Work at home parent

Work at home parent

A work at home parent is an entrepreneur who works from home and integrates parenting into his or her business activities. They are sometimes referred as WAHM (work at home mom) or WAHD (work at home dad).

Entrepreneurs choose to run businesses from home for a variety of reasons, including lower business expenses, personal health limitations, eliminating commuting or in order to have a more flexible schedule. This flexibility can give an entrepreneur more options when planning tasks, business and non-business, including parenting duties. While some home-based entrepreneurs opt for childcare outside the home, others integrate child rearing into their work day and workspace. The latter are considered work-at-home parents.

Many WAHPs start home-based businesses in order to care for their children while still creating income. The desire to care for one's own children, the incompatibility of a 9-to-5 work day with school hours or sick days, and the expense of childcare prompt many parents to change or leave their job in the workforce in order to be available to their children. Many WAHPs build a business schedule that can be integrated with their parenting duties.

Integrating Business and Parenting

An integration of parenting and business can take place in one or more of four key ways: combined uses of time, combined uses of space, normalizing children in business, and flexibility.

Combining uses of time involves some level of multitasking, such as taking children on business errands, and the organized scheduling of business activities during child’s down times and vice-versa. The WAHP combines uses of space by creating a home (or mobile) office that accommodates the child's presence.

Normalizing acknowledges the child’s presence in the business environment. This can include letting key business partners know that parenting is a priority, establishing routines and rules for children in the office, and even having children help with business when appropriate.

Finally, the WAHP can utilize the inherent flexibility of the work at home arrangement. This may mean working in smaller increments of time instead of long stretches, looser scheduling of day’s activities to allow for the unexpected, and working at non-traditional times.

A business that demands 9-to-5 business hours, a polished office, intense one-on-one time with clients, dangerous materials, or impromptu appointments may not work well for a parent with children at home. Thus, not all professions lend themselves to work at home parenting. Without good organization, the WAHP may experience decreased productivity due to added responsibilities and unexpected interruptions. However, businesses that lend themselves particularly well to working from home businesses are internet businesses or 'virtual assistants'.

The Center for Women's Business Research, a nonprofit organization, found that Generation X mothers are the most likely to work from home. The center also reports that between 1997 to 2004, employment at female-owned companies grew by 24.2%, more than twice the rate of the 11.6% logged by all businesses.

Types of businesses that WAHP may engage in include telecommuting for corporations, freelancing or working as an independent contractor, running home-party businesses, and managing complete companies from home [ [WAHM Study] http://wahmstudy.com/2008/04/22/wahm-defined/] and providing valuable business and marketing support.

History

The concept of the WAHP has been around for as long as small businesses have. In pre-industrial societies, merchants and artisans often worked out of or close to their homes. Children typically remained in the care of a parent during the day and were often present while the parents worked. Societal changes in the 1800s, such as compulsory education and the Industrial Revolution, made working from home and working with children around less common.

Entrepreneurship saw a resurgence in the 1980s, with more of an emphasis on work/life balance. Among the long-traditional groups of WAHPs are those professionals in private practice with home offices such as physicians, therapists, music teachers and tutors. The term WAHP began gaining popularity in the late 1990s especially as the growth of the Internet allowed for small business owners and entrepreneurs to have greater options for starting and running their businesses. By 2004, over 20 million people worked at home at least part time (either as business owners or in a formal arrangement with their employer), many of whom were parents. [ [DOL's, Bureau of Labor Statistic's 2005 "Work at Home 2Summary Report"] http://www.bls.gov/news.release/homey.nr0.htm] ] In 2008, a digital magazine was established by a WAHM with a decade of experience in the publications field specifically for work-at-home parents. The WAHM Magazine was designed to address the issues of the complete lifestyle of work-at-home parents regardless of field or industry and has a mission to validate, empower, encourage, educate and support WAHPs in their personal, professional and lifestyle goals. And the end of the first decade of the 21st century, telecommuting is becoming a greater option for companies and employees alike for a variety of economic and environmental concerns.

See also

*Homeschooling
*Attachment parenting
*Home Business

References

External links


* [http://edition.cnn.com/2007/TECH/05/24/internet.moms/ Internet moms: Getting the best of both worlds] - 29 May 2007, CNN
* [http://www.ftc.gov/bcp/edu/pubs/consumer/invest/inv14.shtm The Federal Trade Commission: Work-at-Home Schemes]
* [http://wahmstudy.com/ The WAHM Study]


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем написать реферат

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Home business — A home business (or home based business or HBB ) is a small business that operates from the business owner s home office.In addition to location, home businesses are usually defined by: *Having a very small number of employees, usually all… …   Wikipedia

  • Home-Start International — is a worldwide family support organization. Home Start works with people who have parenting experience to support local parents. Home Start schemes have been established in Australia, Canada, Czech Republic, France, Greece, Hungary, Republic of… …   Wikipedia

  • Work-life balance — The expression work life balance was first used in the late 1970s to describe the balance between an individual s work and personal life. (New Ways to Work and the Working Mother s Association in the United Kingdom). In the United States, this… …   Wikipedia

  • home — 1 noun 1 PLACE WHERE YOU LIVE (C, U) the house, apartment, or place where you live: They have a comfortable home on the outskirts of the town. | at home: Her daughter lives at college during the week and at home on the weekends. | work from home… …   Longman dictionary of contemporary English

  • Home Shopping Network — HSN redirects here. For hereditary sensory neuropathy , see Hereditary sensory and autonomic neuropathy. HSN Home Shopping Network logo Launched 1982 Owned by HSN, Inc. Picture format …   Wikipedia

  • Single parent — is a term that is mostly used to suggest that one parent has most of the day to day responsibilities in the raising of the child or children, which would categorize them as the dominant caregiver. The dominant caregiver is the parent in which the …   Wikipedia

  • Corporal punishment in the home — Legality of corporal punishment in the United States Legality of corporal punishment in Europe (and Turkey) …   Wikipedia

  • Gatekeeper parent — A gatekeeper parent, typically a mother, is one who takes to arrogating themselves the power to decide what relationship is acceptable between the other parent and the child(ren), either within a marriage, or outside any formal agreement between… …   Wikipedia

  • Helicopter parent — is a colloquial, early 21st century term for a parent who pays extremely close attention to his or her child s or children s experiences and problems, particularly at educational institutions. The term was originally coined by Foster W. Cline,… …   Wikipedia

  • Noncustodial parent — A noncustodial parent is a parent who does not have physical and/or legal custody of his/her child by court order. A child custody determination means a judgment, decree, or other order of a court providing for the legal custody, physical custody …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”