20 Tips For Home-based Technical Writers Who Want to Stay Sane

by Ivan Walsh on June 1, 2010

Post by Ivan Walsh. Follow me on Twitter.

Most of my technical writing work is done from home. I’ve worked from my home office for almost eight years. Some tech writing contracts are on-site, but mostly, I work in my home office. Actually, for the past 19 months, this means working in my ‘bedroom’. More on this later. I’m married, with a little nipper, and friends are always popping over for a chat. Did I mention that I’m also working from China?

20 Tips For Home-based Technical Writers

  1. Attitude – you have to learn to take the rough with the smooth. People will interrupt you, the web will go down, all kind of things will go wrong. So keep your attitude positive, otherwise go back to the office.
  2. Monitor – get the largest monitor you can. Like the girl says in the ad – it’s ‘because you’re worth it’! Seriously, this had made a huge difference to my health, productivity and sanity.PS: if you work for yourself you can always claim it back as an expense.
  3. Nice Chair – it doesn’t sound like much, but if you spend 10 hours per day sitting down, get the best you can. I have nice chair with a high back and good support. It really makes a difference.Warning – don’t use the kitchen chair. You’ll weaken your back and once it goes, or you slip a disc, you’ll regret it. Invest in your health.
  4. Health — I go to the gym between 11-1 about twice a week. I really try to get out for a walk, for at least an hour. You will go mad — and worse! — if you stay glued to the PC for long hours. Long walks blow the cob-webs away. Also badminton and swimming seem to help reduce neck and lower back pains. Badminton forces you to look UP! Yoga is also great.
  5. Schedule — Stick to a schedule, otherwise you’ll never stop working. Up at 6. Start at 6.15 am, school run at 7.30, back at 8.30, work till 11, gym till 12.30, and lunch till 1.30. Then work  flat-out until 5.30. School run. Then more from 9.30-11 if possible.
  6. Weekends — I try to keep these two free but usually end up dabbling with lighter stuff , like changing the WordPress theme again!
  7. Fruit — I keep lots of fruit next to my PC. Avoid snacking on sugars and candy. I have a grapefruit next to me (which has a great kick) and some dates. Plain Yogurt also helps. Add honey and black pepper if you want some flavor.
  8. Hot Coffee – here’s a trick if you eat the stuff for fun. Buy a nice, expensive expresso cup. It has to be SMALL. Only use this for drinking coffee. So, I still have 4 cups a day, but the size in cut down. It’s a stupid trick but it seems to work.
  9. Sign on the door – If you have a conference call coming up, walk around the house and remind everyone. I know it sounds dumb but if you don’t, they’ll walk in the middle of your presentation. Hang a sign on the door if needs be saying ‘At Work’ or something like that.
  10. Intervals – you can’t work flat-out all day. Work for 20-30 min, stop, get up and do something, then get back to work. The key is to get UP and walk away from the PC.
  11. Stretch it!— learn 5 yoga exercises and stretch your next, shoulders, lower back and legs a few times a day.  Nothing crazy. Just get into the habit of stretching.
  12. Walk after lunch — a quick 15 minutes walk helps digest your food. Skip this and you’ll be falling asleep, looking for coffee, at 3 pm or so.
  13. Routine – I use Google Calendar to plan my week. Stick to the schedule. Create your routine and stick to it.
  14. Interruptions from friends — one way to get rid of the unwanted guest (you know the type) is to remind them that you’ve a conference call coming up. It’s better than saying “go away, some of us have got things to do.” Just be polite and head off. Skype is great if you do have to make conf calls.
  15. Interruptions from family part 1 — a bit trickier admittedly. You need to be realistic here. It’s naïve to expect a 7 year to understand that you have to update your status report or whatever. Why not go out a kick a ball? You may as well. If you stay inside, you’ll just feel guilty. Anyway, isn’t this why you wanted to be at home?
  16. Interruptions from family part 2 — ok, you need to work. Cut a deal. Say, give me 20 minutes, let me finish this and then we’ll play. It usually works. Other tricks involve pacifying the child with yu-geeo cards, football magazines, or whatever keeps them busy for a while. You need to be creative, so plan ahead and always have some things in store.
  17. Avoid time-wasting activities — if your kids are on holiday or have a short school day (e.g. finishes at 1.30) try to avoid time-wasting activities wherever possible. How to? Unsubscribe from newsletters, forget the News, ignore Facebook, turn off Twitter. Do the important things done first.
  18. Other parents – if you have kids consider picking up a friends kid(s) one day a week, so they have a few spare hours to do their work. Later in the week, they can return the favor.
  19. Know when to Stop — many freelancers burn out because they can’t pace themselves. I try to stop at 6pm. Sometimes I have to go past this but if you don’t have a cut-off point you’ll end up working non-stop. This is a real problem for freelancers, small business owners.
  20. Sleep — don’t fall asleep watching Lost. If you’re tired, go to bed.AND don’t take your laptop to bed or into the toilet!

Tomorrow is another day.

What have I missed?

Let me know if you work from home what works best for you.

About the Author: Ivan Walsh is a technical writer with a weakness for documentation plan guides. His also runs a video marketing blog at www.videocameraschool.com

Related posts:

  1. 20 Tips When Working From Home
  2. 11 Amazing Adobe Distiller Tips For Technical Writers
  3. 5 Reasons Why Women Are Better Technical Writers Than Men?
  • Sally Andrews

    Starting early really helps. That way I get a good run at things before the kids get up.

  • http://www.ivanwalsh.com Ivan Walsh

    I start at 6am and get the US customers before they head off. I also leave the email to late in the day and do the work first! So much email is low priority.

  • http://www.dita4all.com/ Doug Morrison

    A great post full of helpful tips. I try to make sure I write a “To Do” list before reading emails at the start of the day – then amend the list after reading emails if necessary. Otherwise something new and interesting in the emails can take over from more important things that you ought to be doing.

  • http://www.ivanwalsh.com Ivan Walsh

    Hi Doug,
    That’s a good point.
    I've been guilty of rushing headlong into things only to surface to air and see that something else needs more attention.
    Alan Lakein’s books on time management have really helped. He wrote them in the 70s but they’re the best I've read.

  • http://network.stc-india.org/sridhar/ Sridhar

    Thanks for the tips, Ivan!

    I’d add these things as well:

    * Expect things to go wrong (Murphy’s law) and be prepared.
    * Set priorities and expectations – know what must be done and what can wait.
    * Add enough buffer to deadlines.
    * Keep work separate from personal stuff.
    * Break your work into smaller chunks and work on them in 1 hour sessions.
    * Don’t remember things, make to-do lists and add reminders.

  • http://www.ivanwalsh.com Ivan Walsh

    Hi Sridhar,

    Add enough buffer to deadlines. That’s a good point.

    When I started out, I'd try to do things as fast as possible to impress the client. Now I give myself time/space in case unforeseen things arise and when working at home… that happens a lot :)

  • Ed Burns

    I hadn’t thought about adding my story to the Business Plan. I’d thought the VCs would prefer things cut and dry.

  • http://www.ivanwalsh.com Ivan Walsh

    Adding ‘my story’ to a Business Plan is something I had reservations about at first but I can see why it might swing it. all things being equal you’re investing in the person, not the technology or service.

    It’s the person that will get it over the finishing line, so showing how you did this in the past may convince the investors to ‘invest’ in you.

    Does that make sense?

  • http://www.wordtipsandtricks.com/2010/08/01/how-to-stop-microsoft-word-files-from-crashing-part-1/ How to Stop Your SOP Procedure Templates From Crashing | Microsoft Word Tips, Tricks, Templates & Checklists

    [...] it’s not just business writers, in the world of technical publishing, Microsoft Word also gets a bad rap. Many feel that it’s unstable and crashing. It can also bloat [...]

blog comments powered by Disqus

Previous post:

Next post: