Archive for the ‘Paper Organizing’ category

Organizing Papers for the AD/HD Mind

March 31st, 2010

Find PapersAs intimidating as paper seems, a few simple habits will help you keep it under control. I’ve written previously about how to handle incoming mail, so I’m going to focus here on handling papers you need to keep for reference. Many of my clients have a fear of filing: if they put a document in a file, they fear they’ll never find it again. But how findable are those same documents if they’re buried in piles and scattered throughout your home or office? Here are some things you can do to create a filing system you trust:

Choose vertical over horizontal. When papers are in a pile, only the item on top is visible, meaning you’ll have to spend time digging through the piles to find a specific item. Using a vertical system will allow you to find papers more quickly because you can see more than one item at a time. Desktop file holders, filing carts and crates, and step files all provide vertical filing while still keeping things in view rather than tucked away in a file drawer.

DESKTOP FILE HOLDER

File Crate File Cart

STEP FILE 

Use color to provide visual cues. Establish meaningful yet broad file categories and assign various colors to each category, using colored file folders to distinguish them. This will help you find papers quickly. For example, your financial information might be in green files, medical information in red files, and personal interest information in blue files. Not only will you learn to find things quickly by going to the proper color section of your filing system, but you’ll quickly see when something is filed out of place because the color will stand out. Here’s a picture of my own file cabinet – notice how the colored sections are easy to see.Color-coded file cabinet

Use other techniques to “see” your papers when they’re filed. If you still feel uneasy putting papers in file folders for fear of forgetting them, use clear hanging files, project files, or hanging plastic bags to file your papers. Create an index of your file folders so you can quickly scan the list to trigger your memory of what you’ve filed. You can also refer to the index before creating a new file to make sure papers don’t already have a home.

clear file folders

Project File

 

Create a work zone on your desk. Have you ever had papers disappear from your desk, only to be discovered later in a pile or file where they didn’t belong? Keeping an area of your desk clear for only the documents you’re currently working on will help prevent papers from disappearing into the wrong pile or file.

Let me know which of these techniques work for you, or if you’ve found other ways to turn your paper piles into smiles.

Best wishes,

Signature_Sue

Pare Down That Reading Pile

March 3rd, 2010

2010 03 Reading PileFrom health updates to decorating ideas to news items, magazines and newspapers can contain a wealth of information. However, that information is meaningless if you don’t take the time to read it. I have a hard time making time for reading because I always feel there’s something “more important” that I should be doing. So I use car trips (when my husband is driving) to do most of my reading. I enjoy reading magazines about caring for the home and family, including Better Homes and Gardens, Good Housekeeping, and Real Simple magazines, as well as books about time management. I cut out magazine articles of interest and either act on them (e.g., make the recipe, create the centerpiece, etc.) or file them by subject for future consideration. I use sticky notes to mark the ideas I like in library books (or highlight them if I own the book) and type up notes on my computer to save those ideas for future reference. Here’s a link to my newsletter  for this month where I offer additional ideas to keep that reading pile under control. How well are you doing keeping up with your reading pile? What things do you always make time to read, and what things do you always seem to be behind on reading? I look forward to hearing from you. Meanwhile…

Best wishes as you try to keep that reading pile under control,

Signature_Sue

Manage Your Mail

January 27th, 2010

The U.S. Postal Service reported that in 2006, the average household received 29 pieces of mail per week. Sometimes it seems like I get that many pieces a day! In order to prevent the mail from overtaking your home or office, try these tips:

  • Have a designated place to put incoming mail until you’re ready to open it. The kitchen counter or table isn’t usually a good idea unless you’d like the mail to accompany your dinner!
  •  Make time every day to go through the mail. Otherwise you may feel like the postal carrier Newman from the Seinfeld TV show. If possible, try to go through the mail at the same time each day (e.g., right when you bring it in, after dinner, before bed, in the morning, during your commute on public transportation, etc.); this will help make daily processing a habit.
  •  For each piece of mail, decide what the next action is that you need to take on it, and then do something purposeful to move it along on its journey. Possible actions include disposing of it (throwing it out, recycling it, or shredding it), paying it, making a phone call about it, filing it, or reading it. If you can’t take the appropriate action right away, use Action Notes to remind yourself of what the next action is.

action_notes

Put this processed mail that still need action into a desktop file holder, project file, or PilesSmart® system sorted according to the required action. 

  • Schedule time during your week to take the appropriate action on the papers in your action system. 

Enjoy knowing that new paper piles are less likely to appear in your home or office because you’ve got a system set up to manage and organize the mail.

Best wishes as you turn those paper piles into smiles,

Signature_Sue