Sunday, January 18, 2009

Tips On Working From Home

(My Original Blog Post: http://www.wealthyways4you.com/how-to-make-money-online/tips-on-working-from-home)
by cassie humbolt


Now in these times of high gas prices people feel the crunch as the are driving to work each day. Employers are feeling the pain of the energy crisis also. The concept of working from home is getting attention once again, companies of all sizes are examining how to make a work at home plan fit for them.

If you have a job that is on site and you think it may work for this concept, and you've have a good productivity history at work, pitch the idea to your employer with a written proposal for working from home.

If you're in the job market, try looking for telecommute work from home positions on the net. There are a lot of legitimate businesses out there looking for contract workers, as well as freelancers.

If you get your boss to agree with a telecommute setup even part of the time, your end of the bargain is not difficult to maintain. You just need to continue to get your work done on time and obey the rules of when to be in the office.

If you are trying to search out telecommute jobs independently, you have a different problem. As an independent contract worker, you'll discover many scams, and you have to learn how to tell the legit working from home positions from the companies that just want to make money off of you by asking for fees for membership just to access their job listings. These types of sites have jobs you have to bid on. Usually the employer only offers below average pay for this work. So for the most part you are better off to stick to the free sites for your opportunities to work at home to see what you can find.

Scammers do use the free sites too though, they will not pay you for your hard work. There are a some ways to protect yourself on this. When you are offered a job, search the Internet for reports of scamming by this company. If this search comes up empty as far as reports then it gives you the green light to go ahead with this working from home offer. If you come up with complaints stop it and go onto better offers.

When you are working on jobs that last a short time, perhaps 1 or 2 weeks, you should ask for some money upfront and maybe have periodic payment throughout the job. A good example of this is a freelance graphic design artist. Your client wants a new page layout and a new logo for their website. A suggested payment layout is: 1/3 to start, 1/3 when the employer accepts the project sample, and the balance on delivery of final project. This is a very common arrangement, which helps guard you, as your client shows a commitment for you doing the work and also paying you.

When you only have jobs that a short length of time, you have to constantly search for more work and schedule it back to back to what you are doing. You should have 2 or 3 jobs scheduled to maintain a steady income.

Working from home usually is quite satisfying, allows you to be flexible in your hours, while saving you some cash on gas and clothing.

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