
"Set up a power workspace. This meaningful act ensures you'll have a regular space or area for your work. Depending on your living arrangements, you may need to get creative to carve out a work environment for yourself. The key is to define it and contain it. Use a dining room table, kitchen table, or small desk in an area of your living room or bedroom. In some cases, a folding screen, a curtain with tension rod, or a closed door can define your work area."
"Break up work projects and assignments. You may not be able to apply your focus or attention for long periods of time when working outside of the office. To counter this, break tasks into their smallest work parts for both focus and added motivation. Choose a small slice of your work to focus your attention on for the present moment. You might brainstorm headlines instead of planning out an entire writin"
Working from home requires intentional setup and routines to maintain productivity. A defined power workspace provides a regular area for work and can be created using a dining table, small desk, folding screen, curtain, or closed door. Keep the workspace clean and free of extraneous household items, and store basic office supplies like pens, notepads, notebooks, and device chargers in nearby containers. When working in shared spaces, clean up after sessions. Attention spans may be shorter at home, so break projects into their smallest parts, choose a small slice to focus on, and use shorter, motivated work segments.
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