BEARPAW!!! Wrote:
oh i absolutely plan to tell her the ONLY reason i'm leaving nyc is a quality of life issue. i like my job in terms of the folks i work with, i like riding my bike around town, i like seeing music when i want to... but i can live the more relaxed lifestyle i want elsewhere with more space and less nyc style hassle.
i was more wondering if people had any tips as to how to sell the idea of a telecommute - my boss works from home several times a month, i have on occasion, and we do have reps all over the country who dont work out of any dedicated office. of course, they travel a lot for work so it owuld matter less, but the point is i guess that i do all of my work online, with the 1 or 2x a week human interaction just b/c someone swings by my desk to ask a question that could also be answered over IM. it's a social thing, really, which i feel will have just as much of an effect on their decision to keep me or let me go as anything else.
I have no idea where you work or what type of company you work for, but here is my two cents as someone who manages a large team of telecommuters.
1. You need to look at your department budget and see if they can afford having you telecommute. They will be paying you for/reembursing you for a home office set up, cell phone, high speed line, PC, maybe a BlackBerry and your travel when they need you to come beck to NYC for meetings etc. Often when it seems pretty obvious that it would be just as easy to let you work form home, it becomes a cost issue.
2. Do the research before you present it. Package it together as a professional proposal. It will show that you are taking your own interest as well as your manager and the comapny into consideration. Give the written materials to your boss and ask her to look them over before you have a long talk about it. If one of my team were asking me to do something out of the ordinary, my first instinct is to say no because I'm fairly certain my boss will tell me the same. If I get something in writing, I just view it differently.
3. Don't be surprised if they accept part of your proposal- they may end up offering you something which is in between staying on in NYC and becoming a telecommuter. This compromise may end up wringing you out like a wet rag. Think through that before accepting it.
4. When you get a chacne to verbally present your telecommuting idea- take the "Jeapordy" approach and turn all of your answers and points into questions for them. "Have you considered that the costs of setting me up as a telecommuter may be considerably less than hiring and trianing someone new".
5. Depending on where your comapny is on it's budget cycle, they may be able to build your new home office into next year's budget and since you are working in advance on this, you may be able to get it in pretty fast.
Hope this helps