3 Steps to Organize Your Digital Environment

3 Steps to Organize Your Digital Environment

Ace Concierge Get OrganizedHow many times have you thought that you need more hours in your day or an extra pair of hands? You know the feeling, looking at your desk, your calendar, your Smartphone, your inbox…. Ugh, it is overflowing with things that need your attention. You can’t torch it. You can’t ignore it, but you can implement a few systems and processes to help you better manage the overwhelm and chaos, moving you to increase your productivity.

For every minute spent organizing, an hour is earned.  – Anonymous 

The Notorious To Do list

The first step toward success is to be cognizant of the level of disturbances which you allow into your day. It could revolve around the daily notifications you receive regarding text messages, emails, news alerts, phone calls or any other immediate interruption that diverts your focus from the task at hand.

  • Are you able to turn off or lower the volume of the notifications?
  • Can you schedule 3-4 times throughout the day to review/respond to emails?
  • Do you need to respond immediately to each byte of data that crosses your desk or your Smartphone?

Tips

  1. Prioritize and set deadlines.
  2. Know which projects require the most time and your undivided attention.
  3. Create your boundaries for working hours and “publicize” them.
  4. Tune out distractions.
  5. Stay on task.

Is Your Inbox Abundant with Clutter?

In 2011, it is estimated that there were 3.146 billion email accounts and 2.8 million emails sent and received every day. Wow!

Email has become the most predominant mode of office communications whether it is a quick hello or dissemination of corporate materials, contracts, projects and data. It is a necessity that we cannot live without.

Some inboxes can look like a nightmare of messages and To Dos if not properly maintained or left unchecked for an extended period of time. We are all busy working and managing the flow of information and business operations that it can just become an inconvenience to take the time to delete, file, schedule or otherwise take some form of action with each email.  If you continually shy away from inbox management, it not only becomes unruly like a bad hair day, but it fosters a lack of productivity and organization. Who can afford that?

Have you ever spent wasted minutes or hours feverishly searching for an email that contains an important document? It becomes a frustrating unproductive endeavor that is a gross misuse of your valuable time AND time is money.

PING!! A new email is awaiting your attention.  

  • Schedule time to check your email at various intervals
  • Make sure you have appropriate folders and filters for filing.
  • Is it urgent?
  • Can it be completed in 2-3 mins?
  • Can you flag it to read later?
  • Have you set up rules/alerts
  • Delete it if it isn’t necessary and won’t add any value.
  • If there is an attachment, download it and save it in the appropriate document folder
  • Forward it with instructions to your virtual assistant
  • If it is an appointment, drag it to your calendar
  • Have separate email addresses for personal and business use

My Documents

You are inundated with digital paper that requires action and filing. Creating folders is a simple task to ensure your documents are organized and easily found. It can prove very time consuming if you have to scroll through one larger receptacle looking for a needed document. Sure, you can do a broad search but when proper file management is established, you can save a great deal of time and aggravation. Let your digital filing system mirror a physical filing system.

Tips:

  • Create folders and sub-folders
  • Use short names
  • Be diligent about filing
  • Separate current and completed works
  • Archive older, unneeded documents – store in a separate folder, USB or cloud storage
  • Create shortcuts or links to documents you use more consistently. Maintaining a single copy ensures you are always using the most current version.
  • Delete unnecessary files
  • Create shortcuts of your most used documents and save them on your desktop.
  • If you routinely share documents with a group, consider using Google Docs, TeamboxDropbox or another online sharing tool for collaborating.
  • Save your data and  make sure you always back up your computer

Taking the time to organize and streamline your office operations, even if it is just your email and documents, will help to increase your efficiency and productivity – which saves you time and money. The less time you must spend rummaging through folders and emails, the more time you have to devote to the your vital business operations and daily procedures.

Have a time and place for everything, and do everything in its time and place, and you will not only accomplish more, but have far more leisure than those who are always hurrying.  – Tryon Edwards

Make organization a habit, not a one hit wonder. Get into a rhythm everyday and stick with it, just like you would with any lifestyle habit.

 

Multiply Your Minutes | Time Management Tips

Multiply Your Minutes | Time Management Tips

Time Management | Ace ConciergeSo you have read it is a myth. Well, it is in a way. You can’t manage your time but you can learn to better manage yourself.  “Time management” takes discipline and commitment.

There are many hindrances to time management but they are all relate back to how we regulate our lives and productivity levels.

Things that hinder your time management

  • Procrastination: when you consistently put off tasks, you end up in a time crunch and can miss deadlines or leave things undone.
  • Distractions: take you away from the project, cuts into your time, diminishes focus
  • Disorganization: misplace, misfile or lose things and you must waste time searching.
  • Lack of focus: jumping around between tasks/projects decreases productivity and output; hence spending more needless time going back to find and finish what you started
  • Saving EVERYTHING: when your inbox and folders are overstuffed, you spend more time searching for documents and emails. This inefficiency wastes your time
  • Data overload: you have a constant barrage of emails, text messages, IMs and news pouring into your inbox.  When you have a new notification, do you automatically STOP what you are doing, click, read, close? This takes up time, removes your focus and interrupts your work flow.

You can manage the information and the interruptions, because the problem doesn’t lie in the amount of information and interruptions. The problem lies with   your methods of processing that information and handling the interruptions.

 Time Fix – Get Organized

By organizing, prioritizing and eliminating distractions, you will save time and enhance your productivity.

  • Create schedules
  • Time block your day
  • Organize your data
  • Develop a routine
  • Set boundaries
  • Use your calendar for appointments and To Dos
  • Use action steps for items on your To Do list
  • Keep your workspace orderly
  • Check email at specific intervals
  • Delegate
  • Put down your Smartphone
  • Turn off the television

These are just a few simple tips to better manage yourself which will in turn help you to better manage your time. You will feel more systematized and industrious. Can you imagine how much more you will be able to accomplish in your day? With 168 hours in the week, you truly can achieve great things.

Are you ready to be the master of your time??

Image credit: Microsoft

Life Changes – but Business Goes On

Life Changes – but Business Goes On

Your parents are requiring more and more time as they age. You’re working on having a new sort of relationship with your adult children. Your vacation is coming up and you haven’t quite figured out how to manage your business and still relax while away. Your business is at a key stage and you want to spend more time in it.

You’re overwhelmed by all of this change. You know it, but you don’t know what to do about it.

Your First Two Steps

1.  Rearrange your time and your work:

What do YOU want from the time you’re spending with parents/adult children? What do THEY want? These might be different, so think about this first.

How much time per week or month do your parents need? What percentage of your work time is this? Are there other ways to arrange their time to make it more convenient for you? Is there work you can take with you while you’re waiting on appointments? (Be careful of working too much while you’re with them; it’s also very nice to have this time together, so balance this carefully.) Are you possibly doing too much; it’s worth looking at it.

Get the idea here? Use this approach for your parents as well as for your adult children and the new relationship you want to have with them. Look at your time differently, and look at your work tasks differently. Reorganize to fit a new time commitment; don’t try to use the old ways to fit the new commitments you’ve made.

2Forget about the future for awhile.

Too much future thinking is overwhelming. And with these life changes happening, the overwhelm quotient is going to be higher.

The key question here is: What’s important to you now? That’s “now” versus “not now.” That’s the only decision, for now. That’s what to fill your calendar with.

Your vacation is in three weeks. Block time in the next few days to review the status of each project and client, even if this has to be done on personal time, because this helps you get away on vacation with a calmer mind.

Identify which steps/tasks have to be completed before vacation. Not completed projects, but steps or stages of the project. Don’t use vacation as a deadline to force yourself to complete more than is really necessary, just because it’s an easy deadline.

This is the “I can’t leave for vacation unless these are done” tasks. These are the truly important priorities. To keep the focus, mark these in some way that’s clear and obvious when you review your daily goals.

Block working sessions right on your calendar, so you know for sure that you’ve protect time for these priorities. Once this is done, step back for a minute; are you overcommitting at all? Is it possible? Remember that crises happen, so plan buffer time for people coming at you at the last minute, clients not realizing right away how long you’ll be gone and needing something before you’re out, and so forth. The puzzle of your time must have white space.

Changes interrupt our lives. Change is change, whether it’s a welcomed change or one foist upon you. Accept that things are changing; that’s a key first step. And then reorganize to work through it.

Guest Post Courtesy of 

Sue West
Certified Organizer Coach®
Certified Professional Organizer®
In Chronic Disorganization
ADHD Specialist
Do you have enough time for you? Enough time for what’s becoming more important to you? Sue’s clients do and because she’s an organizing coach, her approach is practical.

Her specialties are organizing through change, ADHD and time management. Her clients have called her: insightful, wise, inspiring, filled with hope, gentle yet productive. Sue works privately, by phone or in person and is also the author of Organize for A Fresh Start: Embrace Your Next Chapter in Life, a book about reorganizing your stuff, your home and your time to move onto your next chapter in life. Get to know Sue by signing up for her blog, visiting her on Facebook, or signing up for her newsletter.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Organizational Tips

  • Decrease desktop clutter.
  • File or discard papers and folders.
  • Purge outdated materials, manuals, scraps of paper in your drawers.
  • update customer management database with ALL client/prospect data and discard associated paper.
  • Assign a place for everything and keep everything in its place.
  • file as you go, don’t wait until “sometime” to put things in their place.
  • Organize your workspace for maximum productivity.
  • Reserve your inbox for action items.
  • Create email folders to organize your inbox and sent emails.
  • Break down large projects into smaller tasks, and prioritize them.  Block off time each day until the project is completed.
  • All projects and tasks should have clear goals, objectives, and deadlines.
  • Plan your To Do list for the following day before you leave work.
    • Break your To Do list into categories
      • Must do with deadlines
      • Open-ended tasks (i.e. reorganizing files)
  • Enter calls and appointments into your calendar.
  • Take a break to refresh and refocus, without interruptions.
  • Set aside 1 hour per day for NO technology: you do not answer phones or respond to emails or engage in office communication.  You take this time to regroup and work on pressing issues, modifying your To Do list, and working on projects.