What the Entrepreneur Staff Is Doing to Stay Sane and Productive While Working From HomeAnd how you can do it, too.

ByJessica Thomas

Maskot | Getty Images

As the狗万官方staff ends our fourth week of working from home full-time, we've all settled into a routine. Depending on where we're social distancing — and whom we're social distancing with — our days look different. But we're all trying to be as productive as possible and maintain a sense of normalcy when the world is turned upside down.

Here are some of the steps we're taking to stay sane right now — and how you can do the same.

Establish some house rules

Some of us are quarantining with our spouses and children, others in tiny New York City apartments. But no matter where we are, establishing ground rules with the people we're with has been key to maintaining sanity. Editor in chief Jason Feifer and his wife are trading off shifts watching the kids so they can both get focused work done, and Entrepreneur.com editorial director Dan Bova is learning to speak less loudly on Google Hangouts and Zoom calls so as not to drive his wife and sons insane. Digital features director Frances Dodds is working from a 500-square-foot one-bedroom apartment she shares with her boyfriend, so they've designated the bedroom the "phone booth" for taking calls. "I've found it's harder to fall asleep on the bed when you're actively speaking to someone," she says.

Related:10 Tips for Entrepreneurs to Actually Get Work Done While Homeschooling Kids

Set up your own ideal work environment

Although some of us love the background noise of watching a television show or listening to a podcast while we work, others need as distraction-free of an environment as possible. Possibly thanks to the aforementioned young kids, Feifer swears by white noise: "I wear my wireless earbuds (big shoutout to Jabra) and blast white noise from an app, so that I'm blocking everything out around me. Now more than ever, every minute of my workday counts — I have a very limited amount of them, given the kids."

Take the time to figure out what setup will work best for you: Do you have a desk? A dining room table you can set up with one? What about a counter you could use as a standing desk when you get tired of sitting? Having a designated office space will help you more clearly differentiate between work time and personal time.

Related:Marie Kondo Visited My Quarantine Workspace to Give Me a Lesson on Letting Go

Take breaks

When you're living and working in the same space, it can be easy to blur the lines between personal and professional time. One of the benefits of a work from a home schedule is the flexibility to take breaks to make a nice lunch or put in a load of laundry. Here's how associate editor Matthew McCreary puts it: "Judging my work by what I accomplished, rather than how much time I sat in front of a desk, helps me remain productive and gives me some space to breathe: So long as I complete my daily goals, it's OK to take a long lunch, run around with the dog in the backyard or take a break from checking email."

Related:The Best Ways to Use Breaks to Be More Productive (Infographic)

Stay active

When you're homebound, staying active suddenly becomes much harder. The good news is that there aremanyfree online fitness resources out there right now. Frances Dodds swears by theFitOn App, I love thePeloton appand Instagram live workouts from my favorite fitness instructors, and social media manager Andrea Hardalo loves theBlogilates 14-Day Quarantine Workout Planfrom Cassey Ho: "She created a plan where each day you have to check it off, so I've been posting on my personal Instagram every day. It has helped keep me accountable and active."

Related:5 Workouts You Can Do at Home for Free Right Now

Catch up on reading, movies and TV shows

我们大多数人都求助于书籍、电影和电视商店ws for entertainment even more than we did in the past. For me, that means finally attempting to startThe Wireand instead getting sucked into a six-hourHouse Huntersmarathon. For digital content director Kenny Herzog, that means "watching movies and TV that depict worlds even worse than this one is right now." And for Dan Bova, it means listening to free audiobooks on the Libby app while he takes his nightly walk. He's also one-upping the rest of us by actually trying to learn something — using inexpensive classes onUdemyandedX,他是学习古埃及和history of comic books in his free time.

Everyone's quarantine situation is different, but we hope you can use these tips to make your at-home setup a little more productive.

Wavy Line
Jessica Thomas

Entrepreneur Staff

Senior Digital Content Director

Jessica Thomas is the senior digital content director at Entrepreneur. Prior to this role, she spent nearly five years on staff at Worth magazine and was a staff writer for Bustle.

Editor's Pick

Related Topics

Money & Finance

Want to Become a Millionaire? Follow Warren Buffett's 4 Rules.

Too many entrepreneurs are counting too heavily on a company exit for their eventual 'win.' Do this instead.

Business News

Netflix is Hiring an AI-Focused Role—and the Starting Salary is up to $900,000

The streaming giant is looking for a leader in its machine learning department.

Business Ideas

55 Small Business Ideas to Start in 2023

We put together a list of the best, most profitable small business ideas for entrepreneurs to pursue in 2023.

Data & Recovery

This $20 Training Bundle Could Help Your Freelance IT Business Grow

Hone your cybersecurity chops with this training bundle.