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Time Management Training Country Club Hills IL

It’s easy to blur the line between your time and work time when you run your business from home in Country Club Hills. To be sure that your life plan trumps your business plan, take some advice from those who’ve been there – and found a happy balance.

Francorp, Inc.
708-481-2900
20200 Governors Drive
Olympia Fields, IL
The Open Arm Foundation, NFP
(219) 444-8175
4906 Olcott Ave
East Chicago, IN
Financial Control Group Inc
(773) 947-9049
1507 E 53RD St Ste 502
Chicago, IL
Kylin Trading
(773) 927-6788
4222 S Pulaski Rd
Chicago, IL
Aja Medical & Legal Conslnts
(773) 548-0404
4340 S Greenwood Ave
Chicago, IL
Kirbyco Consulting Incorporated
(773) 298-0030
9608 S Longwood Dr
Chicago, IL
Chicago Park Dist Valley Forge
(773) 229-0812
7001 W 59TH St
Chicago, IL
General Direction Inc
(773) 373-3830
4908 S Ellis Ave
Chicago, IL
Outdoor Lighting Perspectives
(888) 616-1371
1312 Marquette Dr.
Romeoville, IL
World Wide Global Enterprises
(708) 749-1593
3647 Kenilworth Ave
Berwyn, IL
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Tips for Home-preneurs: How to Call It a Day

Before Becky Boyd turned her basement into an office for her public relations business, MediaFirst PR, she fell prey to the “just let me check another e-mail” syndrome that ails many home-based entrepreneurs.

“We had a computer in our living room, and it was so easy to run in there and go online and start doing e-mail,” says Boyd, who works with her husband, Jim Caruso.

After founding the company in 1992, the pair worked offsite. But they moved home because, well, they liked being there. It was easy, convenient, required no commute and – a big plus – their young son wouldn’t have to sit in after-school daycare.

They built out the basement of their 4,000-square-foot, three-story house, creating two offices and a computer closet. Every day, Boyd dresses for work like she would for an offsite office. She sets hours, too, which is imperative for home-preneurs who can get swept away by the compelling forces of working where you live.

“It’s very hard to leave work at work because work is always available,” says Boyd, who has to fight the urge to work 16-hour days and fill weekends with earning income. “It’s not like I have to drive anywhere, fight traffic. I just go boom, and I’m in the office. You have to make a concerted effort to get away from it.”

Author: Lynne Meredith Schreiber

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