How do you stay motivated when working from home?
Ish Baid
21 replies
As a solo founder, I spend a large period of the week working from home alone. It hasn't been too big of a problem, but it is difficult when you're looking to get feedback/brainstorm ideas with someone else.
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Justin Jackson@mijustin
Transistor
Honestly, the best thing for me was renting a small office space downtown. 😜
In 2014, I started a small co-working space with some friends. It costs us each $250 / month to split the rent + really fast internet. Best choice I've made for focus.
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MailKing by cloudHQ
When you can't take it anymore, go for a walk or something that doesn't involve a laptop. Don't spend more than 30 min doing it, but try it and notice how easy it will be to return back to something!
*Tip: if it's something in particular that you keep putting off, let others hold you accountable by letting them know what you need to finish for the day. ✌️
I've joined a few coworking spaces and they've been so helpful with meeting new people and just having someone to vent to / brainstorm with. I tend to go to a coworking place 2-3 times a week and I'm most productive on those weeks when I get out of the house.
Communiti
I usually co-work with friends at coffee shops since meeting in person gives a morale boost much more than any online community.
I've seen others doing the same thing and it gave me an idea to create a small app for makers that let's you check in to places (eg coffee shops) similar to foursquare so that you can join another maker at a coffee shop near you.
I haven't gotten around to making the app but can add it to my side projects if you guys are up for it.
Freemake
@ish
Just in case you'll have to miss such Zoom call for any reason, try Zoom Recorder https://www.producthunt.com/post...
It is a free bot that will attend an upcoming Zoom event and record it. I believe it could be helpful for you.
The way I stay motivated is to achieve a state of flow, which is a combination of 2 things for me (first one's a bit weird but it works for me):
1. Listen to music that plays at certain frequencies, like . Honestly can get into hours of deep work listening to these.
2. Have a balance of doing work that is familiar (things you can do almost on auto pilot) and challenging (interesting work that helps you learn new things). Too familiar and it becomes boring, too challenging and you'll get frustrated
@james_reilly Wow - you weren't kidding. That sound track really does get you in focus mode. I've had a similar experience with https://brain.fm
Take breaks. Go out for short walks. Socialize. I find many more professionals working from home - form a team.
I schedule networking/ coffee events with colleagues at least once a week. It helps me a lot when I have someone to bounce ideas off with. And I have an accountability buddy that I met online and she's the best!
90% of my time is working from home. Once every 10 days we organize a meeting day with the rest of the team. I keep motivated myself with challenges and be always in touch with my other team mates ;) Slack, Skype and sometimes, Whatsapp!!