This appeared in the Management
Solutions section of the July/August 2003 edition of
Competitive Edge,page 30.
<www.compedgemag.com>
The Beauty of A Virtual Secretary
‘Remote’ Workers
Provide Cost-Savings & Are Easier To Manage
by
Janet Rice Keene
If beauty is as beauty does, then hiring a
virtual staff is a beautiful idea. Because it means savings. As for
the appearance of your assistant – you don’t have to look at them.
Having a virtual
assistant is like using a remote control. There is so much less
exertion required. A remote assistant is a person who assists you in
the same capacities as in the traditional way, but one who requires much
less management. The hours of work, which are done from your
assistant’s fully equipped home office, are flexible and tracked on a
timesheet.
Using a virtual
assistant requires some modifications to the role of the traditional
secretary. He or she cannot do your personal filing. But in our modern
world, electronic filing and the paperless office makes this less of an
issue. He or she will not be able to sit before you and answer your
phone while you urgently mouth the words “I’m not in!” But phone calls
can be answered wherever necessary, and if your assistant knows what
appointments you have to meet, these adjustments can be accommodated
readily and cheaply.
Considering the
costs of a traditional assistant, it will make you think twice about
hiring. Offering perks – vacation time, sick leave, health insurance,
office equipment and space, kitchen facilities, etc. – can really add to
your cost. You can’t afford to be a cheapskate with what you offer
because you want to attract the best talent. A good benefit package can
amount to a 30% addition to the salary you offer. Add to that the
paperwork and federal tax regulations that go into having a full-time
staff person. It’s not pretty.
One more point about
a full-time staff person. A salaried position is usually based on 40
hours of work per week. You may not need 40 hours of assistance every
week. When you hire a virtual assistant, you pay for the hours used and
no more. If you have various needs, you could have more than one
assistant each working only a few hours per week. What would those
hourly rates be? Rates vary, but for a professional, dependable
secretary, it could be $18 per hour. That’s a whole lot cheaper than
hiring someone full-time.
So the cost savings
and reduced headaches of using a virtual assistant are attractive. But
what can this virtual assistant do for you and how do you know if he or
she can do the professional and ethical job you desire?
A virtual assistant
is best used for routine secretarial tasks, such as invoicing,
maintaining contract and account files, preparing mailings and
performing customer service. A virtual bookkeeper can reconcile your
bank statements, pay your bills and keep your books in shape for tax
season – all from their home office. You can use a virtual webmaster
(obviously), a virtual media relations specialist, a virtual researcher,
or someone to help you create a marketing plan. You don’t have to offer
benefits to any of these people and you don’t even ever have to see what
they look like.
Certainly, there might be the occasion when
you are not satisfied with the performance of your virtual assistant. If
this had been a traditional staff member, it might mean documenting performance
deficits and then the gruesome task of firing. If you use an agency that
provides virtual assistance, it will replace the assistant, removing that
burden from you.
You may wonder if
you can get an assistant of the same caliber this way. Yes. There is a
surprising abundance of candidates – both geographically close to you as
well as all over the U.S., who are college-educated and have worked in
the business world. Through a careful selection process, agencies
choose candidates who possess high ethical and professional standards,
and have state-of-the-art computer facilities in their home offices.
I call this group of
people “America’s Hidden Labor Force.” A reasonable hourly income is
appropriate compensation for the flexibility and opportunity these
people are given in a virtual support capacity. And that can be a
beautiful thing.
Janet Rice Keene is the founder of ,
an agency providing virtual office support. Her Atlanta Company, known
as “America’s Hidden Labor Force,” has virtual staff people all over the
U.S. and Canada. (Admin@Keeneteam.net)
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