Avoiding Distractions
By
Do you find yourself checking your email every five minutes? Or chatting on the phone when you are supposed to be working? Distractions are a part of life, but that doesn’t mean they have to control your days. Here are a few ideas to help you keep on task.
Close your email
This may seem simple, but, at least for me, it can be hard not only to close my email, but also to STAY out of my email program. When a task needs to be done, the best way to focus is to shut your email program, turn your phone off (or mute it) and distance yourself from any other distracting technology items. You’ll be amazed at how much more you will accomplish – and how much more efficiently you work.
Find Time Alone
As a work-at-home mom, this is by far the hardest distraction-buster to accomplish. As my kids have gotten older, I’ve found that I can get most of my work done while my kids are at school. However, when they were still small and home with me all day, I tended to work in small chunks. Twenty minutes here while they watched a little T.V. or half an hour here while they played outside (and many times I sat outside with my laptop so I could keep an eye on them.
Another tactic I used was to trade babysitting time with a friend who also needed some “alone time” or to ask family members for help. Be creative!
Make a List
This is my go-to tip when people ask me how to become more productive. I couldn’t get nearly as much done without my lists. If plan out tasks with lists of steps that need to be accomplished. I make an outline out of an idea to see if it is feasible. And when I’m writing I outline what I want to say. I find that if I have an outline, I’m much more likely to take on the task and actually complete it.
While distractions still sidetrack me from time to time, these tips help me stay on course. And, as mom always used to say, “Practice makes perfect.” The more we practice these ideas, the more “perfect” our workdays will seem.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR: Jill Hart is the founder ofChristian Work at Home Moms, a website that provides resources andencouragement for women who work from home. She is the author of So You WantTo Be a Work-at-Home Mom and has been featured in places such as The WallStreet Journal and FIRST magazine. But mainly Jill is a wife and mom of two.She lives with her family in Nebraska.
Visit Jill at http://cwahm.com or contacther at Jill@CWAHM.com



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I use a digital program for my notes and outlines. Two actually. One to capture notes and throughts and another for my to do list and project outlines. I have them on my phone so I don’t have to search my house for slips of paper. I alway (well almost always) know where my phone is. And I took my facebook widget off my home screen and leave my laptop in the office so I don’t see it as often. Out of site, out of mind.
Thanks so much for your article and reminder to all those hoping to take the leap into full-time work from home. For many, I sense they eagerly look for ways to work from your home for the simple desire of their not having to go to work.
Whether we sit in a cube surrounded by shades of gray or you sit at your dining room table, work is work. In any work, we must deliver what our employer/client expects and needs. Your article is a great reminder and application that I intend to share with HomeGigz.com readers, who are searching for ways they can work from their homes.
Thanks again!
All the best,
Rodney
http://www.HomeGigz.com