PRESS INFORMATION ISSUED ON BEHALF OF:
Training Synergy
77 Cornhill, London, EC3V 3QQ
tel 0800 072 5900; fax 0870 242 9494
31 May 2007
Keeping Homeworkers working!
Working from home offers advantages to both employees and employers
but, in today’s technology-dependent work culture, any technology
problems - encountered away from the organisation’s IT department - can
cause anything from worker frustration to serious productivity
problems. So Training Synergy, the training solutions provider, is
offering a course for homeworkers which not only delivers PC and
networking basic skills but also ties these in with the homeworker’s
organisation’s best practice processes and procedures.
With space at a premium in many offices, the opportunity to get some of
your employees working from home seems attractive for employers. And,
for employees, the opportunity to cut out commuting time and be at
home, keeping cool, during the summer weather instead of being in a
crowded office is also attractive.
According to David Field, of training solutions provider Training
Synergy: "Not only does homeworking offer a financial benefit but it
also facilitates the movement for work life balance and improves the
potential for staff diversity.
"While the benefits and potential risks are well known and documented,
one of the major areas that tends to be overlooked is the need for
homeworkers to be as self-sufficient as possible in terms of both
applications and basic PC awareness," Field added. "Being dependent on
laptops, PCs and all the other paraphernalia that go with today’s
technology-dominated and facilitated workplace means that small
technology-related issues can soon render a homeworker helpless and
unproductive."
Investing in training for homeworkers in basic PC skills and networking
is one of the best ways to reduce downtime and also take the pressure
off technical support.
"Often the most frustrating problems can be simply solved as long as
the homeworker knows the basics," said Field, who explained that there
are a number of courses and accreditations available for learning these
basic skills.
"There’s the European Computer Driving License (ECDL) and, soon, there
will be the ICDL, ITQ - the new NVQ for IT - along with other
accreditations," Field said. "Training Synergy also offers a course for
homeworkers which not only delivers PC and networking basic skills but
also ties these in with the homeworker’s organisation’s best practice
processes and procedures."
Field endorses Silicon.com’s ‘ten top tips’ on homeworking:
1. If you regularly carry your laptop back and forth from the office,
get hold of a spare battery pack and keep it at home so you don't have
to remember it every time you plan to work from home.
2. Make sure you have a few ways for people to contact you - such as a
mobile, a landline, email and instant messaging. So, if one
connectivity mode goes down for a while, your colleagues will still
have a way to reach you - and you them.
3. Understand how to structure your working day for the greatest
benefit to you and your organisation - whether that means doing a few
hours early, taking the kids to school and walking the dog, or logging
on late at night to free-up time during the day. If you are able to
bring a necessary - or less stressful - degree of flexibility to your
working day then you should be more dedicated to your work and feel
more energised. Your employer should see that as a definite benefit.
4. Tapping away on a laptop is fine on a plane but, when working from
home, make sure you have a full size keyboard and a mouse - and a
monitor if possible - as well as a comfortable workspace. Your
wrists/neck/eyes/back will thank you in the end.
5. Make sure friends, family and partners understand what working from
home is about and that they appreciate it's not an 'available for
chores and errands day'. Also, keep your work and home life separate
even if the venue is the same. Some people favour a home office which
is locked during out-of-office hours and off-limits to others during
the working day.
6. Remember to take screen breaks and stretch your legs. Go and make a
phone call or a cup of tea - otherwise you'll have been sat staring at
the screen for four hours and will have given yourself a headache.
7. Make sure you take a proper lunch hour and finish on time. There's a
great temptation to extend your working day at the beginning or end -
feeling like it's only time you would spend commuting anyway.
8. Make sure you have phone numbers for your technical support
department in case your connection or computer dies - and for your home
ISP in case there are other connectivity troubles. Remember, too, to
take home or duplicate any files you might need to refer to in case of
connectivity crashes. However, when transferring any data from office
to home, ensure it is well protected - preferably encrypted.
9. If you've got important calls to make, ensure you're somewhere quiet
where you can switch your phone to speakerphone and not be disturbed by
roadworks on your street, noise in your home or the sound of your
neighbour doing a spot of DIY. And don't always trust voice over
internet protocol (VOIP) over your home broadband network - unless you
swear by the quality - make sure you have a back-up option.
10. Finally, don't feel guilty. You are probably working harder than
you do in the office so don't be made to feel as if you're skiving at
home.
End
Notes to Editors:
About Training Synergy
With over 300 training personnel working on projects across the UK at
any one time and a turnover in excess of £10m, Training Synergy is one
of the UK's largest training solutions providers. It delivers some
40,000 training days a year and has 7,000 trainers on its database.
Further Information from:
Stephen Fletcher, BroadSkill, 0845 050 5353 or 07968 626999;
www.broadskill.com
Daniel Hanlon / David Field, Synergy, 0800 072 5900 or 020 7556 1140
/1141; www.trainingsynergy.com
Bob Little, Bob Little Press & PR, 01727 860405