Tips for productive teleworking

Tips for productive teleworking

Summary

  • There are some tips that we can transform into work routines to achieve productive teleworking

 

Teleworking has its own peculiarities. Therefore, you can take into account these tips or tricks for your day to day, achieving productive teleworking:

  • Respect the work routine, maintaining the usual habits and schedules to be more productive.
  • start early. One way to improve productivity when you work at home is to get down to work as soon as you wake up, which is key to making faster progress throughout the day.
  • Establish a work area equipped with everything you need, separating rest spaces from work.
  • Plan tasks ahead of time, being disciplined and determining priorities and deadlines.
  • Set goals for the day. With this motivation, you avoid wasting time or procrastinating.
  • Teleworking is not contrary to teamwork. Various collaborative work tools and platforms can be used.
  • Minimize distractions, avoiding stimuli that disperse concentration at work.
  • Schedule breaks between tasks, as part of daily work planning and established routines.
  • Decide the time of the end of the day. Teleworking is not directly equivalent to reconciling work and family and, therefore, a balance must be achieved by separating both areas and temporarily limiting the end of the working day.
  • Use a second monitor. It may seem like basic advice, an additional screen makes it easier for you to do more. Over the course of a workday, search windows add up, and by installing a second monitor, you can make various tasks more accessible.
  • Achieve a natural and relaxed environment through the use of plants. Putting a bit of nature in your work space at home will not only give your eyes a fresh and lively color, but it can also bring benefits such as reducing stress.
  • Organize the work space every day. It is essential to leave everything in order in the workspace when the workday is over, promoting order and organization.
  • Debunk the myth of multitasking. Pretending to be a multitasker is not productive. From the neural point of view, the change of task entails wear; therefore, it is better to focus on an activity until it is finished.
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