HomeArchiveAboutDownloadsProductsContact Us

A Contingency Plan for the Workshifter

By Scott Magdalein on March 19, 2010 10:14 AM | Comment | No TrackBacks
coworkingstickies.jpgWorkshifting, by its nature, is an oddity. Few things can be expected or depended upon. The veteran workshifters in the audience know what I mean. Just because you work from home, or from a coffee shop, or from a boat in the Mediterranean, it doesn't mean you're in control.

I've been workshifting since long before I'd ever even heard the phrase. Over the years, only one thing has remained constant; the need for flexibility. There are distractions, interruptions, things breaking, other things that need fixing, dogs barking, kids whining, repairmen knocking...you get the idea. The only way to successfully manage the potential workshifting chaos is to plan for unforeseen situations.

Naturally, the very concept of something that's unforeseen is that you don't see it coming, so planning for it feels a little absurd. You don't need to try to plan for every hypothetical situation, just a few of the more likely ones.

In my world, likely situations are things like broken Internet, my dog barking in the middle of a meeting or phone call, accidentally meeting an acquaintance at the coffee shop (and the ensuing long conversation), or maybe even a hardware issue that our remote IT department can't fix immediately.

Contingency plans for different situations can take any form. Maybe it's another location where you can get a reliable Internet connection until your home Internet is fixed or a specific "script" you tell your acquaintance to keep the conversation short. My own contingency plans involve two secondary options, just in case one doesn't work.

  • Broken Internet: (1) Sippers Coffee or (2) a local business with an open cubicle with whom I've built a good relationship. (Option 3 is McDonald's.)
  • Surprised by acquaintance: (1) Tell them I'll see them on Facebook or (2) step away to the restroom for a moment. (Neither is dishonest, just strategic.)
  • Hardware issue: (1) Have a second Macbook ready to roll or (2) use my wife's computer. (It helps to use mostly web applications so there's less to replace.)

I've found that the best contingency plans are simple and quickly executable. What do you do?


Photo Credit: Hybernaut

About the Author

Scott Magdalein

Read more articles by Scott Magdalein at Workshifting.com
Bookmark and Share

Share

Categories: Productivity , Professionalism , Tips , Work Environment , Workshifting

No TrackBacks

TrackBack URL: http://www.workshifting.com/cgi-bin/mt/mt-tb.cgi/175

A Contingency Plan for the Workshifter
coworkingstickies.jpg
Workshifting, by its nature, is an oddity. Few things can be expected or depended upon. The veteran workshifters in the audience know what I mean. Just because you work from home, or from a coffee shop, or from a boat in the Mediterranean, it doesn't mean you're in control.

I've been workshifting since long before I'd ever even heard the phrase. Over the years, only one thing has remained constant; the need for flexibility. There are distractions, interruptions, things breaking, other things that need fixing, dogs barking, kids whining, repairmen knocking...you get the idea. The only way to successfully manage the potential workshifting chaos is to plan for unforeseen situations.

Naturally, the very concept of something that's unforeseen is that you don't see it coming, so planning for it feels a little absurd. You don't need to try to plan for every hypothetical situation, just a few of the more likely ones.

In my world, likely situations are things like broken Internet, my dog barking in the middle of a meeting or phone call, accidentally meeting an acquaintance at the coffee shop (and the ensuing long conversation), or maybe even a hardware issue that our remote IT department can't fix immediately.

Contingency plans for different situations can take any form. Maybe it's another location where you can get a reliable Internet connection until your home Internet is fixed or a specific "script" you tell your acquaintance to keep the conversation short. My own contingency plans involve two secondary options, just in case one doesn't work.

  • Broken Internet: (1) Sippers Coffee or (2) a local business with an open cubicle with whom I've built a good relationship. (Option 3 is McDonald's.)
  • Surprised by acquaintance: (1) Tell them I'll see them on Facebook or (2) step away to the restroom for a moment. (Neither is dishonest, just strategic.)
  • Hardware issue: (1) Have a second Macbook ready to roll or (2) use my wife's computer. (It helps to use mostly web applications so there's less to replace.)

I've found that the best contingency plans are simple and quickly executable. What do you do?


Photo Credit: Hybernaut
  • Now
  • Overall
  • Our Faves
  • Workshifting
  • How Many People Actually Telecommute?
  • The Science of Motivation
  • Professional Space and Coworking
  • 7 Considerations for Setting Up a Home Office
  • The Nature Of Remoteness
  • Google+ For The Workshifter
  • 4 Surprising Insights from a Huge Video Conferencing Survey
  • Treating Employees Like Adults Instead of Like School Children
  • Why Employers Should Trust Workshifting Employees
  • Workshifting Balance: What It Really Means to You!
  • From the Trenches: Poor Management
  • Google+ For The Workshifter
  • Treating Employees Like Adults Instead of Like School Children
  • Why Employers Should Trust Workshifting Employees
  • Workshifting Balance: What It Really Means to You!
  • Time Management When Your Time is Not Your Own
  • Subscribe to feed Subscribe to this blog's feed

Get every post in your inbox!

Enter your email address below and recieve each post directly to your inbox.

About workshifting

"If you work from your home, out of coffee shops, hotels, and airports every bit as much as the office, workshifting is for you. Tips, reviews, and opinions on the world of web commuting are what workshifting is all about."

Twitter | @WorkShifting

Flickr Feed | Photostream

Add a "workshifting" tag to your photos in Flickr to see them here

Featured Download


Featured Download

The State of Telework in the U.S., is a summary report that reveals who's really teleworking, what they're doing, and where they're doing it. The purpose of this paper is to shed light on when and where work is done in the U.S., how that's changed in recent years, and where the trend might be headed. Download Now

Your Account

Creative Commons License
This blog is licensed under a Creative Commons License.

Categories

  • Air Travel (15)
  • Announcement (16)
  • App Review (7)
  • Applications (8)
  • Attire (2)
  • Balance (55)
  • Bartering (1)
  • Business (53)
  • Business Continuity (1)
  • Career (26)
  • Case Studies (3)
  • Case Study (3)
  • Cloud Computing (1)
  • Cloud-Based Apps (6)
  • CoWorking (14)
  • Coaching (3)
  • Coffee (3)
  • Collaboration (46)
  • Communications (66)
  • Community (26)
  • Commuting (7)
  • Conferences (2)
  • Connecting (5)
  • Creativity (11)
  • Crisis (5)
  • Deal Making (2)
  • Disclosure (1)
  • Donations (2)
  • Download (6)
  • Email (5)
  • Employees (49)
  • Employers (41)
  • Environment (9)
  • Family (14)
  • Featured (41)
  • Fitness (5)
  • Focus (36)
  • Fun (26)
  • Generation Y (4)
  • Goals (10)
  • Government (4)
  • Guidelines (5)
  • HR (5)
  • Healthy (10)
  • Hiring Process (3)
  • Holidays (8)
  • Home Business (8)
  • Home Office (28)
  • Independence (1)
  • Infographic (2)
  • Interaction (19)
  • International Travel (11)
  • Interview (4)
  • Kelley Checks In (2)
  • Legislation (2)
  • Lifeshifting (17)
  • Lifestyle Design (51)
  • Longevity (1)
  • Managers (35)
  • Marketing (5)
  • Mind-Mapping (2)
  • Mobile (18)
  • Motivation (15)
  • Non-Profit (1)
  • Office (38)
  • On The Go (72)
  • Organization (33)
  • Personal (39)
  • Personality Type (7)
  • Poetry (1)
  • Politics (6)
  • Presentations (7)
  • Productivity (136)
  • Professionalism (23)
  • Remote Support (8)
  • Research (12)
  • Resources (28)
  • Review (6)
  • Routine (14)
  • Sleep (4)
  • Small Towns (1)
  • Social Media (11)
  • Software (6)
  • Sports (1)
  • Staycation (2)
  • Strategy (20)
  • Stress (17)
  • Technology (61)
  • Time Management (35)
  • Tips (144)
  • Training (1)
  • Travel (37)
  • Trust (9)
  • Unified Experience (19)
  • Video (49)
  • WiFi (9)
  • Work Environment (111)
  • Workshifting (386)

Monthly Archives

  • October 2011 (9)
  • September 2011 (8)
  • August 2011 (17)
  • July 2011 (12)
  • June 2011 (17)
  • May 2011 (8)
  • April 2011 (13)
  • March 2011 (19)
  • February 2011 (17)
  • January 2011 (19)
  • December 2010 (14)
  • November 2010 (16)
  • October 2010 (16)
  • September 2010 (18)
  • August 2010 (18)
  • July 2010 (37)
  • June 2010 (31)
  • May 2010 (25)
  • April 2010 (25)
  • March 2010 (22)
  • February 2010 (14)
  • January 2010 (13)
  • December 2009 (14)
  • November 2009 (16)
  • October 2009 (18)
  • September 2009 (18)
  • August 2009 (18)
  • July 2009 (19)
  • June 2009 (11)
  • May 2009 (11)

Tag Cloud

  • balance
  • business
  • collaboration
  • communications
  • employees
  • employers
  • featured
  • focus
  • lifestyledesign
  • office
  • onthego
  • personal
  • productivity
  • technology
  • timemanagement
  • tips
  • travel
  • video
  • workenvironment
  • workshifting

Citrix | Online
© Copyright 2011 Citrix Online. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy