Archive for the ‘Residential Organizing’ Category

YOU and the Mail

Sunday, June 13th, 2010

This may seem like a strange subject for an organizing article.  Some readers may be thinking, “What’s the big deal?” while others are shuddering at the thought.

In my almost 12 years as a professional organizer I have become aware somewhat of a phenomenon, “fear of opening the mail.”

It’s more like an avoidance of opening the mail. Prior to seeing clients for all these years, not opening the mail daily had never even occurred to me. It was just something you do. But then I met client after client with a “mail issue.”

Attempting to get at the heart of it, the following reasons have been given:

  • “I am afraid of what will be in it.”
  • “I can’t stand receiving bills.”
  • “I already know what’s in it.”
  • “I got so far behind after I was ill that now it is too overwhelming.”
  • “I don’t know what to keep or what to throw out so I keep it all.”
  • “It’s just not important.”

Many of these people literally have bags or boxes of mail, sometimes 4-6 years old. That is a long time to be saving, gathering and not opening mail.

Fortified with me by their sides, the clients and I meticulously open and sort each piece of mail, beginning with the most recent envelopes. We sort by bills owed, items needing action, things to read, things to file, papers to toss out. The older the bill, the easier to toss as most likely we have already come across the most recent one and saved it.

What is your “attitude” toward mail? Why do you think some people don’t mind opening the mail, while others dread it?

If you are an avoider, my advice is to shift your thinking. Change the story in your head. Look at the mail as a treasure hunt. You never know what you’re going to get. Someone may be sending you money, a refund, a reimbursement, an adjustment or a gift. You never know, it is worth looking for. Or maybe you’ll receive an invitation to a wedding, a party or a great event. A long lost friend or relative could be trying to reach you. There are any number of happy occasions you may be receiving mail. One recent client of mine found over $4,000 in reimbursement checks in an hour!

Although I always hold out hope for something like that when I open the mail, there is another benefit. I get rid of paper in my house, off my counter, and I feel the completion of a task. Little completions daily feel good and tie up loose ends. My kitchen counter or desk area stays under control which enables concentration on other issues.

Whether you ignore, avoid, or open the mail, you ARE going to receive bills. You OWE people money. There are consequences for paying bills late, worse ones for not paying at all. You want to be a responsible adult, and you know that includes paying bills on time. You are in control of doing that, so why bring worse issues upon yourself? It all goes hand in hand.

Here are some tips to make the process simpler:

  • Open the mail daily.
  • If you can’t open mail daily due to illness, travel or just too busy, set a date to catch up (ex.-by Friday night, or by the end of the weekend.) Write it in your calendar so you don’t forget. Just don’t let it go more than a few days.
  • Throw out all outside envelopes.
  • No need to refold the contents and put them back in the envelope.
  • No need to refold the contents at all. Lay it open flat so you can read it as needed.
  • Have a designated place to work when opening the mail.
  • Resist the urge to feel like you need to read everything before tossing. Letting mail accumulate practically assures it will NEVER be read anyway.
  • If you do need to read mail, do so in a timely manner. Many items are time sensitive.
  • Throw out all junk mail you did not request.
  • Reduce the amount of junk mail. Go online to www.the-dma.org. Or write to the Direct Marketing Association, P.O. Box 282, Carmel, NY 10512. It will cost you $1.00 and may take up to 90 days, but you’ll see a big difference.

If you need more guidance, assistance, motivation or someone to help you catch up, stay focused, advise on what to keep and for how long, set up a bill paying system and general paper handling, just give Time-Savers Professional Organizing Services, Inc. a call at 954-252-7511 and schedule an appointment.

There needn’t be any negative consequences to opening the mail. So pull yourself up, get comfortable, and start opening. Soon, the new habit will feel good, and you will have resolved a major issue. You ARE in control of your mail!

Are You Chronically Disorganized?

Thursday, May 13th, 2010

Does your home or office look like a tornado just blew through?

Do you spend hours looking for something you know “is around here somewhere?”

Do you have paper piles all around your office, desk, floor or home?

Then you may have the characteristics referred to in the Professional Organizing industry as Chronic Disorganization (CD).  Although it is not a medical or psychological disorder, it can cause you real problems.  You may be shaking your head in agreement at this point, because you or someone you know may fit this description.

Chronically disorganized people can have adverse effects on their quality of life or those around them.  They are rarely prepared for meetings, appointments, paying bills on time, deadlines, finishing things they start, filing papers or any combination of these.  They may feel they have little control over their lives, as life tends to control them. (Visit www.nsgcd.org for a more comprehensive checklist of characteristics).

Is this the kind of pattern you want your children to learn from you? We all know “children live what they learn…” Your bad habits will be noticed and assimilated by your children. How are you going to get them to learn to clean up after themselves if they live with the disorganized clutter you’ve created all around them?

A person can be chronically disorganized at work but not at home, and vice versa.  Once one gets so backlogged with mail, paperwork, clutter or disorganization, he/she tends to avoid the situation even more.  This willingness to endure the clutter causes further stresses and frustrations due to the overwhelm generated by the thought of addressing (or avoiding) the issue.

Disciplining ones self to get organized can be as simple as taking the time to do so.  Ironically, this can be one of the most valuable uses of a CD’s time.  Instead they spend it compounding the problem.  In the “being busy,” they avoid attacking the situation head on.  While in their office, the avoidance is compounded by working around the piles, not realizing the stress they feel is due to the surrounding disorganization.  The vicious cycle continues until intervention is sought.

The good news is, getting organized does not have to be a painful process.  It is a matter of breaking old habits and establishing new ones.  We, as professional organizers and productivity consultants are available to guide you through the process.  We not only help clean up, we teach you the systems and solutions that save time and help you maintain the organization. 

Soon, a newfound sense of freedom and control is realized.  This rejuvenation then positively impacts other areas of one’s life.

The following tips can get you started:

  • Commit to putting in a few hours at a time to get organized.
  • Find an appropriate place (a home) for each item.
  • Place papers and items in those homes when they are brought into the home or office.
  • Set up systems that save time.
  • Purge files, drawers and closets annually at a minimum.
  • Make a daily To-Do list, the evening before.

Benefits of being organized at work include providing you with more time for customer service, increasing sales or to spend with employees at your business.  At home, there will be more time for enjoying family and leisure-time activities.

You can also try the Do-It-Yourself Method after reading our book, Don’t Agonize, Organize Your Office Now! It works for office and home and even covers issues such as packing for trips.

If you still find that too overwhelming, give us a call. We will come out to assist you, or if you are out of the Ft. Lauderdale area or money is an issue, we can set up phone coaching sessions to assist you. Suffer no longer, we CAN help you!

Think about simplifying your life.  Busy is great, but isn’t being organized worth the benefits?

Diane Hatcher, CPO®, the only Certified Professional Organizer® in South Florida, owns Time-Savers Professional Organizing Services and is the author of Don’t Agonize, Organize Your Office Now! She has been organizing paper and clutter in offices and homes since 1998. Contact her at (954) 252-7511 or at www.timesaversUSA.com.

Spring Cleaning – So What, Who Cares

Monday, April 12th, 2010

To quote the humor of Joy Behar, “So what, who cares?” rings so true in many cases. For you, spring cleaning may be one of them.

What the heck is spring cleaning anyway?

For years I’d heard the term but it had virtually no meaning to me. I guess that’s because I am a Florida native and the weather is pretty consistent in South Florida. With little delineation among seasons other than a date on the calendar, there wasn’t much environmental change bringing awareness to this time of year.
I’ve actually learned from my clients who hale from up north that they used to have a need to change out their wardrobes from closet to closet between winter and spring.

If you need motivation to tackle that nagging clutter in your home or office, then “there’s no time like the present” as my mom used to say. Time for procrastination and denial is over.

Studies prove that clutter is de-energizing, distracting, depressing, causes extra work moving it around, trying to clean around it (or not cleaning at all in some cases), costs money in hiring someone to help declutter (like me), and costs you time to experience all the above. Your time is valuable. Some use that as their excuse to avoid decluttering.

I am here to get you to re-focus, view it from reality, turn around your thinking and realize what the clutter is actually costing you. The longer you let it go, the worse it is. Of course much of this negative impact is subliminal and therefore easy to ignore or deny. But, take my word for it, with twelve years of experience in the organizing business, ignoring the clutter will eventually catch up to you.

It appears that one day for whatever reason, my clients wake up and suddenly realize the vastness of their clutter issue.

Not being able to sleep on your bed, not wanting to have company come into your house, not being able to get into your closet, not knowing what you have or where to find what you have, all these are serious clues it is time to stop ignoring the clutter. Do things fall out of your cupboard every time you open the door? Do you have to turn sideways to get past the clutter? Ignore the signs no longer.

Feeling guilty that you “should be able to do this on your own” won’t motivate you to get it done. I think I “should” be able to change the oil in my car, but why? Isn’t it more productive for me to have an expert do that? Of course. It’s the same with organizing. Hire a professional, get it done better and faster. You’ll learn something along the way with the “tools” an organizer will teach you to help contain the organized areas and maintain in the future.
So spring is here, put organizing on your list and tackle a little at a time.

Here are 25 simple tips you can implement to conquer your war on clutter.

Clearing Clutter

  1. Follow the “one in, one out rule.” When buying new clothes or toys, always get rid of an equal amount of existing clothes or toys.
  2. Clean out closets annually. Doing one section at a time avoids overwhelm.
  3. When organizing your closet, donate clothes that you are not proud to be seen in or comfortable wearing.
  4. We wear 20% of our clothes, 80% of the time. Turn hangers backwards until the item is worn. Anything not turned the correct way after six months is a candidate to be tossed.
  5. To minimize clutter, avoid saving things just because you or someone else might need them “someday.”
  6. When shopping, never buy anything unless you can answer both of these questions: “What am I going to use it for AND where am I going to put it?”
  7. Designate a home for everything. Put items back in their homes as soon as you are done using them and they’ll easily be found next time. Car keys are a good example.
  8. Recycle purged items by giving to friends, donating to charity or selling on E-bay, Craig’s List or at a garage sale to avoid waste.
  9. Bring re-usable bags to the grocery store to help save the planet avoiding waste of all those plastic bags usually brought home.
  10. Group like items together on shelves, in closets, and in rooms. Store lesser-used items in the garage, attic or basement.

    Controlling Paper Clutter

  11. Pare down file folders of outdated material allowing reuse of the same files and drawers each year. Be ruthless.
  12. Refer to ‘retention guidelines” (found online) in conjunction with your tax professional to determine how long to save specific papers.
  13. Store tax returns and inactive files away from the active files area.
  14. Use of colorful file tabs and folders make your system attractive to use as well as up to 50% easier to locate individual files.
  15. Open mail daily. Sort for appropriate next action- pay, file, read, respond or toss.
  16. When ordering by mail and paying by check, write the company’s name, address and phone number on the back of your check so you can easily contact them if there’s a problem.
  17. Keep travel size items in plastic, self-sealing bags, ready for any trip.
  18. Pay bills on the first and fifteenth of each month (or any two dates 14 days apart) for efficiency. Note the dates in your calendar as a reminder.
  19. Maintain an area with all your bill-paying supplies together (stamps, envelopes, check register, return address labels, etc).
  20. Keep one calendar for the entire family to track schedules. Color-code each person’s activities.
  21. Maintain a personal calendar for yourself to coordinate business and personal appointments and events.
  22. Photocopy two copies of everything in your wallet, in case of loss or theft. Keep one copy at home and one locked up at work.
  23. Clip coupons, recipes and articles only if you plan to use them and have a system for cataloging them.
  24. Maintain a grocery list, keeping a running list of items that need replacing as you run out of them.
  25. File photos in original developing packages from the store, in a photo box with a lid. Date and note the event on the outside of the packet.

Happy Organizing!

Diane Hatcher, CPO®, the only Certified Professional Organizer in South Florida, owns Time-Savers Professional Organizing Services and is the author of Don’t Agonize, Organize Your Office Now! Contact her at (954) 252-7511 or  www.timesaversUSA.com.

Change Your Life, Get Organized!

Monday, January 18th, 2010

“Change Your Life, Get Organized!” This very phrase scares some people. One day a friend remarked to me that she did not want to get organized. I found this curious but the more I thought about it, I understood. I actually think she is already organized and doesn’t realize it.

On Oprah, Peter Walsh, the organizer from TLC channel’s Clean Sweep did an awesome show about de-cluttering. He dealt with the mental aspect of the causes and thought processes that lead to overwhelming clutter. People live in denial as they are accumulating and what is unusual becomes the norm. If you are embarrassed to have company, or have a room to which you always close the door when people are coming over, try this: take a picture of all the “stuff” and you may realize it is time to attack the situation. No one has to live with clutter.

The myth that being organized equates to being perfect, or being anal, must be dispelled. Anyone who knows me personally knows that this need not be the case, and preferably, is not the case!

It is apparent to me that being organized means different things to different people. And that is fine. Being organized is personal, and as individual as each individual.  Being organized to me means that instead of repeating the same mistakes and expecting a different result each time, you formulate a solution to that issue so you don’t spend your time repeating the same mistake, which causes frustration and wastes time.

Besides fear, another common issue that is holding back busy professionals and busy moms and dads, is that “they are too busy.” I am going to be very direct here and rephrase that, or overcome that objection. What that phrase means to me is that you CHOOSE not to spend time organizing. You CHOOSE to do everything else instead. You CHOOSE everything else over spending time getting organized. If you can be very honest with yourself, I think you will realize how true this is. Think about WHY you are avoiding it.

If I told you that you have just won a FREE trip for two to Hawaii, but that you have to use it in two weeks, most of you would find time to go.

It’s all about motivation. Hawaii sounds a lot more exciting than organizing.

But if you really want to get organized, if you really want to get rid of that clutter, if you really want to catch up your laundry, if you really want to clean out those closets, your kids’ rooms, your garage, your kitchen, your desk, have company come over, if it is really bothering you or interfering with your lifestyle in any way, you will make time.

As I suggested to The Miami Herald Business Writer, Cindy Goodman, “schedule a day in,” and this became her favorite tip. You don’t have time to get organized if you never stay home. Work on what you have been avoiding. She took my advice and got so much done, and felt so relieved, she was pleasantly surprised. She even blogged about it online at www.miamiherald.com/business.

And if you want to do it in the minimal amount of time, with the least amount of overwhelm and stress, call Time-Savers and our professionals will work with you to reach your goals.

Walsh stated there are two kinds of clutter, “the ones you hang on to for memories,” and “the ones you hang on to because someday it may be useful for something.” “Living in the past or the future is keeping you from living in the present. Clutter saps your time, energy and money just maintaining it all. The stuff is not making you happy, it is overwhelming you.”

Some of the comments I hear on a daily basis from organizing my clients include: “I feel like a thousand pound weight was lifted off of me,” “I feel so much more in control of my surroundings now,” “I feel like I can breathe again,” “This was so much better than sex,” (yes, someone really said that)!  For more comments and reactions, please see the “testimonials” page of my website at www.timesaversusa.com.

You too can feel the sense of relief de-cluttering brings. And don’t worry about relapsing. It is normal to feel like that. But we will give you the tools, systems and skills necessary to help you with maintenance as well. You will never go back to as bad a situation as you were in when you started if you make some behavior changes. And we are always available to support our clients free by phone along that journey or to help you with a “tune-up.”

I know I’ve been a little harsh here, however I hope it got through to you. Getting organized is a positive step. When we work one on one with you, you have already decided that you need to let go of some of your stuff. So we are gentle, non-critical and non-judgmental. With our skillful knowledge, we help facilitate your own decisions about what to keep and what to donate or toss. It is not about what WE want, but how we can help you get to YOUR goals. You too can be freed from the clutter and open up your life to new possibilities so you can LIVE in the present!