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Creating A Virtual Office?

Fubar asks: "My small company of 10 employees is considering letting our lease run out on our office space and is thinking about having everyone work from home (or wherever they want). I have been tasked with putting a plan together to provide voice and data connectivity to each employee. What sort of solutions have you implemented?" I'm considering the following for providing voice service:

+ Order an extra analog line for each employee
+ Reimburse each employee for a second line on their cell phones
+ Host our current phone system in my home office, add a VoIP card and provide an endpoint for each employee
+ Use third-party VoIP hosting service"
What options have you used to create a virtual office, and what suggestions would might you give to anyone else attempting to do the same?

4 of 71 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Options? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I'd agree with this. It's not exactly the same, but I'm a uni student and studying by correspondence this semester. I was getting credits and distinctions on campus, but am thinking about pulling out because I can't get any work done studying like this. It's much, much harder working by yourself. VOIP and IM doesn't cut it.

  2. A suggestion by icepick72 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Those employees had better be damned dedicated to the company if no centralized physical space exists anymore. You will find yourselves meeting in a lot of places. Maybe just downgrade the space to something like a meeting room you can rent a few times a week.

  3. Easy way to do it. by Wiseleo · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Communications:

    1. VoIP (something like Packet8) or company-paid cell phone, probably a nextel group plan. Actually, Skype conferencing should work good enough.
    2. Workstations - Windows Server 2003 Terminal Services Server. Then you don't care about what their workstations are like and the environment is manageable so you have no backup headaches.
    3. In-person lunches at least once a week. It can get really boring to work from home!

    I implement virtual offices all the time, so feel free to contact me through my website.

    Good luck.

    --
    Leonid S. Knyshov
    Find me on Quora :)
  4. The lease can't be that expensive by tftp · · Score: 4, Insightful
    I can't imagine that the lease is one of your problems. If you and your employees earn $50,000/yr it's, say, $500K per year in "bring home" cash, or roughly $1M with burdening. This place wants $1,500/mo, or $18K/yr - which is 2% of your salary budget. And that is not the cheapest place; other people rent for $0.50/sq.ft, for example, and there are tons of offers (not surprising with this market.)

    By isolating people you make social workings of the company impossible. You can't have face to face meetings, you can't casually walk up to someone and sketch a diagram or two, you complicate things that don't have to be complicated. IMO, you will lose far more in productivity than you gain in giving up the office space. How many companies do that? Hardly any; even one-man companies often maintain an office which is their public face - where they have an address, where they meet visitors, where they make phone calls, where they are a business. And at home they are at home - relaxing, reading, having family etc. Mixing work and home is bad. It's even difficult to work at home, where other distractions are present.