Project Management from a Distance – Part 4
Posted by Brad EgelandIn Part 3 of this six-part series, we covered the concept of what type of project and IT work seems to work best for telecommuting. In Part 4, we’ll discuss what setup you need to make it work for you if you choose to try to go with the telecommuting option for managing your projects:
Part 1 – Why remote?
Part 2 – Will it work for you?
Part 3 – What type of job enables remote PM?
Part 4 – What setup do you need?
Part 5 – Negotiating when it’s not an obvious move
Part 6 – Staying the course
Basic Setup
There is not likely to be anything groundbreaking discussed here. What you probably assume you need is exactly what I’m going to list here. In fact, if I leave something out, I’d appreciate hearing from you, but I’ll list what’s worked for me:
- High-speed cable modem or similar internet connection
- Secured wireless router
- Laptop (or two…I’ll explain)
- Mobile phone (go Blackberry or similar if you can with access to email)
- Regular phone with a good speaker phone option connected either to a land-line or to a VoiP option
- All-in-one printer for printing, scanning and the rare need to fax
- Free online fax sending (easier than using your all-in-one)
- Freeconferencecall.com account (good for a backup if your company conference line is tied up or if you are independent)
I won’t go into detail on all of these…most are pretty self-explanatory. However, there are a few I’ll touch on in a little more detail:
Laptop(s)
I’ve gone Mac and love it. But I hang on to my XP machine just in case. And I probably will always make sure I have one around as a backup. MS Project isn’t made for the Mac at this point and it may never be. There are other options available to the PM like Open Projects and many web-based options including ProjectOffice.net. However, having that option – just in case there’s a problem and I’m at the 11th hour – to utilize a legit copy of MS Project on a Windows machine makes me feel more comfortable. I’ve not needed to do that since I purchased my Macbook in March of this year, but it’s nice to know I can if I ever have to.
Free Online Faxing
I hate using my HP All-in-one printer for faxing because I only have one home line – no dedicated fax line. Using one of the free sending services where you’re essentially uploading a pdf file and faxing it is very easy and it’s never let me down. I highly recommend it. Receiving faxes can be a little trickier – I usually have to talk the sender into scanning it in and sending it as a pdf or an image file. If they want me to have it bad enough, they’ll usually do it.
Home Phones with a Good Speaker Phone Option
This one was on my critical list. I was recently on a six-month project that required nearly daily conference calls. Some were vendor demos through webex meetings with associated conference calls and they could last up to six hours. I needed a good speaker phone option so that I could hear and sound like I was on a regular phone. There was no way I was going to wear a headset for that long! I found a setup – ultimately going with an offering from Philips.
Summary
The key is to have all the communication methods available to you just as you would if you were at the office. It doesn’t need to be high-end, it just needs to work. This is basically the setup I’ve had for the past three years and it’s not let me down yet.
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