Creating a Home Office That Supports Your Next Chapter

If you’re consulting, advising, running a small business, or doing serious knowledge work from home, a laptop on the kitchen table isn’t a home office. Here’s what is.

A large proportion of experienced professionals in their fifties and sixties are working from home in some capacity — as consultants, advisors, fractional executives, board members, writers, coaches, small-business owners. This kind of work has specific infrastructure needs, and most homes are not set up to meet them.The dining-table-with-laptop approach works for occasional use. For serious, sustained professional work at this stage of your career, it does not. And the cost of a poor setup is invisible but real — lower quality of work, more fatigue, less professional presence on calls, and a creeping sense that what you are doing is not quite real.

Why this matters now

If your work at this stage involves your expertise, reputation, and judgement, the physical environment in which you produce that work is not incidental. Clients hear your office on calls. They see it on video. More importantly, you experience it — and the degree to which your space treats your work with seriousness directly affects the degree to which you bring your best work to it.

The space question

The ideal is a dedicated room with a door that closes. If that is not available, a well-designed corner of a larger room can work, provided the boundary is clear. The worst setup is a floating laptop that moves between rooms — it produces the worst of both worlds, with no sense of being either at work or not.

If you have empty-nest bedrooms or an under-used formal dining room, one of these is almost certainly the right candidate for conversion. Investing in one of these conversions is almost always money well spent — the improvement in daily working life is immediate and large.

The actual essentials

A serious home office has:

  • A proper desk — large enough to spread out work, with room for monitors and notebooks
  • A very good chair — not a dining chair, not a decorative office chair, but a chair engineered for eight hours of use
  • Good lighting, both ambient and task — natural light if possible, and proper task lighting for late afternoons
  • A large external monitor (ideally two) for focused work
  • A reliable, fast internet connection with backup (mobile hotspot) for when it fails
  • Video-call infrastructure that makes you look professional: good camera angle, clean background, quality microphone
  • Storage that handles actual paperwork — legal, tax, professional
  • A door, or a clear visual and acoustic boundary

Technology that earns its place

Most home offices are over-teched in the wrong ways and under-teched in the right ways. The right additions, in priority order: a calibrated external monitor, a good microphone (audio quality matters more than video quality on calls), proper video lighting, a reliable wired connection to your router, and a password-managed setup for the professional systems you use regularly.

Boundaries and psychology

The psychology of working from home at this stage of life is real. Without good boundaries, work bleeds into the rest of life — you find yourself checking email at 10pm because the office is there, and you find yourself distracted during the day because the household is there. A dedicated office, and a habit of leaving it at the end of the day, fixes most of this.

Treat your home office the way you treated your corner office when you had one — as a statement about what you do, and a place you take seriously. Your work will rise to meet the space.

Ergonomics that matter at this stage

Ergonomics matters more at 55 than it did at 35. The damage from poor posture, bad chair height, and awkward monitor angles compounds over time, and shows up as neck pain, lower back pain, and shoulder issues that are genuinely disabling. A proper ergonomic setup — monitor at eye height, keyboard and mouse at elbow height, feet flat on the floor, a chair that supports the lumbar spine — is not an indulgence. It is the difference between working well for another fifteen years and having to scale back because your body cannot sustain bad posture.

Video-call infrastructure

Experienced professionals on video calls are judged, partly fairly and partly unfairly, on how they appear. The visible layer of this is simple to address. A camera at eye level, not below. Natural light from the front, not behind. A microphone that picks up your voice clearly and suppresses background noise. A background that is intentional — either a clean wall, a bookshelf arranged with some care, or a tastefully blurred setting. Done properly, these things require a one-time investment of perhaps two hundred dollars and an hour of setup. They are worth it every time you open a laptop.

A note on light

If only one thing can be optimised, optimise the light. Good light makes you look alert and engaged on camera; bad light makes you look tired and half-present. A single, well-placed key light in front of you, daylight-balanced, transforms video-call presence more than any other single factor. This matters for client calls, board meetings, coaching sessions, and any other work where how you come across affects the outcome.

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