Posts Tagged ‘organizing’

The Organized Life

Friday, June 5th, 2009

Stephanie Denton

Stephanie Denton

Stephanie Denton is an organizing and productivity expert who has been featured on the front pages of both The Wall Street Journal and USA Today. Her consulting and speaking clients over the past fifteen years have included individuals, small businesses and corporations such as Johnson & Johnson and Procter & Gamble.

 

Stephanie is a frequent contributor to national magazines and a longtime syndicated newspaper columnist. She has been interviewed hundreds of times on television and news programs around the country, including CBS This Morning, CNN, and MSNBC and by such publications as The New York Times, Business Week, Inc., Reader’s Digest, Family Circle, Real Simple, Better Homes & Gardens and Entrepreneur.

 

Stephanie is past president of the National Association of Professional Organizers and a recipient of its prestigious Founders Award, the industry’s highest award for career achievements and industry contributions.

 

We recommend this book by Professional Organizer Stephanie Denton. Please read the brief book description below. You can click on the cover photo to place your order.

 

 

 

 

 

The Organized Life: Secrets of an Expert Organizer   By Stephanie Denton

The Organized Life

The Organized Life

“Hundreds of Proven Tips for a Less Stressful Life*A top professional organizer shares her best ideas for saving time, banishing clutter and staying organized *Gorgeous design–with beautiful full-color images and bite-sized tips this guide stands out among other organizing titles.

From overstuffed closets to towering stacks of paper, today’s busy families are hungry for information to help them win the war against clutter. This essential guide includes easy and ingenious ideas for managing every area of modern life, from photos and holidays to the garage, kitchen, home office and kids’ rooms. Packed with practical advice, this book gives readers the information they need to achieve a neat and organized home, and a happier life!”

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UCLA Offering New Class: Organizing Your Workspace

Tuesday, May 12th, 2009

One of our wonderful colleagues in the organizing profession has just done a class at UCLA. Regina Lark, CEO of A Clear Path, is teaching the fundamentals of organization when it comes to your workspace.

 

The following is a glimpse to the article  about buidling job skills in which Regina was interviewed. The article is from  UCLA Today, dated May 11, 2009:

 

“When people cut through the clutter in their workspace, it makes them feel more professional and accomplished,” said Lark, CEO of A Clear Path: Professional Organizing for Home, Work, Life. “They love their new space, they feel more productive and they feel like they can find everything. Some people treat their workspaces as extensions of their home, and it comes to look very unprofessional.”
 
She recalled in-office workshops she’s led where she found herself walking into cubicles and offices littered with old food and overwhelmed by towers of paper and books.
 
“It’s a health and safety issue,” she said. “One woman had books stacked so high she had a pile of books fall on her and ended up with a lump on the head.”
 
She offered a mini-version of her course, hitting the highlights:
  1. Make sure you have time to clean. “Your space didn’t get cluttered overnight, and it won’t get uncluttered all at once. If you don’t set aside enough time, you’ll get frustrated.”
  2. Acknowledge that clearing your workspace means throwing some things away. “Ask yourself, will my life be better served with or without this?”
  3. While you clean, make temporary piles: things to toss, things to recycle, things to file and things to send to the office archives.
  4. After you clean, set up a filing system, and deal with new papers as they come to you, instead of waiting until the papers become new piles.
  5. Take time at the end of your work day to prepare your desk for the next morning.

 

“Being able to find things can save money,” Lark added. “You have no idea how much money is wasted on campus buying supplies that someone already has tucked away in the bowels of their desk.”

 

You can read the entire article here.

 

Congratulations, Regina!

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Professional Organizers - The Old Hybrid?

Thursday, April 30th, 2009

I found an old article about what we do at OAI.

How old? August 1997!

Is it still relevant? YES!

 

Title: Organizers Clear Out Company Clutter

 

It talks about improving proficiency, getting organized and increasing efficiency in the business environment. Here are some snipets:

 

“Professional organizers now are a hybrid mix of interior designer, schedule adviser and occupational engineer. Throw in a little psychology and lots of common sense, and a fairly accurate image of the modern-day professional organizer comes into focus”

 

“I go in and look at the job, then determine the client’s needs based on what the client tells me,” Ms. Donald said. “Some have space needs, some have systems needs. Some just need to maintain or regain control of their clutter.”

 

“Every office has to be organized differently,” said Ms. Donald.

 

“If I had suggested the same organization with Equity Technologies that I have for this client, it would have caved in.” she said.

 

Equity Technologies is a fast-growing Mobile business run by Cathy Anderson-Giles, who retained Ms. Donald several months ago.

 

“We started out about seven years ago warehousing equipment for companies,” Ms. Anderson-Giles said.

 

As the company and related enterprises grew to more than 50 employees, Ms. Anderson-Giles said she needed to delegate more responsibility to her staff and reorganize her office operations.

 

She heard about Organizing Associates Inc. through a sister-in-law whose professor at [the] University of South Alabama had hired Ms. Donald.

 

“My sister-in-law was very impressed with the changes she saw in the way the professor was handling classes, meetings and schedules,” Ms. Anderson-Giles said. “Lee came in and studied the way we disseminate information, the way we communicate with each other and with customers. The main thing she helped me do personally was change my focus from being a manager to being a leader. She really helped me with that transition.”

 

According to Stephanie Denton, the national chairperson for NAPO who will be among the speakers at the upcoming conference in Point Clear, professional organizers assist everyone from the homeowner who can’t seem to get a garage straightened out to major corporations going through mergers.”

 

 

Click here to view the entire article with pictures.

Planning Your Office Space

Thursday, April 2nd, 2009

by Mark Kolakoski, Contract Resources

 

Think Inside the Box

 

Traditionally, most people plan the outside of their new building first. Only after that plan is complete do they focus on the space plan for the inside. You may want to consider doing the opposite, and thinking “inside the box” first. Consider this; your staff will be spending most of their time inside the building, not on the outside. The amount of thought you put into planning the inside your offices will determine how productive, happy, healthy, and safe your people will be. So why not take a look at this first.

 

 

How to Start

 

First, you should compile a list of all your staff members and their corresponding job responsibilities. What jobs are exclusive to an individual?  Which jobs are shared between people?  Do staff members often work in teams?  This information will help you determine whether to centralize your staff into a team area; to set up private offices; or use a combination of both. And, how many offices you will need. For example, admin or middle management staff may be better off in a team area so that sharing and communication will be enhanced, while senior executives may need a private office due to the nature of their work. 

 

 

Plan to Grow

 

You always should plan for more space than you actually will need today. Too many companies are short sighted and only plan for their present needs. As your company grows, your staff will need to grow, too. Often, companies fall short on planning enough administrative space. All too soon they outgrow their new space and have to start looking at building again. This costs more money in the long run than building a larger space to begin with.

 

 

 Lasting Impressions

 

When you’re planning your office space, look at if from the perspective of a new customer visiting you for the first time. Is it easy to find your office? Do they have a warm and inviting feeling? Is it easy to find your way around once your inside? Overall, would a person feel welcome there? First, your offices need to be centrally located near a major entrance with ample parking. Second, your offices need to be located on a main corridor so they are easily accessible from not only the main entrance, but from anywhere in the building. Finally, well placed directional and office signs are a must so that people can easily navigate through your office space with ease.

 

 

 

Contract Resources is a unique workplace interiors company that specializes in furnishings and interior space planning for companies of all shapes and sizes. For more information, please contact Mark Kolakoski directly at 251-583-0980. 

 

http://www.contract-resources.com/

 

 

The Great Quest to Be Organized

Wednesday, February 18th, 2009

 

Could your disorganized work style lead to health problems? Yes, says Sandra Seick RN, the director of cardiovascular development with Providence Hospital. Chaos leads to stress, which takes itself out on the body. The primary organ affected by stress is the heart. Eat right, exercise and reduce your stress, advises Seick.

 

Not long ago, high tech gurus around the country were predicting that, by now, we would have become a paperless society. Though a heavenly vision, it simply hasn’t happened. In fact, with the onset of technology, people seem to be waging an internal battle, stuck somewhere between their old filing system and an increasing attraction to their computer and all of its paperless capabilities. The result is chaos, lost souls who, at one time relied on personal filing methods but who are now wandering aimlessly in a disorganized realm.

 

Today, it is estimated that 80 percent of all information is still paper based. U.S. and Canadian businesses alone generate over one trillion new pieces of paper each year In addition, the average time to retrieve and re-file a paper document is 10 minutes, and about 30 percent of documents are lost or misfiled and have to be recovered at an alarming cost of $120 per document. (Source: Gartner Group, Coopers &Lybrand, Ernst &Young).

 

“It’s not only frustrating to be disorganized, it’s just plain costly,” says Lee Donald, president of Organizing Associates Inc. in Mobile. Donald likes to quote a study by Coopers and Lybrand which found that the average executive wastes 150 hours per year looking for lost, misplaced, misfiled or mislabeled documents.

 

“People think that being organized is being perfect, but it’s not,” Donald points out. “Being organized is having a system that works consistently for that person.”

 

Though there are different software programs available to help people become more organized, Donald’s favorite one for filing systems is called “Taming The Paper Tiger.”

 

Describing it as a “search engine for your files,” Donald says the system integrates paper filing systems into a computer program that can help people find information instantly, reminds them of any activity they need to maintain within a file, and can even keep track of archived information stored offsite.

 

“You’re not getting rid of your files,” said Donald. “You’re simply logging them into a system where you can cross reference information and find things instantly without searching through a file drawer. It’s so useful that you no longer need to keep a single piece of paper on your desk. Your active files and information are placed within arms reach, so even your “things to do list” can be dropped into a file.”

 

Mark Glass, CEO of Southern Heritage Inc. is a believer in the Paper Tiger method. His three-year-old company was experiencing 10 percent com pounded growth every month of last year and this year, the percentage has been even higher.

 

“My desk was a three- ring circus,” said Glass. “We have 8,000 customers in our data base. I use my computer for everything, but when it came to paper; I didn’t file anything for fear I’d lose it. I needed to put my hands on that paper instantly.”

 

One day, Glass was watching television and saw Donald talking about the Paper Tiger system. He called her the same day with one simple sentence, “You are going to organize me.” Before long, Donald was in his office helping him put his papers into the system.

 

“With Paper Tiger, everything’s in the computer and files are numbered. It’s so simple, but it’s ingenious,” said Glass. “If paperwork bogs you down, you can’t grow. This enables you to get control so you can step up to the next level.”

 

 

Five Tips for Organizing Your Workload

1. Eliminate the non-essentials.

2. Prioritize your task or “to do” list using a 1, 2, or 3to indicate order of importance. Do one of each every day, so that the lesser important things do not turn into urgent matters.

3. Schedule appointments with yourself to get work done. Keep the appointment!

4. Define and delegate when possible.

5. Break projects into manageable steps and schedule the due dates for each step on a calendar for all involved.

 

 

Integrated Legal Office Systems Lead to Productivity, Part 5

Wednesday, February 18th, 2009

 

Key #5 Listen Well, Communicate Effectively  

Good listening skills help us avoid miscommunication with co-workers, which reduces stress and improves individual and office productivity. One of the listening issues I’ve found in many practices is that there is not time set aside on a daily basis for the people in the office to communicate face to face. 

We all get busy and think that since there is not a fire to put out at this moment there is not an important issue to discuss.   When time is taken to discuss the issues at hand it keeps an office running smoothly because everyone knows what is important. 

Again, the most important part of effective listening is to summarize.  Be certain that you have clearly understood the message.  Also, when getting a point across to others be aware that the way you speak – your voice tone and facial expressions often have a more lasting impact than the actual words you use.

Integrated Legal Office Systems Lead to Productivity, Part 4

Wednesday, February 18th, 2009

 

Key # 4 Prioritize Tasks, Schedule Time, and Minimize Stress

When we prioritize our tasks and schedule our time, we DO minimize Stress. Maintaining balance in our lives is so important and sometimes it is hard to do.

Use a simple system of 1-2-3 to prioritize tasks.  Make a conscious decision of what is the most important task to be done that day and schedule that task when you are at your peak production time.  In other words, make an appointment with yourself and keep it.

Do not put more than a few #1’s on your “to do list” daily.  That’s a great way to cause burnout quickly. Remember to do the truly important things, not necessarily the things that others deem urgent.

One important thing we all need to do is schedule our time, not only including our outside appointments but also our office time.

1)    Did you know that 80% of our daily interruptions usually come from 20% of the people we work with?

 

2)    An average interruption during the work day consumes 10 – 20 minutes in getting back on track, not counting the actual time with the interrupter. 

Try scheduling appointments with yourself as well as with others.  Time blocking will help you do that and it is easy to do using your computer calendar. Outlook is the most often used computer calendar in the firms I have worked with. 

In the August 2008 issue of Addendum, Laura Calloway wrote an article reviewing a book by Ben Schorr regarding Outlook 2007.  In the article, she says that someone else has already done the hard part by writing the book; now you can streamline your office tasks quickly and easily.  I agree.

Laura declares The Lawyer’s Guide to MS Office 2007 is a must-have for every lawyer who has ever wanted to pull out their hair over e-mail management. For information on how to order the book, go to www.alabar.org

Another way to minimize stress is to pay close attention to various ergonomic factors in your office.  Keyboards, chairs and lighting are so important and many of us do not pay much attention to these things.

 

Lee’s Keys #5 can literally change the culture of your legal office into a productive, efficient machine.

Integrated Legal Office Systems Lead to Productivity, Part 3

Wednesday, February 18th, 2009

 

Lee’s Keys #3  Improve Efficiency, Reduce Steps

Let me share some statistics regarding paper.  In a survey done by Fast Company, the question was asked,

“Do you use more paper or e-mail in your business?”  Eighty-six percent said “more paper.”  Look at these paper statistics:

1)         The average American office worker is estimated to use a minimum of 1 sheet of paper every 12 minutes.  

 

2)         80% of papers filed in drawers are never referenced again

 

3)         50% of all filed materials are duplicates or expired information

Remember the RULE OF ORIGINATION

“The person responsible for the origination of a document is the person who is responsible for maintaining that information either on paper or electronically.”

One of the best ways to maintain hard copy information in any form is by using MobilLogic.  It is a web based search engine for your file cabinet as well as a great front-end application for your records management system.  MobilLogic also works very well with off site hard copy storage and retrieval. 

If you don’t already have a standardized hard copy filing system with pop-up reminders, this one can solve many issues for you.  With reminders regarding actions to be taken on a file as well as searchable records of cases in progress, you don’t have to remember which legal pad the notes were written on. 

We know where the paper comes from, but what do we do with it?  Use the ART OF WASTEBASKETRY® to determine whether or not to keep a piece of paper.  Ask yourself these 6 questions when making a tough decision about keeping a piece of paper.

1)      Did I ask for this Information?

 

2)      Is this the only place the information is available?

 

3)      Is the information recent enough to be useful?

 

4)      Can I identify the special circumstances when I would want this information?

 

5)      Are there tax or legal implications?

 

6)      What is the worst possible thing that could happen if I didn’t have this piece of paper? 

 

From:  Kiplinger’s Taming the Paper Tiger: Organizing the Paper in Your Life

Revised and Expanded Edition

By Barbara Hemphill

Registered trademarks are the property of Hemphill Institute

If the answer to these questions is NO, then toss the paper!  Remember to include scanning in your office records management system.  Used properly this will become a great part of improving office efficiency. 

Over the years I’ve learned there are different learning types in most offices – visual, auditory, and kinesthetic. The people who are kinesthetic will be the least likely to want to convert to a total scanning system. These are the people who will re-print a scanned document to read it. 

 

Know that scanning is important as a part of overall office organization, but it may work better for some practices rather than others due to the people who are the end users of the information.

  

One practice I worked with saved its client millions of dollars because they were able to locate the original printed fax cover sheet.  That alone was worth the effort for the office to become organized!

 

Lee’s Keys #4 is about prioritizing, scheduling, and minimizing.

Integrated Legal Office Systems Lead to Productivity, Part 2

Wednesday, February 18th, 2009

 

Lee’s Keys #2 Think Vertically and Visually!

 

This includes:

 

1)      Separating items according to categories

 

2)      Designing vertical storage spaces specifically for the items being stored in them, and also for the persons using them the most

 

3)      LABEL EVERYTHING – there are many different ways to label, including docket number, client matter, dates, or a combination of these.  I’ve seen firms use them all. 

 

4)      Design a plan for the desktop organization of the computers in your firm.  When everyone has the same programs in the same order on their desktop, it is much easier to locate information in their absence. 

 

Many law offices don’t realize how much it costs for even one person to be disorganized.  To calculate the COST of disorganization in your office, you can go to the website www.eldonsolutions.com.  As an example, I put in an average salary of $45,000 in a company with 6 employees.

 

The cost of disorganization in that company 

per year was $33,750 – that is a lot of wasted money.

 

Did you know that a 1% improvement in office productivity equals 10% of the operating cost? Thinking Vertically and Visually leads us to Lee’s Key #3.

 

 

 

 

 

Integrated Legal Office Systems Lead to Productivity, Part 1

Wednesday, February 18th, 2009

 

“If you fail to plan, you plan to fail.” We have all heard the saying, but what does it mean in an office environment?

 

I have learned over the years that when you say the words “get organized”, different people will hear different things.  One person may think “communication”, another person may think “spatial order” and another may think “time management.”  Actually they are all correct; I will give you some Keys to remember when planning the systems in your law office.

 

Lee’s Keys #1 Design your Waterfront Property© for Maximum Use

 

How many of you have Waterfront Property©? Actually, anyone who works in an office has it! It’s a term I coined to describe the space around your desk or credenza – or the area where you do most of your work. 

 

When you sit in your chair, hold your arms out to your side and turn in a circle, this area is considered your Waterfront Property©.  It’s the most valuable piece of property in your office because it is where your most important work is done.

 

One of the main complaints I hear about a person’s Waterfront Property is “what do I do with all this stuff”?  We tend to keep lots of “stuff” around us in our Waterfront Property area especially if we are visual people.  And we tend to keep this Waterfront Property “stuff” in piles, rather than in files.  

 

Someone with lots of piles is creating what I call “horizontal filing”. These people have difficulty finding information quickly because most of it is paper based. If a matter or case is not closed, then we tend to keep the information in paper form, and most of the time it’s filed horizontally rather than vertically.  This creates a pile that must be lifted and moved every time information is needed.  This equals more time wasted.

 

Many law practices wait until the case is closed before they consider the ways they keep the information. Remember that information in a combination of paper, electronic, and scanned documents is often a good way to handle a case or a legal matter.

 

Always send the closed case hard copy information to an AAA Certified records management center rather than using a mini warehouse unit, or closet, or attic of the building you are in. The difference in these options is dramatic and failure to manage and store your records properly could have serious consequences.

 

When horizontal filing is the organizing problem, I teach people Lee’s Key #2.