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how to get organized at home

Home Organizing: Going on an Information Diet

By Blog, Business Organizing, Home Office Organization, Home Organizing, Organizing Paper Files No Comments

home organizingOur day sets us up for information overload. Social media, Magazines, T.V., Online Subscriptions, Newspapers, the list goes on. If we don’t learn how to regulate our information you can become overwhelmed. Your home and mind become cluttered. Business and home organizing suffer. We are far from the productive people we could be.

Here’s four simple steps to decrease your information and improve your home organizing, business organizing, and mental space:

Step 1 – Limit Times Checking Email

Harvard Business Review did a study on multi-tasking and time wasted on the psychological switching gears back and forth.  Multi-tasking decreases your productivity by up to 50% and the switching back and forth between tasks or projects also wastes time of 10-45 minutes.

No wonder our to do lists are bulging, desks are piled high with unfinished paperwork, and people are drowning in email. Think about the business and home organizing you could get done with almost an entire hour added to your productive time.

 Step 2 – Group like Activities Together

Depending on your type of work, set 2-5 times a day to check your email.  Turn off all notifications and ringers.

For other activities like project work, making phone calls, responding to emails, meetings, coaching hours, service hours, invoicing, home organizing, and planning to name a few, block out times in your schedule to do similar tasks.  This is also known as batching.  Want to know where your times goes, track your activities for a week!  It will be an eye-opening experience and you’ll get to the root issues of your productivity much faster.

 Step 3 – Set boundaries

Get clear on your desired outcomes and goals and you’ll be more selective on what type of information you keep and let into your world.  Create space by organizing your paper, books, magazines, photos and electronic files.  Only keep what is useful, relevant and easy to access.  Keeping something for “just in case I may need it someday” doesn’t cut it.  This is where people get into overwhelm, waste time, procrastinate and create unnecessary piles of clutter in their offices, homes and computers.  Home organizing suffers greatly!

Also, keep a small basket for magazines and reading material.  When it’s full, its time to purge!  When the filing cabinets are full, it’s time to purge and the same goes for bookshelves, your Inbox and other areas of your office and home.

 Step 4 – Decrease Volume

When you know what your retention guidelines are for keeping computer files, financial files, project and paper files, meeting notebooks, emails, client files, magazine and newspaper subscriptions, and so on, deciding what to keep and what to purge is simple.  You take the heavy thinking out of business and home organizing. Write out your retention policy for the different areas of your business or home office and have it handy on your computer for easy reference.

Recently, an Office Manager asked me what to do with 17 years of meeting notebooks.  After discussing it for 30 minutes and talking with the Health Director, we were clear that all meeting minutes and financials  were saved electronically and any other information that may be lingering in the notebooks were safe to let go.  A week later, I received an email saying “I did it!  I shredded 17 years of notebooks and I feel better.  Out with the old, towards the future we go.  The past is the past!”  A huge load of stress was released, freed up some mental space for creative thinking, and space opened up in his office.

High performers practice the above steps because they are clear about where they are going, what information to let into their world and focus on doing the right actions on a consistent basis.  Going on an information diet will free up physical space as well as space in your mind to be more creative and productive.

 

Want to improve business and home organizing? This is where it starts. What does your information diet include?  Leave your comment below.

 

organizing back to school, pencils, getting kids ready for back to school,

Back to School Organizing Tips

By Blog, Free Articles, Home Office Organization, Home Organizing, Organizing Paper Files No Comments

No matter how chaotic it gets at home, having a system for keeping track of kids’ things is essential. There’s sports schedules and phone lists, papers to sign, health records, music books, report cards, and precious keepsakes that tend to pile up around the house.

Then there’s the sports equipment, jackets, shoes, backpacks, lunch containers, homework, projects, and electronics that your children drop at the door when they come home from school each day. Times this by three to five kids and you’ve got a giant heap sitting on the floor on a daily bases.

The key to keeping your sanity and peace of mind is to create a place for them to easily hang their coat and backpacks. I love the storage locker system if you can create space for this in your home. Also, create a homework area and have all the necessary supplies handy for their projects as well.

Then gather all the sports equipment and store each child’s items in separate bins, for each sport. Store bulky equipment in a one area, sports clothes in their closet. If they play soccer and baseball, then have a small clear container for each sport and make sure to label the bins “Soccer Clothes” and “Baseball Clothes.” When you’re rushing out the door to soccer, the right socks and shorts will be in one place verses all over the bedroom or house.

Next, create a Family Reference Binder with tabs for each child. Behind each child’s tab you can file their sports schedules, music schedule and any other important phone numbers that you want to have at your fingertips! Everyone in the family will thank you for gathering all the papers and putting them in one central location!

Now to deal with all the other papers. Create a hanging file for each child and keep any awards, report cards and other keepsakes in this file for the current school year. At the end of the school year, simply take out the papers and file into their keepsake box. For larger artwork, just take a picture and store the photo in their school photo album. Or store large artwork in an art porfolio.

Be realistic about what school papers and artwork you are going to keep. The more stuff you have, the more time and space it will take up to store it. A good rule of thumb is to “keep the best of the best and let the rest go”. Ask yourself, “When was the last time you looked at your keepsake box stored in your attic?”

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Want To Use This Article In Your Newsletter or Website? You have my permission as long as you include this complete blurb with it: Sherry Borsheim is the president of International Association of Business Organizing and Simply Productive. You can visit Sherry, access her free article archive and grab lots of free stuff here. Sherry lives in Vancouver, BC Canada with her husband (her high-school sweetheart).

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How to Maximize Your Closet Space

By Blog, Closet Organizing, Quick Organizing Tips No Comments

Have a Messy Closet?

Despite your best efforts to keep an organized closet, does it still feel like a chaotic mess?

 

Do you often find yourself thinking “I have nothing to wear!” every morning?

 

In today’s consumer-driven world, we’re constantly being urged to buy more, and it’s easier than ever to accumulate more than we need. But with these few simple strategies, you’ll easily be able to purge and organize your closet.

 

Get ready to start each morning feeling fresh and confident in your new calming, functional space!

 

 

Declutter + Purge Your Closet

Think about this for a moment; how much time is wasted while you get ready each morning?

 

Between eating breakfast, picking an outfit for the day, styling ourselves, packing lunch, and don’t even get me started on adding kids in this routine… that’s a lot to manage!

 

Each day, we’re already making an average of 35,000 conscious and subconscious decisions. So wouldn’t it be more productive of us to save that extra brainpower and take a few of them off our plate?

 

There’s one particular moment about creating a organized closet that has always stood out to me, and it happened at the time I was just starting my business.

 

 

I was working in the home of a busy mom when she confided in me that the most stressful part of her morning routine was getting dressed.

 

Once asked when the last time her closet was cleaned out was, she had an epiphany!

 

She had never realized just how much stress was caused by her closet being disorganized and too full.

 

The next day I was with her, I said, “Today’s the day we get you an organized closet!

 

 

She excitedly agreed, and one by one I pulled each item out of the closet and asked her:

 

 “Do you love this?

Do you wear this?

Does it fit and make you feel great when you wear it?

 

If she answered No to any of these key questions, the item went straight into the donate pile! (we also had “Try-on” and “Give to friends” piles, too)

 

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Organize Clothes In Your Closet

Next, we started to hang related items together in the closet – pants, blazers, cardigans, dresses, skirts, and tops.

 

Then, we arranged each section by color. I like to go from lights to darks, followed by the classic ordering of the rainbow. Something like this; whites, greys, browns, blacks, then red, orange, yellow, green, blue, and violet.

 

Ahhhh, what bliss it was to just awe at such an organized closet!

 

 

Design Your Closet Organization

With everything neatly hung up, we tallied how many hangers we had used and planned a shopping trip.

 

I made sure to follow an important organizing rule: Never go shopping for containers or other organizing supplies until you’ve sorted through everything.

 

Many people make this mistake and end up returning most of what they bought. It’s important to know what you need to contain before you try buying the how (supplies).

 

It is also important to buy the right hangers for the right items in your newly organized closet.

 

Because in case you don’t know, there are different hangers for pants, skirts, shirts, and jackets!

 

If you want to know where to find my favorite hangers, check out this Instagram post and DM me for the links!

 

In my home, we have very limited storage. So I like to keep things contained in an allotted space.

 

When the stuff starts to spill out of that space, it’s time to let some go. I am constantly (monthly) giving things away and I’m finding that I buy way less than I used to!

 

 

Our household is a strong believer in “What’s old for me is new for someone else!

 

 

How To Actually KEEP Your Closet Organized

 

Have a “What NOT to Wear” Party

Invite your friends over and let them tell you what to get rid of!

 

Try everything on, relive some past memories, have a few laughs, then let those old clothes move out of your old cluttered closet. Now you’re on your way to an organized closet!

 

Note that your closet says a lot about you. Are you living in the present or living in the past?

 

BONUS: Let your friends shop your to-go piles! This doubles as a nice gesture for their help, and makes less donation trips for you 😉

 

Two Golden Rules to Live By

 

The One-In, One-Out Rule

This one is self-explanatory – when you buy something new, something old goes out. For example, when I buy a new pair of shoes or any piece of clothing, I remove at least one item from my closet.

 

Be ruthless!

 

 

It’s best to be realistic about what you actually wear, and what looks and feels fabulous on you.

 

I love passing items onto friends or taking them to my favourite charities. I’m a big supporter of the organization Dress For Success as well as various women’s shelters in my area. Also, keep an eye out for clothing drop bins in your area!

 

 

80/20 Rule

The 80/20 rule states that typically, we wear 20% of our clothes, 80% of the time.

 

So to follow this and maintain an organized closet, only keep the clothes that you love, use, feel good in, look great in, and THAT FIT! Do not even try to keep clothes that no longer fit or that you won’t wear. Yes, styles do come back eventually, but designers always update the look. (some vintage, designer pieces would be an exception to this rule)

 

Be realistic!

Whenever I buy something new I use the golden rules above and bring at least 1-3 items to charity or give them away to a friend. Be it clothes, books, jewelery, etc. Just ask my friends Holli and Alison who have been the lucky recipients of many clothes from my organized closet over the years! What’s old for me can be new for someone else 😊

 

 

How does an organized closet make YOU feel? What is the biggest change you are looking to see? Comment below!

 

 

 

 

 

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