The Finer Points of WAH Etiquette
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The Finer Points of WAH Etiquette By Dan Reinhold
Business etiquette is vitally important in the corporate
world...and more so when you work at home. Here we at WAHumor
present a basic primer on the finer points of WAH etiquette.
Proper Telephone Etiquette:
When answering a WAH business phone, you must first and foremost
must answer it yourself. The most pleasing and eloquent message
on your machine proves useless when your three-year-old proudly
announces to your befuddled caller, "I MADE POTTY
TOOOOODAYYYY!!!"
An easily recognized signal to quiet any outstanding clamor is
most essential. A snap of the fingers, a ring of a bell or the
sharp report of an airhorn may prove adequate. If not, consult
your local Army/Navy surplus supplier for...ummm...unadvertised
specials.
It is also imperative that you answer in the correct manner -
it's not so much what you say as how you say it. Although you
may have had a mad scrabble with several youngsters experiencing
Double Stuf Oreo-induced psychosis, upon answering your voice
must be perfectly calm and your breathing even. Asthma attacks
are very poorly received and could cost business.
In the event of severe noise, a tranquilizer dart gun is not
thought unseemly.
Entertaining Clients:
For the purpose of entertaining clients, always use a small.
secluded room away and well insulated from sounds emanating from
the main living area. Should such a room be unavailable, build a
shed.
Clearly mark the pathway to your chosen meeting place. Be sure
to provide the quickest possible access to respect your client's
time and avoid children. Consider installation of an extra large
vacuum chute of the kind once used to transport mail in office
buildings.
Have suitable refreshments on hand to be certain that you will
not leave the room, thereby leaving said client alone and
unprotected. If something should spill during the meeting, clean
it up promptly and discard it in a large waste basket under your
desk. If your client requests something that is not on hand,
politely affirm that you have none - even water.
Unexpected Guests:
Use an intercom to ascertain the identity of the visitor, By
this method, you may avoid opening the door and the risk of
inadvertantly inviting them inside. It is crucial that you use
this approach at all times - even when the front door is open
and the visitor is plainly visible behind the screen door. Feign
blindness.
Provide an unwelcoming atmosphere at the entrance - no
coatracks, tables, chairs or ironing boards that could hold
coats. Should the visitor enter, assume the military "at ease"
stance with your hands clasped behind your back. Maintain this
position so that the visitor cannot hand their coat to you.
If guest still enters and wants to sit, prepare furniture by
placing large, angular rocks under the cushions. Hide old rotten
half-eaten bananas and unfinished yogurt cups (with children,
there is always a constant and abundant supply on hand) in
strategically chosen areas of the furniture to soil your
visitor's clothing so that you may hurry them off to the dry
cleaner and resume work.
We at WAHumor hope that you will find this basic primer to be of
some use and always be mindful of the importance of proper
etiquette for the work at home lifestyle.
With two boys, a dog, a cat, a wife and a household to keep
together to boot, Dan Reinhold is the editor of WAHumor to hang
on to his sanity by showing how insane the work-at-home
community can be. Work at home? You deserve a laugh!
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