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John Warrillow

Seven reasons not to work from home

JOHN WARRILLOW | Columnist profile
Special to Globe and Mail Update

My friend has a business that sells one of the most popular iPad and iPhone applications on the market.

It’s a multimillion-dollar business and he does it from the comfort of his own home.

He has half a dozen employees scattered across the United States, and they all keep in touch through a mixture of Skype, Google Docs and e-mail.

In some ways, I envy my friend for his ability to work from home – no commute, no rent to pay – but I also know from experience that I can’t do it for any longer than necessary.

I’m on my fifth startup, and the days I spent working from home were the least enjoyable and productive.

One of my favourite milestones in the development of a new business is the day I have enough cash flow and steady income to move out into a real office.

Here are my seven reasons to stop working from home:

1. Unabomber isolation

There is nothing worse than sitting in front of my computer all day and taking a break in the mid-afternoon, only to realize that I’m still in my pyjamas, haven’t showered and haven’t interacted with anyone all day.

I think we humans are social creatures – at least I know I feel better when I have some human contact every day. The little interactions with my office colleagues and nearby shopkeepers make me feel like part of a community.

2. Starbucks is not a boardroom

I’m a coffee addict so I’ve tried to overcome the isolation of a home-based business with regular trips to Starbucks.

But a coffee shop is not an office. Conversations are public – both yours and the chatter of the gaggle of 14-year-old girls who have just sat down to gossip beside you over their two-pump white chocolate raspberry mochas.

Yes, I could put a hood over my head and dawn my sound-cancelling earphones to block out the prattle, but then not only do I feel like the Unabomber, I now look like him, too.

3. The magnetic cave

I find the isolation of working from home becomes self-fulfilling. If I’m in town anyway, meeting a customer or colleague for lunch or a drink after work is easy.

But when I’m at home, the idea of putting on work clothes and trekking downtown seems onerous.

I have to make an effort, which means I do it less and sink further into the cave that seems to have magnetic walls, sucking me back in.

4. You’re just playing house

My first business address was 3250 Bloor St., which sounds prestigious but was actually a P.O. box in a Cards ‘n Such outlet in the suburbs.

I had a dedicated phone number for my “office” but eventually people figured out I was working from home.

Sooner or later, someone is going to say, “Let’s meet at your office,” and then the jig will be up.

With more and more successful people like my friend working from home, the stigma is slowly changing, but for now, when you work from home, most people think you’re just playing house.

5. You stifle your growth

When I start a business from home, I sink into a bunker-like mentality regarding expenses. I look at every cost through the lens of a consumer instead of a business owner trying to grow.

It doesn’t make sense, but something about being at home causes me to wear my consumer hat. I start to get cheaper and cheaper until, eventually, staying small becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy.

Paying your business office rent each month forces you to sell to cover your expenses. It encourages a degree of rigour that is a good trial run before hiring employees.

It puts you into the habit of paying a regular monthly expense, which doesn’t fluctuate with how much you sell.