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Three top pieces of financial advice — from when to find a new stockbroker to drawing limits for at-home work

Home office
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When to find a new stockbroker

Don't fire your broker just for making "a bad call about a stock's direction in the short term," said Matt Krantz at USA Today. Predicting stocks' short-term moves is almost impossible, and it's not what your broker should be doing anyway. For most investors, a broker's biggest role "is to protect them from themselves." Individual investors have the tendency "to be overly emotional about investing" and to react strongly to short-term moves. You need a financial hand who is thinking about the long term. "If your broker has you chasing short-term returns and speculating, it might be time to find an expert with more of a strategic approach."

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Drawing limits for at-home work

Working from home is a privilege that "comes with a price," said Laura Kreutzer at The Wall Street Journal. Having a home office gives you a degree of flexibility, but there's always a risk of letting the office part "seep too much" into home life. If you're trying to set better boundaries, know that "much of the challenge lies in learning when to turn things off." Establish a strict cutoff time for responding to emails and calls. Next, stay organized and keep your work materials where they belong: in the office. Isolating your work to one space will cut down your temptation to let it seep into your home life. And diligently keep track of your hours to get a true sense of how much time you actually spend working.

Sergio Hernandez is business editor of The Week's print edition. He has previously worked for The DailyProPublica, the Village Voice, and Gawker.