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Do you feel guilty about all the publications you purchase but never read --
or the articles you read with great ideas or opportunities you never implement?
Are you spending time recreating marketing materials because you cannot find
what you wrote the preceding month or year? Do you run out the door for an
appointment at the last minute because you could not find your keys or the
directions you needed to get where you are going? Are you frequently feeling
tired and overwhelmed? Do the people you care about express frustration at your
disorganization or want to spend more time with you? If so, getting
organized should be high on your priority list!
One of the continual frustrations in my career as a professional organizing
consultant has been peoples misconceptions about what it means to be
organized. Visions of unrealistically tidy desks and impossible
mandates such as Handle a piece of paper only once conjure up
feelings of frustration and impossibility. Fears o f being imprisoned by a
specific work style eliminate the reality of the freedom resulting from true
organization.
What does it mean to get organized? Many people have a total
misunderstanding of what it really means. I am trained as a musician. I look at
organizing as an art form. Paint me a picture of what you want your life to be
like, and I will help you get organized so you can get there!
Organization is very personal. To identify whether a particular
aspect of your work or life is organized, ask these three questions:
- 1. Does it work?
- 2. Do you like it?
- 3. Does it work for others?
Getting organized is about creating and sustaining a setting in which
everything around you supports who you are and who you want to be and
allows everyone else you care about to do the same! The secret of getting
organized and staying organized is what we call a Productive
Environment. I have spent the past 25+ years assisting individuals and
organizations to create and sustain a productive environment so they can
accomplish their work and enjoy their lives. We do that by helping them
organize their time, space and information.
If you are ready for a life that will help you increase your profit and
decrease your stress, here are 9 proven principles to get you started:
1. Todays mail is tomorrows pile
Are you sick of the clutter in your life? Most people start getting
organized by throwing away old stuff. Our most popular service is called The
8-Hour Miracle. We spend eight hours with a client with the promise of
three things: 1) You will know what to do with every new thing that comes into
your home or office. 2) You will be able to find anything we have filed or
stored in that eight hours in five seconds or less. 3) You will have a
Productive Environment GamePlan for handling whatever we didnt
handle in the eight hours we were there. If we do not live up to that promise,
you do not owe us any money. How can we make that promise? Because we ignore
all your old stuff, and set up a system to design the future you desire.
2. Organizing in and of itself is of no value.
It is merely a tool to help you accomplish something important to you. Ask
yourself, If I were organized, what would I be able to do that I cannot
do now? An inability to organize a particular aspect of ones life
often reflects a should mandated by someone else not an
inner desire to improve the quality of work or life, which is the only real
reason for organizing anything! Always ask Should I be organizing this at
all?
3. Clutter is postponed decisions.®
Not being able to decide what to keep, where to keep it, how long to keep
it, etc. causes paralysis when it comes to organization. The good news is that
there are really very few options. You can get rid of something, you can store
it so you can use it regularly, or you can store it so you can use it if you
want to.
4. Implement The FAT System
Papers pile up on your kitchen counter or a desk because you have not made
a decision. The good news is there are really only three decisions you can
make: File (in case you want it in the future, Act (the ball is in your court
to pay the bill, write the report, or make a phone call), or Toss (decide it is
not necessary).
5. Eighty percent of what you keep you never use
Ironically, often the more you keep the less you use. It is no mistake the
simplicity movement is one of the fastest growing in the world! Continually
practice The Art of Wastebasketry® by asking these questions:
Does this require action?
Can I identify a specific use?
Is it difficult to obtain again?
Is it recent enough to be useful?
Are there tax or legal implications?
What is the worst possible thing that would happen I did not have this?
If you can live with your answers, toss or recycle!
6. Overresponsibility can become irresponsibility
One of the major reasons people keep things is because they might be
useful someday. For example, many people have every pair of eyeglasses
they ever ordered while someone 20 minutes away cannot afford even one pair. Do
you have difficulty letting go of things even if you do not use them?
Finding someone else who needs them more than you do will make it easier.
7. Half of any job is having the right tool
For years I struggled with guilt about my inability to stick to an exercise
program. The combination of spending 80% of the time on the road and negative
childhood experiences about physical activities seemed insurmountable, until I
discovered I could get amazing results using exercise equipment I could pack in
my suitcase and use in the privacy of my bedroom.
8. Perfection prevents progress
A creative mind always has more ideas than the physical body can carry out.
Virtually everyone I know, including myself, feels guilty about not being able
to keep on top of the to read pile. Consider spending more time
contemplating what you will do as a result of what you have read than feeling
guilty about what you have not done.
9. Asking for help is a sign of wisdom, not weakness
Sadly, many people have been conditioned to feel that being successful
means going it alone. Nothing could be farther from the truth. As president of
The National Association of Professional Organizers, my theme, which I have
subsequently turned into a theme for my life and my business, was
Together we are better. I believe that statement applies to
all of life. The only thing keeping you from getting what you want is finding
people who can and want to help you get there!
Getting organized is an on-going process, not a destination. It is about
progress, not perfectionism. When you feel less organized than you would like
to be, forgive yourself, and move on. Substitute If only
with
Next time
and you are on the right road!
Will any system turn you into a perennially clean desk person
unlikely! Messy desks are the natural outcome of a hectic pace. A place
for everything and everything in its place forget it, but it is half
right! A place for everythi ng means than when you want to clean up your office
to meet a client, or just because you are sick of the mess yourself, recovering
is no big deal! Some quick decision-making will clean off your desk in a matter
of minutes, bring back a sense of control and get you on your way to
productivity, profit, and peace of mind!
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