How is your clutter, mental and physical, affecting those around you? You may be surprised to know just how much your level of organisation does affect those around you and what you can do about it.
Cluttered Time So you can live with terminal tardiness, but can your customers, suppliers, family? Will your business survive a constant cluttered schedule? Whether you dial in late for a Skype business call or keep your family waiting ("Just need to send this email darling...") your actions are having negative flow on effects. Consistently keeping others waiting says "You do not value me or my time". Loved ones may even perceive "You are rejecting/neglecting me". Heavy stuff!! But there is an antidote: • Get organised! - Use one diary only and do not overfill it • Schedule in buffer zones for moving between appointments and shifting head spaces • Block out time for tasks and stick to it • Create clear time boundaries around your working hours for clients and family. • And stick to them. The last thing your family wants is for you to be taking business calls at the dinner table.
Cluttered Mind Cluttered minds breed procrastination, stress and inefficiency. Who said we can recall only seven significant things at any given time? If you're anything like me that will sound pretty optimistic. I operate on about three. What to do with the rest?
• Write them down. Use a journal or ideas book that goes with you everywhere. If you don't like the idea of carrying a book, use your PDA, mobile phone or digital recorder. Fabulous for recording volumes rapidly.Make decisions quickly. This is a learnt skill. Schedule in time to gather the information you need to make the decision. Give yourself a deadline to make the decision. Decide. Don't second guess yourself. Often your first thought is the mind's way of giving you the answer.
Cluttered Desk How many late charges did you receive last year? How many documents did you lose, ahem, I mean ‘misplace? Apart from your own time, money and sanity(!) lost due to poor workflow, who else is being affected? Your bookkeeper. accountant, financial advisor or other professional when they have to reschedule around you? What about that client who wants a copy of their last invoice to pay you?? Can you put you produce a copy within sixty seconds? If not, why not? Efficient and effective workflow is vital for soloists. Establish a good solid, relevant system from the outset and maintain it regularly. Start with these quick tips: • Dedicate an ‘entry' point in your office. Put a bin there and open all mail over said bin! • Decide then and there where every document needs to go ‘To Act', ‘To Read', ‘To distribute' • Ensure your hardcopy and electronic systems have identical names, folders and files. Just because they are different formats doesn't mean they need different systems. • Keep contact numbers in one area. Do you use an electronic or paper address book? I'd be interested to know what works best for you and why.
Published in www.flyingsolo.com.au April 2009
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Working Order
Six top tips to Get Organised at Work.
Sick of a superficial tidy up? Want to get organised for once and for all? You need good systems as well as good behaviour! Start with these top tips to Get Organised at Work.
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