Category Archive

Office Clearing

Posted by Jane Woolsey on July 5, 2011

The clearing process is not restricted to the home or cottage during the summer. It needs to be done in your workplace to give you that renewed sense of balance in all areas of your life. Here is a process to help you get started….

Define the areas that you need to clear:

  1. your paper backlog – desk and surrounding area
  2. paper files
  3. e-mail inbox and sub-folders
  4. electronic files on your personal drive
  5. electronic files on your shared drive

 

Then:

  1. prioritize the areas above
  2. select your top priority
  3. block off time in your calendar – create one hour to three hour chunks of time
  4. set-up a reward at the end of the “clearing sessions” – heading out for lunch with a friend, take-out food pre-ordered or a glass of your favourite
  5. make sure you have any supplies or tools you will need organized ahead of time
  6. develop a system/structure for your paper and electronic records
  7. make a commitment to yourself and reinforce this commitment by telling someone else who will not let you procrastinate
  8. Now – DO IT!

 

See how great you feel, now apply this process to the next area.

Share your experiences. If you are having trouble getting started, email us, we will give you a boost!

Filed Under: Business Organization, Business Planning, Email Management, Organizing Strategies, Paper Management, Purging Tagged: , , , ,

Spring Clearing!

Posted by Jane Woolsey on May 8, 2011

A much more pleasant term and broader to encompass the purging and organizing aspect of getting a fresh start for the spring! 

There are so many areas to talk about within this concept of “Spring Clearing” so keep in touch. Let’s start small and work our way up to the largest tasks it and for those organizers out there…..capture some of these ideas and work through them with your clients.

Magazine Madness!

I tackled this one myself last weekend when it was pouring cats and dogs outside!  That pile of wonderful magazines that have accumulated over the past months or years. It is so easy to allow this to happen. Don’t procrastinate any longer…it’s time to deal with them, try these ideas to free up space and perhaps save some money:

  1. Limit the number of subscriptions, perhaps one per interest, or rotate your subscriptions each year – you only have so much free time to read them
  2. Donate magazines to dental or doctor’s offices, or any place there is a waiting room
  3. If they are current issues(no more than three months old) then you might approach Good Will to donate them
  4. Share subscriptions with your family members, a friend or your next door neighbour
  5. Tear out articles and file them in a “To Read”  or “Resource” file and recycle the rest of the magazine
  6. Cancel subscriptions and search for your favourite topics on the internet
Filed Under: Organizing Strategies, Paper Management, Purging Tagged: , , ,

Same Time Next Year ~ and I don’t mean the movie!

Posted by Jane Woolsey on April 1, 2011

Tax Time!

Here are a couple of quick organizing tips that will help you this tax year and then appreciate them even more next year…..

 

Flag your files, find it fast.   One of the easiest ways to get started is probably sitting right in your home office to review your records. We’re referring to your tax records from last year! Unless you’ve had significant changes over the year (such as a new baby, investments or home), your past records can provide a good start on what information you’ll need to gather this year. As you review your files, flag items and the files so you can locate them quickly next year.   Consider using Avery NoteTabs for this purpose - if things change, you can remove them from the file or item easily and reuse them and they are color coded if you want to categorize your tax information. 

 

 Spend less time looking for loose receipts. Americans spend nine million hours a day looking for lost or misplaced items, according to the American Demographics Society.  Develop a system to organize your receipts now and then use it for next year. There are a variety of options but I love to use the Avery PocketTabs™.  Use the convenient pocket to store receipts for all your deductible expenses you collect throughout the year. The removable, repositionable pocket can be attached easily inside your file folders, and has a closeable flap to keep your contents secure. You could also create a tax receipt binder and attach the pocket tabs to card stock in the binder. Take it one step further, categorize each pocket tab – gas, meals, parking, medical, donations…etc. You can find out more about these products by visiting your office supply retailer such as Staples or visiting www.avery.ca or www.avery.com.  

 

If you need help getting organized for tax time, send us an email at jane@productivitysquared.com.  

Filed Under: Business Organization, Business Planning, Organizing Products, Organizing Strategies, Paper Management, Records Management, Time Management Tools Tagged: , , , , , ,

The Most Important Question

Posted by Jane Woolsey on March 15, 2011

Are you tired of looking for items you need? Starting today, begin asking yourself “Where will I find this?” instead of “Where shall I put this? This question works great for papers to be filed as well as for other items in the home or office.  Words of wisdom from Marlo Nikkila that I totally agree with and have always put in practice for my clients to create their own unique organizational systems based on the way they think, not on the way I think!

Filed Under: Business Organization, Email Management, Organizing Strategies, Paper Management, Records Management, Time Management Tools Tagged: , ,

Piles be Gone!

Posted by Jane Woolsey on February 11, 2011

Overwhelmed with the paper on your desk – perhaps all those “to do’s”?  Have your New Year’s resolutions not delivered on their promises? I know not all mine did! If paper does not have a home to go to then it will create its own – a “Pile”!  Even paper that just needs to be filed is a “To Do”.  Our “BOS” (Business Organizational Solutions) approach recommends setting up a standard set of “to do” or “action” files based on your own unique business activities.  If you are a piler, place these files in a visible place such as a desk top filing rack (so it is in plain view and you won’t forget about it) or if you are a “filer” then tuck them away in hanging folders in a desk drawer that is easy to access.  Some of the action files you could choose to set up for your own system might be: File; Pay; Read; Research; Plan; Errand; Write; Input; Review or Call. Now, file away all those loose “to do” papers and feel confident that you will know where to find them when you need them.  You can also use these categories to set up your electronic “To Do” or task list in Outlook so you are consistent with your approach across both paper and electronic documents. If you need a reminder to look at your “To Do’s” set up a reoccurring event in your Outlook calendar. Send me an email jane@productivitysquared.com if you would like to know more about “BOS” and how you can conquer the piles.

Filed Under: Business Organization, Organizing Strategies, Paper Management, Records Management Tagged: , , , , ,

Paper and email overwhelm!

Posted by Jane Woolsey on January 4, 2011

While you put away the last few remnants from the holidays, remembering time with your family and friends with a smile on your face or perhaps a sense of relief that it is all over, you turn your mind to what’s next.  Yikes….dealing with all of the paper, email and voicemail that have accumulated at work over the holidays. Overwhelm kicks in and the re-energizing you did over the holidays is draining away.  Don’t despair, it can’t all be done in a day and if you try to do everything all at once you will get even more overwhelmed and end up not  doing anything well.

Take a few minutes, a couple of deep breathes, and develop your “Fresh Start” plan. Identify what it is you need to deal with to get back on top of things. There are probably four categories – voicemail, email, paper and projects.  Decide which category is the most important as not everything can be a priority one!  Start working through each category systematically until you have dealt with all the high priority items in each group, then circle back and start the process again until you have caught up in each area.

As you work through all the items, you may not be able to do them right then and there.  So you don’t get bogged down, and lose your momentum, set up a reminder so that you can forget about that item until the appropriate time and then immediately move on to the next item.  There are three reminder systems that you could use. Choose the one that works best with your behaviour style:

  1. Task it in Outlook or other similar software.  Don’t forget the reminder date and time, so you can forget about it until you need to deal with it.  This option is great because you can drag and drop emails into tasks in seconds;
  2. Create a Pending folder (electronic or paper) and drop the paper or email into the folder.  Don’t forget to revisit that Pending folder first thing each morning or at the end of each day to make sure you stay on top of your pending items;
  3. Create a “To Do List” either electronic or hard copy.  This is my least favourite as “To Do” lists have to be re-written to keep them current. Consider moving to the electronic option referred to in 1. above.

Watch for more blog posts for more ideas on a “Fresh Start” for the New Year.  We will be talking about managing email, setting up paper task files, procrastination and more.  Interested in one on one or group training in email and/or paper management or managing effective meetings, contact me at jane@productivitysquared.com for more information about our in-person or on-line services.  Happy New Year!

Filed Under: Business Organization, Email Management, Paper Management Tagged: , , , , ,