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Author Archive for Carolyn – Page 8

Organize Taxes – Time Tamer Tuesday

Posted by Carolyn on
 March 16, 2016
  ·  1 Comment
organize taxes ahead of deadline

Three principles will help you organize taxes before the deadline.

It’s that time again.  Time to organize taxes. Yup.  Funny how it comes around every year at the same time.

And since it’s so predictable you’ve anticipated tax season and have everything ready.  Right?

Ok if you answered yes, feel free to leave now and come back next Tuesday or next blog post, whichever comes first.  For the rest of us, stick around and let’s see if we can help you with a couple of strategies to save some time, and maybe some money, on your income tax preparation.

Now, let me be clear – I am NOT an accountant.  I am not offering any advise that might actually impact or have bearing on your tax submission.  You will need someone with a CGA or CA after their name to help with that.  But, with a CPO after my name, I can say i know something about getting things ready to organize taxes each year.

Many of my clients need help with this task.  Some are running a small business and while creative, are not very organized.  But they are clever and have hired me as a professional organizer to help.  To organize taxes we use 3  simple principles.

File When it Arrives

organize taxes

Sort files both paper and electronic as they arrive to organize taxes ahead of the deadline.

As soon as those receipts and invoices show up, get them filed.  Leaving receipts and invoices lying around, whether paper or electronic, is asking for them to start wandering around.  And they do.  Ever noticed how those chiropractor receipts managed to wander from the bag your were carrying when you got your last adjustment to the stack of paper on the table?  The e-receipt from your last product purchase?  Might still be buried in your email. File it as soon as you see the email to help organize taxes ahead of tax season.

File by Expense Type

Simple right? For some people, yes.  They likely aren’t still reading.  For the rest of us, resisting the temptation to drop all files into one folder, paper or electronic, that says “Income Tax”, is a tough job.

You know what your expense categories are unless our are filing income tax for the first time, as a young new employee or new business owner, and therefore have to organize taxes for the first time.  By taking that one extra step to file the material according to the expense type, you will be saving yourself time and effort down the road.  Depending on the role your book keeper and/accountant plays for you, you could also be saving yourself some money.  Their time is precious and usually expensive.  Especially around tax time.

Match Paper and E-Files

organize taxes

Match up your paper files and electronic file categories to reduce the work for organizing taxes.

Although more and more paper files are becoming less and less of our lives and businesses, the reality is we are not yet free of the paper.  So, you are likely to still have some paper and some e-files for your accountant.  An accordion file works well for paper files.  Most office supply stores carry accordion files with anywhere from 6 to 26 (alphabetized) pockets.  Use the one that best matches the number of expense categories you use.  I keep my categories lean so I use the 13 pocket style.

On the electronic side, set up an Income Tax folder with subfolders of the same categories.  The result?  Your brain only has to remember one set of categories and you will get used to using the folders, paper and e-files, the same way.

Can you feel your brain relaxing yet?

We organize taxes every single year.  These three principles will help make it easier for you to be prepared.  And might save you some money in book keeping and accounting fees.  No more running around at the last minute looking for the telephone receipts.

Business Organizing Organizing Challenges Organizing Strategies Time Tamer Tuesday
Tags : Filing, organize taxes, Time Tamers
organized closet

Organize the Closet – Lighten the Load

Posted by Carolyn on
 March 9, 2016
  ·  2 Comments

Organize the Closet? I Can’t see the Closet

organized closet

Try the Friends, Acquaintances, Strangers game to sort through clothes.

Recently a client and I stood in front of what was supposed to be a clothes closet in her bedroom.  The door was open and the closet was full.  She was desperate to have a beautifully set up, organized closet. But in fact, we couldn’t even see inside much less organize the closet or contents.

Some serious purging and sorting was needed.

Almost all of these strategies were used.  Each strategy has its own merit.  They each work differently for different people depending on the item in question.  What works for you?

Pull Everything Out

Start by getting everything out of the closet.  While this can be an almost overwhelming task, at least you will know what is in there.  Get the clothes, purses, shoes, scarves and anything else out of hiding.

Use the Friends, Acquaintances, Strangers Game

Getting through the sorting of a full closet enroute to an organized closet can be daunting task.  Using the friends, acquaintances, strangers game can help.

Friends are the people you would have for supper.  In other words the clothes that you love, look good in, feel good in and wear often – or would wear often if you could get at them with an organized closet!

Acquaintances are the people you might chat with but aren’t very close to.  Which are the items that you thought you might like but ultimately never warmed up to?  Can they move on to a life outside of your front door? Off to donation?

Strangers are the people you just don’t know.  Or maybe the ones you knew but don’t hang out with anymore.  These are clothes that don’t fit or have gone out of style. You don’t care for them, don’t wear them.  Send them away.

Re – Consider the Gifts

We all have items in our closets that were gifts.  They were loved, liked or found amusing by someone that gave them to you.  But maybe not quite your taste.  Since they were a gift, they are yours to do as you please, right?  Consider, your mother likely didn’t expect you to keep that sweater for 4o years.  If you don’t wear it, love it, cherish it – send it off to someone who will.

Photograph the Cherished

Check shoes for any that need repair or polish.

Organizing shoes includes checking regularly for repairs and polish.

And then there are the items we love and don’t use; beloved items that just don’t measure up to today’s – or your – style. Take a photo. That way you have the memory without having the item take up space in your closet.

Organize the Closet

With a lighter load, its easier to hang up, fold up and generally sort everything back into the closet.  Try going through the sorting process again as items go back into the closet.  Sometimes a second round of sorting will lighten the load that much more.

Now stand back and survey the closet.  When you open the doors you ought to be greeted with friends waiting to be taken out and worn.  Items that you love, that make you feel good and that look great on you.

Home Organizing
Tags : Clearing Clutter, closets, clothes, organizing clothes, organizing strategies
plan your time to get important things done

Time Tamer Tuesday – The Organized Workout

Posted by Carolyn on
 March 8, 2016
  ·  No Comments

An Organized Workout takes Planning

plan your time to get important things done

We can’t manage time, but we can plan to get important things done.

Headed for a workout in the morning?  Are you organized to workout? Whether you hit the gym, pound the pavement, or take you bike for a spin, using organization to help you get there will increase the chances of fitness happening.

Let’s face it, on a chilly March morning, it’s sometimes hard to haul out of bed and find the motivation to hit the gym right?

Since I’m not a trainer, I’ll leave the organization of the crunches and sprints to the folks with the six-pack abs and unfailing motivation techniques.  Here are some organization strategies to help you get out to that workout.

Plan Your Workout – and a Backup Plan for Weather

Whether it’s a run, swim, spin or walk, plan ahead of time. Add a backup plan for weather in case you wake up to pouring rain.  With both a plan and backup in place, there is no second guessing first thing in the morning before you’ve had chance for coffee. Your organized workout has been anticipated.

Lay Out Your Gear

Lay out your gear the night before – all of it including clothes, socks, shoes, gloves, keys, phone, headphones, shower gear, work clothes and anything else you need to take.  Pack your gym bag.  Get the shoes from where you left them after your run.  Grab the travel kit with the shampoo and add to the gym bag.  When you wake up, you’ll be on autopilot until the endorphins kick in.

Set up the Playlist

I walk for fitness and like many people I have my special playlist.  In fact I have several.  So I know what it’s like to head out on your walk or run, or arrive at the gym, and realize the playlist isn’t there.  Remember how your phone memory was full, so you took it off to save room for those videos you wanted to take?  Nothing ruins a workout more than a lousy playlist or no playlist at all.  Load it up before hand and that workout will be music in your ears.  Pack the headphones.

Schedule your Workoutwoman on bended knee tying shoe lace on running shoe.

A dream is a wish without a schedule.  To give your fitness goals some real intention and keep that organized workout, schedule the workout into your calendar.  Morning, noon, evening, night?  That’s up to you and your schedule.  It’s much more likely to happen if you have protected the time by loading it into your calendar.

Set the Alarm

Your organized workout won’t happen if you never make it out of bed…until 30 minutes before blastoff to work time. Avoid missing your morning workout time by setting that alarm.  While you’re at it, why not use a favourite tune on your phone so you wake up to something that makes you feel good even before the endorphins get pumped up.

It’s not always easy to keep our intentions to get active and get fit.  Being organized can help.  An organized workout will set you on the path to achieving your fitness goals.

See you on the treadmill.

Organizing Sports Gear Time Tamer Tuesday
Tags : clothes, organized workout, organizing sports gear, sports, sports gear
plan your time to get important things done

Plan in Minutes

Posted by Carolyn on
 March 1, 2016
  ·  1 Comment

You Can Plan in Minuteshands holding up analogue clock with red face and white numbers

It doesn’t take long. Plan in minutes to be more productive and accomplish more goals.

You are busy.  High on your To Do List is learning how to better manage time.  You just never seem to get there.

You Can’t Manage Time

The reality is you can’t manage time.  It ticks away at the same pace whether you are prepared for that meeting, unprepared for that exam or running early or late to your client’s home.  Time moves at the same pace.

What you CAN do is manager yourself. Each time you agree to complete a task you create a time commitment. It doesn’t matter whether you are committing to yourself or someone else. It’s still requires a plan and scheduling that time commitment.

Plan How you Use Your Time

plan your time to get important things done

We can’t manage time, but we can plan to get important things done.

Being even just slightly more prepared for the day will help you achieve more focus and purpose.  And with that, you can accomplish much more. Planning in just a few minutes each day, will set you up for success and help you accomplish more

15 Minutes to Plan

At the end of the day, spend 15 minutes writing down the top 3 things you want to accomplish tomorrow.  You’ll wake up with purpose and focus.

Organizing Time Productivity Time Tamer Tuesday
Tags : Goals, Lists, Time, Time Management, Time Tamer Tuesday, Time Tamers
Great things can happen in an organized home office.

The Organized Home Office: 3 Key Ingredients

Posted by Carolyn on
 November 9, 2015
  ·  6 Comments
sign spelling office in white letters on black background

Making sure you maintain an organized home office takes basic ingredients and your own spice.

So you’ve decided to work from home – congratulations!  Chances are you’re going to love working in your jeans and t-shirt, without a commute and with the flexibility that a home office provides.  It takes some work, however, to ensure your work space is functional, productive, has all the tools you need and  is available to you when you need it.  These are important criteria for an organized home office.  Here are some key ingredients that can help your office meet those criteria.

Basic Ingredient: An Organized Home Office is Separate from Home Functions

When setting up a home office, clients frequently start by taking over a small part of an existing space in their home.  This is a great way to see if working at home is feasible.  You know the place: the computer table in the kitchen; the family computer desk in the den; the craft corner in the basement rec room.  These areas are often already multi purpose space.  Its where home work, crafts and family organization and communication are happening.  Adding the additional pressure of a home office is sometimes more multi than these multi purpose spaces can manage.  Professional organizers  are brought in to  help organize the home office when clients find the geography project has exploded over the latest market research report and invoices ready to be mailed.  

Find a way to physically separate the business work from anything else that happens at that work station.  If you can’t  fully take over a space, and have to share with other household activity, use a cupboard, box or even just a shelf where your material can be collected and put away before the homework starts up.  Role model to other family members that you put away your material when not actively working at the common space; they are expected to put away their things when leaving the space.  It might take a bit of reminding at first but your material will be secure and the work station can continue to be used by the family while you enjoy the advantages working at home can bring.

House big enough you get your own corner office?  Lucky you. Just make sure that room has a door.  Opening the door is like stepping into a corporate setting.  It says “I’m at work”.  Same with the office-in-a-box approach.  When you empty the box onto the dining room table, you have arrived at work for the day.

Resist the temptation to use a corner of your bedroom for your home office.  The bedroom is a place for rest and relaxation, not work.

Binding Ingredient: An Organized Home Office is Mostly Self-Contained and Holds its own Tools.

Great things can happen in an organized home office.

Great things can happen in an organized home office.

Think of this as permission, resources permitting, to shop for the tools your office will need and to keep them in your office, even if it is just a box.  Often, we identify the space for our office space and then use tools from elsewhere in the house to stock it;  paper from the family computer station, stapler from the kitchen, pens from the junk drawer, hole punch from the craft boxes.  This can be an excellent use of extra tools around the house.  It can also mean, however, that your office is raided when that hole punch is needed for the science project.

You will need holders for those tools.  Use a decorated juice container from your 8 year old, or top of the line from the office supply store.  An organized home office has the tools there when you need them easily accessible.  The more self contained it is, the more likely your organized home office will stay organized.

Spice it Up: Add Your Unique Style

desk with flowers in vase

Add some spice to make your organized home office reflect your taste.

It might be a business office, but one of the advantages of a home office is the freedom to decorate to your own style and taste.  Go to town and have fun.  The more comfortable and personal you make the space, the more likely you are to keep it organized and functional. About to land the company’s next largest order?  Do it in style.  If your office is stored in a box while supper is on the table, add your own taste with a special picture, pencil holder or the coolest file folders you have ever seen.  Using a cupboard?  Try putting your special pictures on the inside of the cupboard and leave it open while you are at work.

A home office can be fun and flexible.  A home based business can be rewarding.  Keep yourself productive with an organized home office that reflects your business needs and your own personality.

 

Business Organizing Home Organizing Office Organizing Organizing Challenges Productivity
Tags : home office, organized home office, Organizing Maintenance, Professional Organizers in Canada, SOHO

How Many Synonyms Does Planning Have?

Posted by Carolyn on
 March 31, 2015
  ·  1 Comment

Life comes at us all at about 150km/hour in my estimate. Occasionally a little faster; sometimes a little slower. Usually, pretty fast.

Being organized is being prepared to respond to what’s coming at you no matter how fast it arrives. Anticipation, preparation, planning all work the same way when it comes to organizing for life’s challenges.

Take tax season for example. I know today, 30 days before most of our taxes are due, that next year on June 15th, 2015 my business taxes will be due. I have more than a year to prepare myself and all the bits and pieces associated with tax submission in order to submit on time, or depending on your circumstances, early.

Tonight, on the other hand, I have no idea what time everyone will be home for supper and in fact, I’m not even sure anyone will be home for supper. So I have about 5 hours to figure out how to handle that challenge. My solution, a stash of nutritious freezer foods that even my 12 year old can safely prepare for himself after swim team training session.

Home Organizing Organizing Challenges Organizing Time

POC Toronto’s Vendor Marketplace Success

Posted by Carolyn on
 February 24, 2015
  ·  No Comments

Very proud to have Caldwell Mentoring participate in POC Toronto Chapter’s Vendor Marketplace last night.  The well attended evening was an excellent opportunity to mix, mingle and network with other vendors and professional organizers.  It was such a great evening that many members stayed well past closing time.  Thank you to POC Toronto Chapter for hosting this annual event.

Caldwell Evolution News

Children’s Behaviour when parents exhibit Hoarding Behaviour

Posted by Carolyn on
 September 10, 2014
  ·  No Comments

A friend and colleague recently contacted me regarding behaviour she had seen in one of her contacts.  She poses an interesting question and I thought you all might be interested.

VB writes: Is Hoarding in the genes? Have you ever seen young children hoard? In a family I recently worked with, one of the children cried and was very upset when his Dad sent a couple of pieces of furniture to the curb hoping someone would pick up for free.! (The aunt is a “collector” and another aunt shows evidence of hoarding behaviour.) Dad is worried about his child. He understands not wanting to part with toys, but furniture? Any thoughts or advice for this situation?”

Here is my response: Although there is much work currently being done with children of those with hoarding behaviour,  I am not aware of any definitive research on the genetic link for hoarding behaviour. We do know, however, that individuals with chronic disorganization, of which hoarding behaviour is a subset, personify objects and have unusually high emotional attachment to objects. These charact traits I see in the children of my clients all the time.

In the absence of a psyche degree, we as organizers ought not to be trying to remove or change those traits but there are tried and true techniques for managing them so the impact of the traits is not harmful. My fear is that this child has now been emotionally impacted – which he/she will remember long after the furniture is gone – and carry forward to other objects preventing him/her from healthy separation in the future.

Try this:
1. Let the child “say good-bye” to the furniture just like they would a friend.
2. Take a picture as part of the goodbye process and create an agreement on how long the picture hangs around.
3. Help the child understand the furniture needs a new home that can use it better. It will have new life with its new family.
4. Help the child understand objects have a natural life cycle with us. We need/ desire, they come, we use/love/use up, they leave (donation/ sale/recycle/garbage), they have a new life.

I’d be interested in hearing from others on similar experiences to VB.

Organizing Challenges
Tags : Accumulation, Children, Clearing Clutter, Client Questions, organizing strategies, Understanding disorganization

Happy Pesach

Posted by Carolyn on
 April 14, 2014
  ·  No Comments

Happy Passover to our Jewish clients, colleagues and friends.

Caldwell Evolution News Gratitude Holiday Organizing

What to Know Before you Work at Home

Posted by Carolyn on
 March 29, 2014
  ·  No Comments

In a recent article “What to know when you are work from home” in The Post, the author has identified staying focused, security of your work and maintaining a social and professional connections and key components of a successful workspace.  While these are very important, I would add a fourth key element of protecting your workspace.

When setting up a home office, client frequently decide to start by taking over a small part of an existing function space in their home in order to see if working at home will be feasible for their family or home life.  These multi function spaces frequently serve family tasks like home work as well as the new work tasks that have been added by a home office.  We then get called to help them out when they find the children’s homework is mixed in with the latest monthly or quarterly report or preparation of invoices.  

When setting up a work at home location, establish a means of separating the business work you do physically from anything else that might happen at that work station.  This can be accomplished through a cupboard, box or even just a shelf where you material can be collected and put away before the homework research starts up.  You can teach other members of the family that you put away your material when not actively working at the work station and that they are expected to put away their things when leaving the work station.  It might take a bit of reminding at first but your material will be secure and the work station can continue to be used by the family while you enjoy the advantages working at home can bring.

Office Organizing
Tags : home office, work at home, workstation
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