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Archive for Office Organizing – Page 3

Keeping to the Agenda

Posted by Carolyn on
 March 25, 2009
  ·  No Comments

This post is going to make everyone else happy and give you some more work. “Oh great!”, I can hear you say. But remember, when your organization makes everyone else happy, you look good.

It’s not about goals – its about agendas. Do you use them for your meetings? Do you send them out ahead of time? Are they clear and concise and related to the previous meeting’s minutes (if there was one)?

There is almost nothing worse for meeting attendees, even the virtual kind, than a meeting that doesn’t stay focused, runs overtime and doesn’t accomplish the goals for which it was set up. Your agenda, sent out in advance, will notify everyone of the purpose of the meeting, the time commitment, who will attend, what they are expected to contribute and what they can expect to get out of it.

Set up your meeting agenda. Send it out ahead of time. Stick to the agenda when you meet. Everyone will be happy to attend your meetings.

Office Organizing
Tags : Agenda, Meetings, Schedule, Time Management

Organizing to Maintain your Sanity – 5 Ignore Criticism and Enjoy Bonus

Posted by Carolyn on
 March 23, 2009
  ·  No Comments

You’ve heard it. I’ve heard it. We all know what it sounds like.

“Getting a little anal aren’t you? Turning into the next Martha S. here at the office?”

Here comes the criticism from those people, usually one person in particular, who can’t stand to let you reach a higher level of organization in your work. It might even be your boss. Who knows, maybe that person is jealous, envious or afraid that you might be more productive, more effective and receive the accompanying accolades that eludes them due to their disorganization.

They have every reason to be very, very afraid. Clutter gone, priorities shift and here you come with productivity in hand. Using the 15 to 45 minutes of routine, organizing maintenance that I have outlined in items 1 through 4 of this series, you will have freed up your mind away from the clutter and what you “should” be doing about it, to whatever your boss, organization or business really wants you to focus on.

If the naysayers want to focus on criticising you, let them do whatever. You’ve got product to sell, clients to support and staff to lead. You rock!

Home Organizing Office Organizing
Tags : Goals, Maintain Your Sanity, SOHO

Organizing to Maintain your Office – 1 The Floor

Posted by Carolyn on
 March 16, 2009
  ·  No Comments

I am committed to education. I am committed to educating my clients with new behaviours and habits to keep their lives organized. I have heard it said that insanity is doing the same thing over and over again and expecting a different result. If my clients continue to do what they have always done – their lives will once again be full of the clutter that I help them control/purge/manage and they will be no more organized then before we started working together.

This week’s posts will address basic, simple habits to help you keep the clutter at bay. Organizing does not have to be complicated. In fact, the less complicated your routines the more likely anyone – you, your spouse/partner, your children – are likely to follow them. Keep it simple and focused – keep the clutter away.

Habit 1 – Clear the floor.
Spend 15 minutes at the end of each day clearing away the debris off your floor. Refile the file folders that you dropped their. Pick up the paper and recycle or file. Return the books to the book shelf. Look under your desk. Is there an old pile of shoes? Throw out the ones you no longer wear and put the others in the closet with your coat. Anything that doesn’t actually belong in your office can be returned to its rightly location.

If you are doing this exercise at home, and you have children, they can easily help. Bear in mind, it does not need to be a lengthy process. Give the children 15 minutes to run through the house and pick up/put away their toys, books, homework items, sports equipment. Consider giving a reward when they are done like reading them an extra chapter of their book or a Popsicle.

There may be lots of clutter on the floor when your first start. That’s OK. Try this for 28 days without a break and I guarantee you that by day 29 your house will be tidier and you will feel more organized and in control of the clutter.

Office Organizing
Tags : Accumulation, Clearing Clutter, maintaining organization, managing mess, mess, office organizing, organizing strategies

Recession Strategies

Posted by Carolyn on
 March 10, 2009
  ·  No Comments

“Who has time to organize?” you ask. “My boss has just been let go and a dozen colleagues have been downsized. A neat office is not on my priority list.“

While a neat office may not be high on your priority list, A1 performance ought to be. In these difficult economic times, you want to be sure your high performance is facilitated by your organization level and not hampered or impeded by your lack of organization.

And if you think you have hidden your disorganization from your colleagues and boss for these past years – think again. Most managers have a pretty good idea of who is well organized and who is not. For one thing, organization and performance are frequently related – your colleague next door with the clean desk doesn’t waste any time in getting your boss the report he/she needs or following up on that very hot sales tip.

If there were ever a time to commit to improving your organization level, now would be it. Start with either your desk or the floor. Get rid of the extra paper, shoes, garbage, recycling and boxes. It will speak volumes to those in charge about your commitment to productivity.

Office Organizing
Tags : Accomplishment, Clearing Clutter, organizing goals, organizing strategies

Quiet Hour for Executives

Posted by Carolyn on
 March 5, 2009
  ·  No Comments

How often do you book a meeting with yourself in order to get time alone to work on a priority item? All too often, we feel guilty for booking time to ourselves rather than making ourselves available to the people in our business world. Consider, however, whether or not those priority items are in fact getting done on a timely basis with the number of distractions coming into your workspace during your regular work day.

Booking a quiet hour whether for a project, a task, or to think can be a very effective organizing tool for managers and executives. It is especially effective for planning time at the end of the day. The best time to plan for tomorrow’s agenda is at the end of today. Taking a quiet hour to review your priorities, plan out your day and block in your activities will increase your effectiveness as a leader and as an employee.

It may take a couple of times before the people around you realize that you really do mean to be left alone. Don’t answer the phone, email or door. Pretend that no one is in the office. Concentrate for that quiet hour on the task at hand. Pretty soon other people will learn to respect your time and need to work alone. Especially when they see the productivity that results!

Office Organizing
Tags : Goals, Leadership, Time Management

More on Labelling E-files

Posted by Carolyn on
 March 4, 2009
  ·  No Comments

You have no problem handling file names with dates attached but now you are wondering “How do I label files so that my most frequently used items come to the top of my list when my computer only files by number or alphabet?”

Use letters like numbers to help your computer file by frequency of use. If you use a file often, start the file name label with an A (or AA, AAA depending on the number of files you are labelling). Start the file name of those files used least often with a Z (ZZ or ZZZ etc.)

Your computer will obligingly file alphabetically reading those letter first and your files will be listed according to frequency of use.

Office Organizing
Tags : E-files, manage email, organizing strategies

Keep it all Contained

Posted by Carolyn on
 February 26, 2009
  ·  No Comments

I’m staying on the limited real estate theme today. With a small desk/work space, it is more important than ever to ensure all your work tools – pens, rulers, paper, drafting tools, memory keys – are as contained as possible. When small items have a home to be returned to, they are less likely to wander around your work space.

The containers for these items could be anything at all that works for you. If you are using vertical storage space, you will want something the fits on the space and is easy to get to. If the work space is in the open and subject to the public eye, you may choose decorative containers. If you have only yourself working in the space, why not use a clear container to help you locate what is inside.

If you are a tosser and dropper, and not likely to open a lid to put something away, then use open storage like bins, open boxes, baskets or a similar item. Once again, make sure the items you use on a regular basis are at your finger tips and the items you use occasionally are not sitting in prime real estate!

Office Organizing
Tags : Clearing Clutter, home office, managing mess, mess, organizing small stuff, organizing strategies, SOHO

Solutions for Limited Real Estate

Posted by Carolyn on
 February 25, 2009
  ·  No Comments

Is your desk too small for the stuff that sits on top of it? Are you feeling cramped and penned in by hot files, current files, your computer and just the mere presence of your coffee cup?

Whenever possible, move to vertical storage and even a vertical desk. what? Put my desk on the wall?

Pretty much, that’s it. consider placing shelving units above your desk or, if space does not permit, even to one side of your desk. Then set up the items off your desk onto the shelves. Those things you use daily will be closest to you while the occasional items can sit on the shelves farther away.

Office Organizing
Tags : home office, managing mess, mess, office organizing, SOHO

Label those E-files

Posted by Carolyn on
 February 24, 2009
  ·  No Comments

Enough about organizing paper, I can hear you shouting.

OK, let’s get a grip on all those files on your desktop.

Computers don’t read or count. They recognized yes or no. When labeling your files, the computer will automatically try and sort either alphabetically or numerically depending on the symbols you have chosen (letters or numbers). If you want a file sorted by it’s name in a date order use a number to represent the date. Use “0” placeholder for single digit months i.e. Jan to Sept otherwise your computer will put October first in the list.

Office Organizing
Tags : E-files, labelling, organize e-files

Ecofriendly Labelling

Posted by Carolyn on
 February 23, 2009
  ·  No Comments

While there is no doubt, many of us print as little as possible, sort only what we can’t avoid and file what is left over, paper seems determined to be here for a long time. As a result, paper files are still an organizational structure that must be managed.

Here is a tip to limit the number of file folders that end up in the recycling. When labelling the folders, use a file label to write on. They are readily available from most stationary or business supply stores like Grand and Toy or Staples. If you put the file name right on the label, when that file is finished, the file folder can easily be reused by simply putting a new file label over the old one.

Office Organizing
Tags : Files, labelling, Labels, organizing strategies
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