You have a full-time job, but you don’t actually work 40 hours per week. To be honest, you have a lot of extra time on your hands, so you’re thinking about taking on another full-time job.
This might sound a bit wild, but you’re definitely not the first person to have this idea.
Anthony Brunello, co-founder and chief technology officer at ADTAQ, credits working multiple jobs with being able to become both a first-time homeowner and entrepreneur.
“As an early adopter of remote work, I learned many years ago just how wasteful the traditional office setting is for many jobs,” he said. “In a typical work day, you are spending at least an hour commuting, one to two hours socializing, an hour for lunch and at least another hour being pulled off task to help a random someone walking by.”
He noted that this adds up to at least four hours each day that could be reallocated to performing actual work.
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“By working remotely, you are effectively able to accomplish the same amount of work as someone in the office, in just half the time,” he said. “If you apply this principle to two jobs, you would be able to fully focus on your tasks for four hours at each role.”
He said this would require you to put in eight hours of total effort each day — four hours at each job — but still accomplish just as much at both positions as someone who goes into the office each day.
This sounds pretty amazing, but he noted there are several caveats that also need to be on...
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