something urgently from you (it may not be somethign you think of as urgent) and you don't see it for hours.
– HLGEM
Dec 5 '14 at 21:23




+1,000,000 fro mentioning avaiablity. The biggest thing that I have seen torpedo people who work remotely is that some of them dont; respond to IMs, phone calls emails in a timely manner and teh boss then thinks they are not working. Yes it is annoying to get out of the zone to do those things, but when you aren't in the office, you must be perceived as being on the job and working. This iespecially true of tehy need something urgently from you (it may not be somethign you think of as urgent) and you don't see it for hours.
– HLGEM
Dec 5 '14 at 21:23












up vote
7
down vote













I've been doing the same for a few years with various companies. One of the main things I've struggled with is getting connected. There's nothing wrong with my Internet access, but some companies are trying to increase their network security and remote workers get hit the hardest. Here are potential policies to be concerned with:



  1. Must use company hardware to access network. You may have a company PC but enjoy using your laptop occasionally. You could lose that.

  2. Two-Factor Authentication. You can use a cell phone for some of these, but there could be a connection issue or message expense. Some have a key-fob with the security numbers generated. All of this is great when it works, but if things fail, being away from the office can limit your support option. If you go a week without access, that could be a problem.

  3. Other security issues accessing servers and databases. It could be some strange think like working with linked servers and the credentials don't carry-over.

I know these examples could all be resolved, but it could take time or hinder your ability to perform. Early on, you're going to be very paranoid that others will think you've slacked off since the move.



Keep positive and always communicate. Pick the phone up and call more than you did at the office. You don't have as much face to face as you use to. There will be little jokes about how you're not working or sitting there in your underwear, etc. Laugh them off initially, but make sure your supervisor knows you're getting things done and as many others as possible. Don't let the haters who are back at the office take it out on you. Let them know you're setting the standard and if everyone believes this worked out, it could lead to more people working from home even if it is just a day or two a week.






share|improve this answer




















  • True as well. In fact, just before I stopped working remotely (b/c the company shut) I spent an entire Saturday w/ the network admin guy while he was configuring the HW Firewall he had sent me. (Firewall at my house, he in another country). Big fun.
    – kiss-o-matic
    Dec 5 '14 at 21:58










  • Very good point about the hardware, this is one of the things I'm most worried about since without server access it's impossible to do my job.
    – taffy
    Dec 6 '14 at 17:02














up vote
7
down vote













I've been doing the same for a few years with various companies. One of the main things I've struggled with is getting connected. There's nothing wrong with my Internet access, but some companies are trying to increase their network security and remote workers get hit the hardest. Here are potential policies to be concerned with:



  1. Must use company hardware to access network. You may have a company PC but enjoy using your laptop occasionally. You could lose that.

  2. Two-Factor Authentication. You can use a cell phone for some of these, but there could be a connection issue or message expense. Some have a key-fob with the security numbers generated. All of this is great when it works, but if things fail, being away from the office can limit your support option. If you go a week without access, that could be a problem.

  3. Other security issues accessing servers and databases. It could be some strange think like working with linked servers and the credentials don't carry-over.

I know these examples could all be resolved, but it could take time or hinder your ability to perform. Early on, you're going to be very paranoid that others will think you've slacked off since the move.



Keep positive and always communicate. Pick the phone up and call more than you did at the office. You don't have as much face to face as you use to. There will be little jokes about how you're not working or sitting there in your underwear, etc. Laugh them off initially, but make sure your supervisor knows you're getting things done and as many others as possible. Don't let the haters who are back at the office take it out on you. Let them know you're setting the standard and if everyone believes this worked out, it could lead to more people working from home even if it is just a day or two a week.






share|improve this answer




















  • True as well. In fact, just before I stopped working remotely (b/c the company shut) I spent an entire Saturday w/ the network admin guy while he was configuring the HW Firewall he had sent me. (Firewall at my house, he in another country). Big fun.
    – kiss-o-matic
    Dec 5 '14 at 21:58










  • Very good point about the hardware, this is one of the things I'm most worried about since without server access it's impossible to do my job.
    – taffy
    Dec 6 '14 at 17:02












up vote
7
down vote










up vote
7
down vote









I've been doing the same for a few years with various companies. One of the main things I've struggled with is getting connected. There's nothing wrong with my Internet access, but some companies are trying to increase their network security and remote workers get hit the hardest. Here are potential policies to be concerned with:



  1. Must use company hardware to access network. You may have a company PC but enjoy using your laptop occasionally. You could lose that.

  2. Two-Factor Authentication. You can use a cell phone for some of these, but there could be a connection issue or message expense. Some have a key-fob with the security numbers generated. All of this is great when it works, but if things fail, being away from the office can limit your support option. If you go a week without access, that could be a problem.

  3. Other security issues accessing servers and databases. It could be some strange think like working with linked servers and the credentials don't carry-over.

I know these examples could all be resolved, but it could take time or hinder your ability to perform. Early on, you're going to be very paranoid that others will think you've slacked off since the move.



Keep positive and always communicate. Pick the phone up and call more than you did at the office. You don't have as much face to face as you use to. There will be little jokes about how you're not working or sitting there in your underwear, etc. Laugh them off initially, but make sure your supervisor knows you're getting things done and as many others as possible. Don't let the haters who are back at the office take it out on you. Let them know you're setting the standard and if everyone believes this worked out, it could lead to more people working from home even if it is just a day or two a week.






share|improve this answer












I've been doing the same for a few years with various companies. One of the main things I've struggled with is getting connected. There's nothing wrong with my Internet access, but some companies are trying to increase their network security and remote workers get hit the hardest. Here are potential policies to be concerned with:



  1. Must use company hardware to access network. You may have a company PC but enjoy using your laptop occasionally. You could lose that.

  2. Two-Factor Authentication. You can use a cell phone for some of these, but there could be a connection issue or message expense. Some have a key-fob with the security numbers generated. All of this is great when it works, but if things fail, being away from the office can limit your support option. If you go a week without access, that could be a problem.

  3. Other security issues accessing servers and databases. It could be some strange think like working with linked servers and the credentials don't carry-over.

I know these examples could all be resolved, but it could take time or hinder your ability to perform. Early on, you're going to be very paranoid that others will think you've slacked off since the move.



Keep positive and always communicate. Pick the phone up and call more than you did at the office. You don't have as much face to face as you use to. There will be little jokes about how you're not working or sitting there in your underwear, etc. Laugh them off initially, but make sure your supervisor knows you're getting things done and as many others as possible. Don't let the haters who are back at the office take it out on you. Let them know you're setting the standard and if everyone believes this worked out, it could lead to more people working from home even if it is just a day or two a week.







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Dec 5 '14 at 21:16







user8365


















  • True as well. In fact, just before I stopped working remotely (b/c the company shut) I spent an entire Saturday w/ the network admin guy while he was configuring the HW Firewall he had sent me. (Firewall at my house, he in another country). Big fun.
    – kiss-o-matic
    Dec 5 '14 at 21:58










  • Very good point about the hardware, this is one of the things I'm most worried about since without server access it's impossible to do my job.
    – taffy
    Dec 6 '14 at 17:02
















  • True as well. In fact, just before I stopped working remotely (b/c the company shut) I spent an entire Saturday w/ the network admin guy while he was configuring the HW Firewall he had sent me. (Firewall at my house, he in another country). Big fun.
    – kiss-o-matic
    Dec 5 '14 at 21:58










  • Very good point about the hardware, this is one of the things I'm most worried about since without server access it's impossible to do my job.
    – taffy
    Dec 6 '14 at 17:02















True as well. In fact, just before I stopped working remotely (b/c the company shut) I spent an entire Saturday w/ the network admin guy while he was configuring the HW Firewall he had sent me. (Firewall at my house, he in another country). Big fun.
– kiss-o-matic
Dec 5 '14 at 21:58




True as well. In fact, just before I stopped working remotely (b/c the company shut) I spent an entire Saturday w/ the network admin guy while he was configuring the HW Firewall he had sent me. (Firewall at my house, he in another country). Big fun.
– kiss-o-matic
Dec 5 '14 at 21:58












Very good point about the hardware, this is one of the things I'm most worried about since without server access it's impossible to do my job.
– taffy
Dec 6 '14 at 17:02




Very good point about the hardware, this is one of the things I'm most worried about since without server access it's impossible to do my job.
– taffy
Dec 6 '14 at 17:02










up vote
6
down vote













Be proactive about communication. Talk to people at the company on a regular basis. It's easy to assume you're not doing anything if the person you're reporting to doesn't understand what you do, and isn't getting updates.



Make sure that these meetings actually happen. Often they'll be pushed off, forgotten, and eventually ignored. See the first point.



Also, talk to your family. When you're working, you're working. It took a very long time for my wife to get this.






share|improve this answer




















  • +1 for the family dynamic. If you don't go out during work hours to buy some milk, you do not do so when you are working remotely.
    – Nelson
    Oct 23 '15 at 6:03














up vote
6
down vote













Be proactive about communication. Talk to people at the company on a regular basis. It's easy to assume you're not doing anything if the person you're reporting to doesn't understand what you do, and isn't getting updates.



Make sure that these meetings actually happen. Often they'll be pushed off, forgotten, and eventually ignored. See the first point.



Also, talk to your family. When you're working, you're working. It took a very long time for my wife to get this.






share|improve this answer




















  • +1 for the family dynamic. If you don't go out during work hours to buy some milk, you do not do so when you are working remotely.
    – Nelson
    Oct 23 '15 at 6:03












up vote
6
down vote










up vote
6
down vote









Be proactive about communication. Talk to people at the company on a regular basis. It's easy to assume you're not doing anything if the person you're reporting to doesn't understand what you do, and isn't getting updates.



Make sure that these meetings actually happen. Often they'll be pushed off, forgotten, and eventually ignored. See the first point.



Also, talk to your family. When you're working, you're working. It took a very long time for my wife to get this.






share|improve this answer












Be proactive about communication. Talk to people at the company on a regular basis. It's easy to assume you're not doing anything if the person you're reporting to doesn't understand what you do, and isn't getting updates.



Make sure that these meetings actually happen. Often they'll be pushed off, forgotten, and eventually ignored. See the first point.



Also, talk to your family. When you're working, you're working. It took a very long time for my wife to get this.







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Dec 5 '14 at 20:45









evandentremont

757411




757411











  • +1 for the family dynamic. If you don't go out during work hours to buy some milk, you do not do so when you are working remotely.
    – Nelson
    Oct 23 '15 at 6:03
















  • +1 for the family dynamic. If you don't go out during work hours to buy some milk, you do not do so when you are working remotely.
    – Nelson
    Oct 23 '15 at 6:03















+1 for the family dynamic. If you don't go out during work hours to buy some milk, you do not do so when you are working remotely.
– Nelson
Oct 23 '15 at 6:03




+1 for the family dynamic. If you don't go out during work hours to buy some milk, you do not do so when you are working remotely.
– Nelson
Oct 23 '15 at 6:03












 

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