LIGHTS_CAMERA_ACTION_FILES_Organizing_Your_Office_By_Task
| LIGHTS, CAMERA, ACTION FILES! Organizing Your Office By Task
Lights, Camera, ACTION FILES! Organizing Your Office By Task
Your desk is the most important part of your office. It is a
work space, however many people make the mistake of using the
desk as a storage space! In order for you to be focused on the
task at hand, the desk should be clear and free of distractions,
such as piles of paper, books, notes, bills, etc. How can you
manage these items without losing them, find the information you
need to work on, and still have a clear work space?
Action files! Action files are merely temporary homes where
papers live until they either end up filed away permanently or
thrown away. Your action files may sit on the far corner of your
desktop, they might be in your file drawer, or in baskets on the
credenza. Whichever method works for you is fine. Label them
according to what actions fit best with your industry. (ex: CALL
BACK, TO FILE, TO READ, TO MAIL, TO PAY, etc) Clearly label your
files so you will always know what is in them, and just as
importantly, the labels will remind you what not to put in them.
An important add-on to your action files is a HOLDING file. This
will be a key player in the organization of your office space,
as it will hold all the information that requires an action some
time in the future, rather than immediately. For example, if you
get an invitation and map to a seminar you?d like to attend in a
few months, how do you keep that information without losing it
or forgetting about the event entirely? This is precisely where
the ?Holding file? comes into play.
You simply mark in your calendar the date you wish to take
action and what the action will be (ex: September 5, Marketing
Seminar at the Hilton) then you make an ?H? next to what you?ve
written, which is a visual indicator that the information
pertaining to this event is living in your Holding file. The key
to using your Holding file effectively is that you must use it
in conjunction with your calendar. It?s a dual system: the note
in the calendar reminds you of the action you need to take, and
the ?H? next to the note reminds you of where the details of the
information are being stored. Once the action is taken, remove
the physical information from the Holding file and either file
it or throw it away.
Some examples of what to keep in a Holding file:
·Airline tickets and itineraries ·Event or seminar invitations
·Directions to events ·Letters to follow-up on ·Auto tag
registration
In short, your Holding file is a temporary home for anything
with an action deadline either in the near or distant future.
The system gives you a way to safely put things out of your mind
until it?s necessary to think of them again, thereby freeing
your mind up to focus on your immediate priorities.
About the author:
Monica Ricci has been an organizing specialist since 1999, and
her motivational presentations teach effective organizing and
simplifying techniques for home and work. She also offers free
email tips and ideas on how to make life simpler and more
organized. Her topics include clutter control, paper management,
time management, organizing space and procrastination.Contact
Monica at 770-569-2642 or Monica@CatalystOrganizing.com.
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