2012年3月4日 星期日

Home-Buying For the Telecommuter - Part III


If you already read Parts I and II of my "Home-buying for the Telecommuter" series, you've learned already about 2 factors that the average telecommuter must consider when house-hunting that non-telecommuters may not need to concern themselves with.

Read on now to learn about the final factor that is probably the last thing you'd expect me to tell telecommuters to be concerned about!

Location:

Every home buyer (or home seeker) has heard the real estate mantra "Location, location, location!" Getting a home in just the right location can be one of the biggest challenges when buying your house. In Part I of this series I mentioned, however, that the exclusive telecommuter may not be concerned about location - sometimes living hundreds of miles away from his or her company office. And even for people who still have to go in once in a while, a long commute once or twice a week is a whole different consideration than a long commute every day. Obviously if you only telecommute occasionally then you still need to live driving-distance from work. But chances are, the more often you telecommute, the easier it will be to tolerate a long distance to the company office.

However, no matter what your current telecommuting status, one thing you must remember is that the only constants in life, as they say, are death and taxes. I've never heard telecommuting added to that list.


Even if you work for a company that is very pro-telecommuting, you never know when the rules might change for you. I've seen even very large companies that are known for excellent telecommuting policies suddenly switch gears and call all their telecommuters back into the office. I've seen policies so strict that people who were unwilling to move could no longer keep their jobs. All it takes is a new CEO, or new head of your organization, and suddenly the rules are all different.
Don't forget the risks from down-sizing. Suddenly your whole group is cut and you're job-hunting. But the jobs you apply for may not be as interested in hiring someone who lives in the middle of nowhere and can't come into the company office on a regular basis. Do you have a large financial cushion to take the extra time to find a job that permits full-time telecommuting? Or do you have a family depending on you as sole bread-winner, and you can't afford to be out of work for more than a couple months?

Unless you are certain that you'd rather take the time and make the sacrifices to find a new telecommuting job than go back into a company office again, or you don't expect to stay in this house you're buying for very long, don't get too cocky about how flexible your home location can be. You may want to hedge your bets and make sure you live close enough to your company (or other companies in your industry) that you can drive in (perhaps nearly daily) if you absolutely had to!

If telecommuting is an important part of your work-life balance please consider this factor plus the others mentioned in the previous articles when you buy your next home!

You can find Parts I and II of my article on my author page




Bottom Line? Experience huge gains in time, money, and stress reduction by telecommuting. You deserve it! But don't dive in unprepared. Make sure you know how working from home differs from going into the office. I invite you to get your free copy of the "Top 10 Telecommuter Mistakes list" - to learn from the mistakes of others: http://avoidgoingtowork.com/free

Nicole Bachelor, the "Master of Telecommuting Success" is the author of "How to Avoid Going to Work Without Quitting your Job". She specializes in teaching people how to effectively work from home. Nicole has been telecommuting exclusively for over 4 years, and has vast experience working with teams that are spread across the world.





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