
Chris Preimesberger0



















Q3: Are there considerations you should be aware of when moving into a new home or apartment that factor in the home-as-enterprise concept?

David Gewirtz
A3: Definitely. Keep in mind that when you WFH, you're generally doing it full time as your main income...

Gorka Sadowski
Get a fast Internet and a "zoom room" (lol another variation of "zoom" :))

David Gewirtz
A3: … it used to be that the company invested in the infrastructure to buy your cube or office gear. But when you work from home, it's a factory, warehouse, lab, studio, and office.

David Gewirtz
A3: Bandwidth is key. When I bought this house, as part of the diligence process, I put in broadband and tested it. If it had failed, I would not have moved forward with this property.

Gorka Sadowski
A3 -- and talk to your boss to make sure he/she is comfortable managing a remote employee. And talk to HR to understand if the org can help you with special expenses. And talk to IT to make sure that tools will support you at home. And talk to security ...

David Gewirtz
A3: But there's also the need to identify spaces in your home (or potential home) that work with your work needs. Do you need a desk? Or do you need a full testing lab and a studio, as I do? That impacts your purchase or rental decision, too.

Gorka Sadowski
A3b - /and talk to security to make sure that you understand the parameters that you need to abide by. Do you need to access work resources from a sanctioned device, can you use your own personal iPhone, or not, etc.

David Gewirtz
A3: What about internal bandwidth? Do you run cables through the wall for Ethernet or just Wi-Fi? Or a mesh? All of that has to be considered. What about the condition of the power lines? Are they reliable, solid, or ancient?

Daniel Graves
A3: The biggest challenges I hear are enough separate space for all the people. Two parents and 2 kids all working and learning from home. An apartment in SF with 5 renters all on zoom meetings. Not an easy problem to solve, and it is driving some movement to lower cost geos.
(edited)

David Gewirtz
A3: We bought our house pre-pandemic so explaining our working from home needs baffled the real estate agents. Today, that would be easier.

Gorka Sadowski
At @Exabeam we did a survey last year where it came out that 49% of all respondents said "most challenging psychological shift when working from home for security teams working remotely" was "distractions in the home making individuals more prone to mistakes"

Vineet Jain
A3. Every company should allow as many meetings without camera turned on and also have at least one day of no meetings IMO

David Gewirtz
A3: Because I do so many online videos and webcasts, we actually cobbled together a light system that indicates whether or not quiet in the house is required. It works, but it's weird. Fortunately, my family understands my odd life.

David Gewirtz
A3: Well, except for the puppy. He doesn't care about work.

Vineet Jain
A3. Since I live in the Bay Area (temperate weather), sitting in the backyard as much as possible leaves me with more energy at the end of the day, as compared to being inside a room,

Daniel Graves
@DavidGewirtz We were contemplated something similar, like the red light 'recording' by the door in music studios :)

David Gewirtz
A3: One thing that's been harder was that a key component of my WFH strategy was writing in coffee shops. It was good when I just needed a change of scenery. Then...2020.

Daniel Graves
@DavidGewirtz I think a lot of people need to work in multiple spaces to stay sane and be productive. So a mix of home, coffee shops, parks, sitting in your car, on a walk etc. are required.
(edited)

Gorka Sadowski
A3 -- re: scenery, sometimes changing settings helps with "thinking outside the box", other times it can be a distraction. Depends on the task at hand...

Daniel Graves
A3: which means it's not just about enabling WFH, it's about enabling WFA with productivity, privacy and security.

