Archive for August, 2008

 

Does anyone earn a full income working from home?

Monday, August 25th, 2008
working from home
rubbertoe17 asked:


I really want to find a reliable work from home job, but it just seems like everything out there is a scam. Does anyone here earn a full income from job working at home? Or should I not expect much. I know it won’t be easy but I am willing to devote time.

Anita

 

How can I file for child support for my son, while I’m away from home working in another state?

Saturday, August 23rd, 2008
working from home
MY asked:


I’m a contractor currently working in PA. My 24 year old daughter is guardian for my 14 year old son, living in San Antonio, Texas. I want to file for support from his Father who lives in Maryland. Do I have to travel back my to home in Texas to file for child support on is there a way to file electronically?

Harry

 

Make Money Working From Home

Saturday, August 23rd, 2008
working from home
Steve Cownley asked:


How many times have you heard that phrase, pitch, advertisement, or whatever? Lots, I’m sure. It is used so much because marketers know that staying home and making money is the fondest dream of millions of people.

And why not? Did you know that the majority of fatal heart attacks happen at 9 a.m. Monday morning? It’s true. It seems a lot of people would rather die than get back to the old grind after a weekend of freedom.

So when someone offers an opportunity or plan for you to take your job and shove it, yet still make enough money to live and pay all your bills, it sounds blissfully irresistible.

Of course, bliss and reality are always two different things. Is it really possible to run a business from your own home that is more than a hobby or source of part-time income? Can you get rich working out of your own home? Can you really trade your cubical and necktie for blue jeans and the comfort of your own den?

Well, for your information, home-based businesses are one of the fastest growing kinds of enterprises in America today. As this is being written, some 40 million Americans are doing at least some form of work out of their homes, and the numbers are rising rapidly. According to the U.S. Department of Labor, as many as 70 million people will be working out of their homes by the year 2005. Government studies have indicated that as much as 75% of all work done in this country could eventually be moved home.

The overwhelming majority of home workers, however, are not exactly getting rich. The average work-at-home American earns less than $15,000 per year. That may not be bad as a supplement to a spouse’s full-time income, but let’s face it, fifteen grand in and of itself is not much better than poverty. As master marketer and author Dr. Jeffrey Lant said: “Frankly, I never saw any benefit to staying home and being poor.”

Lant, without so much as a business card, became a work-at-home millionaire, and is a perfect example of what truly can be achieved if you are serious about chucking your day job, staying home, and not settling for peanuts in exchange for your freedom. You can have it all — you can stay home and make as much — and more — money than your current job provides you.

In this report, we are going to outline and discuss five key rules on how to work at home and make big bucks, no matter where you live. After these five rules, we’ll talk about the most important aspect of any business, whether it be home-based or a giant factory — cash flow. Starting your own business out of your home is all about attitude and inspiration, but all the attitude in the world won’t help you without money!

1. It Takes Commitment

Is it any secret in America that most people detest their jobs? Study after study proves that most people simply dread going to work Monday morning, and they live for the freedom of the weekend. But even that freedom is not pure because we know that it is only temporary. It’s hard to enjoy a Sunday evening when the Monday morning alarm clock is just a few hours away.

It makes sense that people **** their jobs. Everyday, there is a lot of **** kissing that needs to be done. There are endless meetings which usually accomplish nothing. There are pointless interruptions, a lot of drifting this way and that, and lot of idiot supervisors who do nothing but waste your time and then dog you for not accomplishing your share of work.

There are co-workers you hate, and who would stab you in the back in a minute if it meant a raise for them instead of you.

When you work for someone else, you live a regimented life. Your body may not want to get up at 7 a.m., but you have to be at work by 8 a.m. so you lurch out of bed with a head full of sleep. People who choose to work at home are doing more than just escaping the yoke of their master; they have made a deep, firm, life-altering decision which says that health, happiness and prosperity depend vitally on the freedom to work for ourselves, and in doing so in the comfort of the home.

We want to really emphasize that fact that to be successful in a work-at-home situation, you have to be nothing less than a fanatic; a zealot, who is utterly committed to making work-at-home not only a successful venture, but a profound commitment for life. You must be convinced that a return to an outside office job would be the equivalent of a spiritual death sentence.

Many people **** their office jobs, but they have made an inner compromise with themselves. They have convinced themselves that their job is “not so bad,” pays the bills, and that they can stick out because they have to. If you want to be truly successful at quitting your day job, there cannot be any room for such compromises in your soul. You have to take the

attitude that to work any longer at your hateful job is akin to fouling your inner being with a spiritual cancer the will sicken and kill you.

2. Eliminating the Home-Office Mentality

To move our work home, however, does not mean we eliminate every single thing about the traditional American office. Rather, we should select what is useful and what is not.

It’s a mistake to quit your job and go home with a “home-office” mentality. By this we mean thinking small, and believing that you will automatically sacrifice a decent income in exchange for your freedom. Please! Do not think small!

To quote Jeffrey Lant again: “Too many home-based practitioners fail to understand the benefits that accrue because of the professional style they have selected. They focus on the “home” part of the business rather than the “business” portion, and as a result are doomed to small incomes.”

Working at home provides many benefits. We can save a lot of time because we don’t need to commute and we have more control over our schedule. We can save a lot of costs because we don’t have the overhead requirements of larger businesses. We can cut our stress — and so have more energy — because we avoid many of the characteristic problems of life in the late

20th-Century office. We must work these advantages to our profit.

3. Your International Headquarters

The German philosopher Immanuel Kant said that if you sit at home alone at your empty kitchen table, eventually, the “whole world will come to you.”

Well, today you don’t need the great mind of a philosopher to make the entire world come into your living room. What you need is a phone jack. We live in a unique time in history. Satellites, fiber optics, the integrated circuit and other communications miracles means that you can be just about anywhere in the developed world and establish communication with

anyone.

The telephone, the fax machine, the computer, the modem — all of these are not only affordable by any middle-class citizen; they are the key to eliminating your need to drive a hectic freeway everyday to get to a place of business outside your home.

With these devices at our disposal, we should allow ourselves to “think globally.” Too often, home-based businesses focus on the narrowest market, the neighborhood, the county, the city or state. This is fine if you are providing a local service and are content with a certain moderate level of income. But if you want the big bucks, you should not think small. Also,

you should not believe that, just because you are home-based, you cannot compete with the big guys.

The purpose of any business is to seek assess and seek out every possible market for its products and services, to ascertain whether these markets have the ability to buy these products/services, to determine whether there is sufficient profit in these markets to warrant approaching them, and, once positive assessment has been made, to launch a sustained marketing

campaign that gets a significant percentage of this market to purchase the product or service in question.

Your home telecommunications machines will not only enable you to do this, but they can also help you overwhelm larger, more cumbersome traditional businesses that are your competition.

As a home-based entrepreneur, you will not have all of the disadvantages of your more traditional competitors: no office rent, equipment or expense; no employees to pay salaries and fringe benefits for; no time wasted on meetings, employee problems, paid sick leave, etc.

All the money your competitors spend on heating the office and buying furniture could better be spent on the actual marketing itself.

As a home-based business, you will be already positioned where the traditional business is currently struggling to move: toward the lowest possible overhead and the greatest possible concentration of dollars on products/service development and product/service marketing.

So, a home-based business takes full advantage of three major goals of modern business success:

(1) Vastly reduced overhead

(2) Easy access to a global market

(3) Full advantage of telecommunications.

To not have the basic telecommunications toys — computer, modem, fax, and telephones is impossibly stupid. Still, even in this day and age, many of people strongly resist the one element that is undoubtedly the heart and brain of any successful home business — the computer. The computer is so important in fact, we have made it a category all itself.

And remember, learning to use a modern computer is easier than learning to drive a car, so you have no excuse not to plunge forward.

4. The Computer

You should pay close attention to what computers can do for you in your plans to escape your job and make your work-at-home dreams come true. People who want to run a home business usually have a very small staff — in fact, a staff of one — yourself! The rest of your needs are handled by independent contractors, depending on the kind of business you are in and

the services you need.

To run a serious, truly global home business, a computer is as necessary as oxygen is to life on earth. Those who try to fool themselves into thinking they will ever make a serious go of their home-based business without a computer are sadly mistaken.

Computers give you two primary advantages:

(1) They enable you to store large amounts of data and to sort by data field so that you can easily get the information you need.

(2) They enable you to develop a pattern document for every situation you’ll ever be in in your business. To run a home-based business successfully, you must anticipate just what situation will emerge and prepare accordingly.

A business is based on a characteristic series of situations and a characteristic set of things that happen — or that do not happen. You must be prepared with the proper document for each situation. Once you have established all the protocols, and have experienced all the situations associated with your kind of business, the time will come when running your business is, in large part, a repetition of certain key tasks. Computers are all about handling repetition swiftly and efficiently.

But the computer is much more. Today, by connecting a computer to the phone line with a modem, your machine becomes more than a data storage system and repetitive task handler. It becomes a multi-task, multi-level communications processing center that connects you to the globe.

Such things as e-mail, on-line services, the Internet, the Web and more can’t help but revolutionize the way business is done. If you do not become a part of it today, you certainly are going to suffer for it greatly in the near future.

If there is an effective way to market products on the Internet or any other on-line venue, no one has truly discovered it yet. The only people making money on Internet marketing are the people who are selling the concept of doing it. If you have a product or a service and expect to reach millions of buyers through computer screens, you are sadly mistaken.

The Internet is definitely where a lot of innovative things are happening. It’s a great place to exchange ideas, find out what hot, what’s not, and stay on the cutting edge whatever your particular business is.

5. Your Business Hours

If you’ve been paying attention to the first four points, you’re well on your way to becoming a successful home-based business owner. Now we don’t want you to blow it by thinking you can keep banker’s hours.

The global market is a 24-hour per day market, and a 365-day per year market. Let the others sleep late on Saturdays and take Sundays off. Those times could be your day to move and corner loads of customers that the others miss.

You should get up earlier and quit work later. You should be open for business on holidays and be available 24-hours a day either personally or through your answering service.

“But wait a minute!” you might be thinking at this point! “I thought that working at home was all about freedom and an end to drudgery. This sounds like nothing but endless work!”

Well, here’s the thing. For most of you who quit your regular jobs to go to work for yourself, you’ll discover something magical. You’ll discover that when you are working for yourself, when you are building your own business, a lot of what you does not seem like work at all.

The great writer Jane Roberts said, “Inspiration is its own motivator.”

Running your own business is all about being inspired 24-hours-a-day. When you stop selling your body and soul to some company or corporation and start giving your energy to yourself, work has a way of turning into inspiration and play.

The perfect work for you is that which you don’t think of as work, yet doing it makes money and provides you with the bread and shelter of life. You’ll see what it’s like if you make a true commitment to being self employed, put all your energy into it, and stick with it for the long run.

Steve Cownley

http://infoblog.net78.net/



Benjamin

 

Luxury Real Estate: What Defines A Luxury Home?

Friday, August 22nd, 2008
working from home
Jerry Work asked:


In addition to overseeing industrial and commercial development projects, I have been a luxury home builder for over 30 years. My definition of a luxury home has less to do with price per square foot or actual cost, but rather, the quality of workmanship that goes into a home. The special custom features that accent the home are important because they reflect the home buyers character or taste in an individual way. A luxury home should include some design flourishes that add to quality of life, highlight interiors or exteriors in an artistic way, and are made from materials that last for a long time.

Square Footage is Not the Definition of a Luxury Home

Many builders and home buyers confuse large square footage homes with a luxury home. A 2,000 square foot home could be defined as a luxury home or a 6,000 square foot home, that is just a big box, built with cheaper materials, may not be classified as a luxury home.

Let me explain the difference. Some builders rely upon business plans that rely upon a market searching for less expensive square footage. So, say they build 4,000 square foot homes and sell at a cheaper square footage than comparable properties. Lets compare this to someone constructing a 2,000 square foot home that is custom built with details. This home would cost $400,000. But the 2,000 square foot home is built with more expertise and detail — and this is where the true quality of a luxury home exists.

Custom Features in Luxury Homes

I will give some solid examples of custom features in a home that make all of the difference in day-to-day living. Currently, I’m building Craftsman style homes in the Asheville North Carolina area. In some of these homes, the stair rails are custom made. You may find a stone harp on a cathedral ceiling, or a slab of redwood for a fireplace mantle. The redwood would be imported from a reliable source, and the finest cut of redwood available. Some other details would be faucets, light fixtures, custom stonework, custom embellishments on the front or back of the house, hardwood floors, and custom windows or windowpanes. These are among the features that make a house a unique luxury home, though this is not a definitive list.

Popular Custom Features in Contemporary Luxury Homes

Today, there are some common amenities the contemporary home buyer may want to add to a luxury home. These include billiard rooms, wet bars, wine cellars, home theaters, outdoor fireplaces, home offices, home gyms. In warmer climates, swimming pools, outdoor kitchens, and outdoor living rooms are commonly requested additions to luxury homes.

Use of Extra Bedrooms in Luxury Home as Living Space

A luxury home is well-planned and executed. This means that the home utilizes space to the optimum potential for the homeowner. Many of the mansions which have been built in the last decade are constructed with number of extra bedrooms. This is not the best use of space when only two adults are living in 4,00-6,000 square feet of space. Even with just one or two children, this sort of space can be adjusted to fit a billiard room, wet bar, home theater, or home gym instead. Any of these features would add to the quality of life of the inhabitants of the home and make better use of space then extra bedrooms.

This is merely a short list of some of the amenities and special custom features that can be added to a luxury home. The list could be as unique as the owners imagination. For those looking for a custom builder, remember to look for a builder with a number of years of experience and good references. Attention to detail, as well as an ability to hire the right subcontractors to install the custom features correctly, is a must. Finally, if you are looking to build a custom home, know your budget. This way you will be able to decide upon the specific building materials used, and the design in advance.



Judith

 

Organizing Clutter at Your Workplace and Home

Monday, August 18th, 2008
working from home
The Work/Life Experts at eni asked:


Workplace Clutter

Take a look around your workplace. Can you see the color of your desk? Find important documents on demand? Like most of us, probably not. If you work at a desk, it is too easy to leave papers lying around, and to collect various items that simply take up space. If you do not work at a desk, take a look around your workplace and you will most likely see items and papers that can be cleared away. Office or workplace clutter can not only be irritating because it interferes with work, but can also cause unwanted and unnecessary stress that can affect your performance at work.

To determine what items and documents you really need to keep, ask yourself these questions.

What do you use it for? When will you need it? Will really need it in the future? Will you actually ever use it? Why do you have it? Does anyone else need it? Do you really want it? Is it yours?

When you have answered these questions truthfully, use these tips to help you organize your cluttered space, and work stress free.

Throw it out. If it is outdated, not yours, you don’t need it, or if it’s broken, throw it away! Old magazines, journals, papers, old software, broken pens can all be tossed.

Make a junk pile. If you have a pile for these items such as unopened mail, memos not pertaining to you, or something you will never read, keep them in one pile. This will create extra room in your workspace for important things, or even a place for your desk to shine through.

Make a “hot” pile. This pile should contain all of your high priority items to keep them from mixing in with clutter.

Store your items. File away documents that do not need attention for easy reference and less clutter. Store whatever possible in your filing cabinets and company storage areas.

Utilize the computer. Input events and meetings in a calendar on the computer, type up a To-Do List and any other loose papers. This can eliminate many post-its and reminder papers that are creating clutter in your work space.

Once you clear the clutter, make sure to keep up with these tips so you do not fall back into messy habits. You will feel more organized and less stressed with a clutter-free work environment.

Get Organized at Home

Many people feel the difficulty of maintaining an even balance between work and life. Either your office is disorganized and stressful while your home is peaceful, or just the opposite. Maybe all areas of your life seem this way. Getting organized at home is just as important as it is at work. Spend extra time to make your home clutter-free, and learn how to keep it that way to help balance your personal and professional life.

Stay Organized

• Spend 15 minutes at the end of each day

cleaning up.

• Write notes in places you will see.

• Let go of the need to try to make everything

perfect.

Simplify Your Life

• Buy low-maintenance clothing for yourself and

your family.

• Remove kitchen appliances you rarely use.

• Consolidate weekly errands and shopping into

one trip.

Cut through Clutter

• Donate unneeded household items to charity.

• Establish family agreements about putting away

toys and clothes.

• Sort incoming mail into categories by priority

or action.

Delegate Tasks

• Assign work tasks to appropriate family

members.

•Get your kids involved in housework.

• Post chores on a bulletin board everyone can

see.

Use Calendars

• Post a family calendar to schedule holiday

celebrations, doctor appointments, birthday

parties and recreational activities.

• Check your calendar daily.

• Write down all firm commitments in pencil

rather than trusting your memory.

• Review your activities in advance.

Make Lists

• Use checklists to simplify shopping, traveling

and entertainment.

• Make to-do lists each day.

• Keep a list of important dates and events to

remember.

Manage Your Time

• Schedule quiet time at home to refresh your

mind.

• Say “no” to friends and family members when you

need to.

• Consolidate errands.

• Make constructive use of slow time.

Stay Focused on What’s Important

• Remind yourself of your long-term goals daily.

Revise them when necessary.

• Set daily priorities and make plans to achieve

your goals. If you tend to procrastinate, focus

on the sense of accomplishment you’ll feel when

the job is done.

Use these tips to help you with organization at home. Don’t let clutter and disorganization welcome you after a long day at work. Coming home to a clean and organized household will help you ease any stress you have experienced at work, and pave the way for balanced work and life.



Tom

 

Find Your Right Working Home Business Option

Wednesday, August 6th, 2008
working from home
James Lowe asked:


Most of the time when considering home based businesses people think about owning and operating their own business. However, there is an easier option for those who don’t want to run their own business and still work from home. You can work for somebody else. Telecommuting is a job that allows you to be hired to work a type of job that allows you to work remotely from your home. However, if you want complete financial independence then this is probably not the option for you since you are still an employee of a company. On the other hand, if you simply want to avoid the daily commute and spend more time at home working on your own schedule then this can be a good option for you.

The first thing to remember is that telecommuting jobs can be difficult to find. Getting a telecommuting job isn’t as easy as answering an ad and then being allowed to work from home. Most companies prefer not to trust brand new employees who may need training with that much unsupervised work time. However, if you already have a job that can easily be done from home then you could consider approaching your employer and asking to become a telecommuter. If you have a stellar employee record and your employer trusts you or they value your services then they may approve your request rather than risk losing you. However, this can be difficult if the company has no experience with telecommuters.

However, if you decide you would rather own your own business so you can work for yourself then you should look into what kind of business you want to start. Just remember that any home based business can only sell one of two things either a service or a product. Carefully look at your job skills and experience to see what you can capitalize on with a home based business. Then you can narrow your options by considering which options fit with the assets you have on hand. Look for any specific equipment or facilities that can be put to use and make a profit from.

Some services you can sell include word processing, tutoring, or tailoring. If you prefer to sell a product then you have two options. One you can sell something that you make yourself or two you can sell something somebody else has made. It’s generally easiest to sell someone else’s product since there is no testing, prototyping and market research involved.

When choosing which products to sell always look for products with accessory sales potential. This will give you the potential for up sell with additional items. You should also look for products where you have the possibility for back-end sales. This is products that need items to replenish or replace something that is consumed in the original sale item.



Rick

 

Where can I find a job working from home?

Monday, August 4th, 2008
working from home
Willis is my cat asked:


I work in HR at a hospital and I wish I could find a full-time legitimate job working from home, making good pay. Please tell me where!

(Or if anyone works from home tell me what you do and how you got that job.)

10 points for the person with the most help or best advice!

Thanks!

Theodore

 

Does anyone know any good working from home jobs?

Sunday, August 3rd, 2008
working from home
Emma X asked:


does anyone have any websites or numbers for working from home either online or stuffing envolopes or anything?
me and my partner are trying for a baby…
when im pregnant i want to work from home and after ive had the baby 2!

Marie