The 9 to 5-Home Business Tug o' War
Perhaps the scarcest commodity the new home-business owner just
starting out has is time. This is particularly so if you are
also working a traditional, full-time job and building up your
business "on the side" in your spare time.
This is a situation I am all too familiar with. I still work a
full-time 8:30 - 5:00 job while building my own internet-based
business in my spare time. So how do you go about burning the
candle at both ends without burning yourself out in the process?
First off, let's think about priorities. Working a full- time
job while developing a business requires stamina and endurance
if other areas of your life are not to be neglected. This means
being fit and healthy. Make time to exercise at least three
times a week. Four or five is better. I know how hard it can be
to commit an hour to working out when you've got an endless (and
I mean ENDLESS!) list of things you need to be doing NOW for
your business. But make the time. It pays BIG dividends in terms
of stamina and endurance. For me, this means getting up at 4:00
am on workout days. If that's what it takes for you, do it!
Second, eat right. Don't just grab a McBurger on the way home
from work and scoff it down as you're driving. Take the time to
cook a proper meal and relax for a half hour or an hour before
getting down to business. This gives you a break and time to
unwind from the pressures of the day, making you much more
productive when you do get down to work. Eating proper meals
will keep you in good health and, coupled with a regular
exercise routine, will help keep your energy levels high.
OK, so you're physically in shape and taking care of yourself.
The next major thing to think about is time management. Every
weekend, before the working week starts, prepare a business plan
for the coming week. This is nothing more complicated that
writing down the various business-related activities you must do
over the course of the coming week and then scheduling them
according to how much time you know you are going to have on a
particular day. By planning out your time this way, you can
schedule your business activities alongside your other
activities. Take care of as many of them as you can through the
course of the day. Whether you are able to do this depends on
the nature of your 9 to 5 job but if you have even a little
autonomy you should be able to squeeze out a little time here
and there. Not huge chunks, just 10 minutes here and there.
The nature of your job may mean you don't have the luxury of
that sort of autonomy. If this is you, then there's nothing for
it but to free up time before and after work. This may mean
getting up an hour earlier every day, for example. Whatever your
personal situation, by planning ahead you will at least have the
peace of mind of knowing that time has been allocated to all
important business-related tasks.
By eliminating the "scatter gun" approach you will find that the
limited time you do have will be much more productive.
There are going to be some activities that you have to do day
in, day out. Decide what time of the day is best for you to
attend to these routine tasks. The more you can integrate
business activities into your daily routine the more efficient
will be your use of time. Let's take email, for example. Anyone
running an online business has to deal with email on a daily
basis. I use the time between when I get up in the morning and
when I start my workout for this. It gives me time to wake up
before I launch into physical activity and it is a relatively
undemanding task that does not require precision concentration.
Make use of autoresponders for as much of your email processing
as possible. This will further reduce the amount of time you
have to spend on this aspect of your business.
Other routine activities include things like site promotion and
search engine position monitoring. Now there are a lot of great
tools to help webmasters with this part of their business. For
example, WebPosition Gold will automatically review your
position in all the major search engines and report back to you
with the results. It can also be programmed to auto-submit at
appropriate intervals. Be sure to use quality automated tools
wherever possible. They can save you literally hours of work
every week and as we all know, time is money in this business.
Keep a journal for a week. Record in it everything you do during
the day from the moment you get up in the morning to the moment
you go to bed. What activities can you eliminate in favour of
freeing up some time for your business? Maybe it means getting
up an hour earlier. Maybe it's forgoing the sleep-in on the
weekend. Maybe it means giving up those two hours of TV every
night. You will find even 15-20 minutes blocks here and there
can add up to a sizeable chunk of time over a week or a month.
If you travel, keep a copy of your website on your laptop and
work on it while you're in the air or waiting for a flight. Or
answer your email ready to send it when you get plugged in again.
As you can see, the trick is to practice the "nibble" technique.
If you wait until you have a great chunk of time in one block,
such as the weekend, you'll only waste all of those little bits
of time you could have put to good use during the week and
fritter away your "quality" time on routine tasks rather than
business development.
One final piece of advice. Take time every week to just relax
and do something you want to do. Although the pressures of a new
business are demanding, failing to take time out will only lead
to burn out.