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E.A.S.Y. Organization System

January 11th, 2007 · 2 Comments ·

The Cost Of Disorganization…Can You Afford It?

For many, being organized means a place for everything and everything in its place. For others, it means nothing. The true definition of being organized is being able to find things when you need them, not 3 weeks later.

But if you ask me, being organized means saving BIG money…period. Simply put, time is money. If you waste time all day long looking for things, you are wasting money.

If you spend just 5 minutes of every hour of an 8 hour day (how often do we only work 8 hour days?), looking for things, that adds up to over 4 weeks per year (166 hours). Many times, we spend hours looking for something. It adds up fast when you take each employee’s hourly rate of pay and multiply it by 166 hours per year.

For example: $15/hour X 166 hours X 10 employees = $24,900/year thrown away! OUCH.

The worst part is (yes it gets worse!) that most small business owners and managers average even more wasted time…as much as eight weeks per year! So what can be done to eliminate most of this wasted time?

Get READY…

For starters, if you are not as organized as you’d like to be, you have look inside yourself and explore WHY you are not organized. By revealing your nature, you can learn to work with your habits instead of against them. Over the years, we develop excuses, obstacles and reasons to avoid getting organized. Here are a few examples:

* You might need it someday!
* If you can’t see it, you forget it
* You have too much stuff!
* Your stuff needs a home.
* You grew up with clutter.
* You have too much to do!
* Not enough storage space.
* You are very sentimental.
* You have had major changes in your life.

Get SET…

Second, you have to take the time to look at your space and map out what you want the space to look like when you are done before you touch the first piece of clutter. In this step, you will need to:

* Do a Needs Assessment
* Define the activity for the room
* Use Logic
* Make a drawing of the room
* Make a list of what you will need
* Have a realistic time schedule
* Have the URGE TO PURGE

GO!

Finally, you get to declutter by sorting and putting away in a methodical fashion.

Most folks skip the Ready and Set steps and just start to tear into the clutter but don’t develop any long lasting systems. This Band-Aid(R) will only last a short while before you have clutter creeping back into your life.

In order to make the paper clutter go away, a simple process is necessary. When it comes to papers and office clutter, I recommend the E.A.S.Y. system. There are only four things you can do with a piece of paper.

Eliminate it
Act on it
Send it away
You file it

If you create four piles that correspond to the E.A.S.Y. system as you sort, decision-making becomes more concise and narrow. The bad news is that getting organized takes time and commitment. It has to be on your list of priorities for it to really become achievable.

The good news is that getting organized is simple if done methodically and it pays off. Not only does organization provide a less stressful work environment, but it also boosts morale, increases productivity and positively affects the bottom line.

Can you afford to be disorganized? Could you stand to be more organized? Schedule the time to declutter and soon you’ll be inspired to continue because you’ll feel like a huge weight has been lifted off your shoulders!

Here’s to simplifying your life!

(c) 2007, Kreamer Connect, Inc. Permission granted to reprint this article so long as the text and by-line are not changed and reprinted intact with all links made live.

Patty Kreamer, owner of Kreamer Connect, Inc., is a professional organizer, speaker, and author of …But I Might Need It Someday! and The Power of Simplicity, now available at http://www.ByeByeClutter.com. Sign-up for the new e-course Making Life Simple… Again! at http://www.ByeByeClutter.com/MLSAHome.htm

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2 responses so far ↓

  • Carol Bremner // Jan 17, 2007 at 11:30 am

    Hi Lynn,

    My biggest problem is organizing things I have on the computer. I am noticing all kinds of software I downloaded who knows when and I have no idea now even what it is supposed to do - the fact that a lot of file names are in short form doesnt help much either. Add to that PLR stuff, etc and my laptop is a big mess.

    Do you have any organizing tricks for computers?
    Toronto Carol

  • Lynn Terry // Jan 19, 2007 at 12:14 pm

    Personally, I am particular about what I install and it is generally something I will use regular enough to recognize it. I wouldnt make a habit of installing things you may or may not use and just leaving them there. Once you install something, and test/try it, if you arent going to use it go ahead and remove it then (while the name of the program is still fresh in your mind).

    I would go into “Add/Remove Programs” (in the Control Panel) and look through your list of programs. If you click on them, you may be able to see more detail. Remove anything you know you dont need/want.

    As for documents and files, I create a folder on my desktop for work files, one for personal files (music, photos, etc) and then sub-folders in each to organize the data.

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