Paauwerfully Organized: Decluttering schedules, spaces and minds
Published by Kathy Paauw
Organizing & Productivity Consultant
Certified Personal & Professional Coach


Paauwer Tools is a Monthly Ezine
June 2003
Issue 40

Working from Home – A Blessing or a Curse?



"It pays to plan ahead. It wasn't raining when Noah built the ark."
--Anonymous


If you are among the increasing number of individuals who work from home, you know that it has some wonderful benefits – no traffic and parking hassles, no office politics to drag you down, nobody looking over your shoulder, you can wear your house slippers to work, and you can set flexible work hours. But these same great benefits come with drawbacks – a sense of isolation, no external pressure to keep you motivated and on task, and no limit to your work hours. In essence, if you are not careful you can easily find yourself “at work” all the time.

With some good planning, it is possible to reap the benefits and reduce the drawbacks of working from a home office. Here are 10 tips to help:

  1. Begin with the big picture in mind.  Clarify what needs to happen in the next three years in order for you to feel like your life has progressed in the way that you want it to. 
  1. Plan and organize your week so you are focused on your priorities – both professional AND personal ones. Do you find yourself putting things off that are important to you because you have so many urgent tasks that need your attention? Do you look back at the end of the day with regret and wish that you had spent your time focusing on more important things ... such as time with your family, time for self-care, or time to work on an important project that has no deadline? Being technically proficient in your business or profession will only get you so far … especially if your life gets out of balance in the process.

    We are all accustomed to making appointments with other people, but not necessarily with ourselves. Because most of us tend to focus on that which is urgent, we tend to put off activities that are important but have no deadline. Schedule “protected time” -- time during the day when you let calls go into voice mail and you don’t check email -- so you can concentrate on activities that are important but not urgent. Click here to review an excellent weekly planning process.

    W. Clement Stone once said, "No matter how carefully you plan your goals, they will never be more than pipe dreams unless you pursue them with gusto." If interruptions in your home office make it difficult to concentrate, consider going somewhere else to work on important projects requiring concentration.

Be clear about how you choose to structure your week. 

  • How much free time do you choose to spend away from work? 
  • How much time do you choose to spend delivering the primary product or service you provide?  Are you available evenings and weekends? 
  • How much time do you choose to spend doing the support activities important to your work? 

All of these activities affect each other.  If you neglect support activities (returning phone calls, responding to email, follow-up, filing, etc.), things will start slipping through the cracks.  Then it becomes difficult to take free time to relax and rejuvenate.  Without free time, the quality of what you deliver will suffer.  It becomes a viscious cycle!

  1. Limit the number of places you post reminders of activities requiring your attention. I recommend that you check these three places daily:
  • Your tickler file -- click here for more information about how to set this up.
  • Your contact management program (such as ACT or Outlook) – This can contain your scheduled appointments with others, as well as your scheduled appointments with yourself and reminders for follow-up with others.
  • E-mail – Flag the items you need to come back to and do something with.
  1. Create a Perhaps List . Most people have stashes of lists in multiple places – several legal pads containing to-do lists, sticky notes plastered on the computer monitor, the wall, the desktop, etc.  Instead of writing these ideas down in multiple places, collect all of them in one place.  Click here to see a sample Perhaps List.

  2. Schedule 10-15 minutes at the end of each workday to organize your work space and review your plans for tomorrow. Psychologists have found that we enjoy our non-work hours much more when we leave the office with an organized desk and a plan for the following day.  This is also a good time to check your tickler file for the next day so you can begin mentally preparing for what needs your attention tomorrow.
  3. Schedule time with other people.  Working from a home office can be isolating.  If you need more human contact, build in opportunities that will help you feel more connected to others. Join a service club or networking group, or treat yourself to having lunch or playing a sport once a week with a friend, colleague, or client…whatever it takes to feel more connected.

  4. Schedule weekly “admin” time to tend to routine activities that you know need to be done regularly – filing, checking email, returning phone calls, invoicing, paying bills, etc. Although these activities are important, they are generally not urgent…but if they get neglected long enough they will become urgent when you cannot find something you need or a bill does not get paid by the due date. 

    NOTE: Not all hours are created equal. Pay attention to your own body rhythms. Schedule your “high brain” activities (things requiring creativity, for example) during your best time of day, and schedule the “low brain” activities (the auto pilot stuff) during your low energy time of the day.

  5. Page-Up Copy HolderSay NO to activities that are not important to you.  If you need a reminder of what to say YES to, consider using a daily checklist and a PageUp Copy Holder that can
    hold your checklist upright (see photo)
    so it does not get buried on your desk.
  1. Trim the F.A.T. – File, Act, Toss.  When you open the mail, immediately make a decision to either FILE away for future reference, ACT on it, or TOSS it.  Click here to learn more about this process, or participate in my FREE upcoming Buried in Paper teleclass.

  2. Create a filing system which will enable you to find things quickly, no matter where you filed it.  The number one reason people pile instead of file is a fear of never finding it again.  You're invited to participate in my FREE upcoming Find Anything in 5 Seconds teleclass and I’ll show you how you can file your papers so you’ll find them in 5 seconds or less.




June is National
Rebuild Your Life Month

If you are overloaded and …
   …Have trouble finding what you need.
   …Forget important follow-up or miss key deadlines.
   …Feel so overwhelmed that it's hard to focus on what's most important right now.
   …Try and manage it all...but at a cost to you in excess stress and little peace of mind.
...Then I can assist you in taking control of the clutter that's clogging your schedule, space and mind, so you can focus on what is important to you. 

I offer the following teleclasses to help you be more productive:

  • Register for my FREE teleclass on June 17: Buried in Paper? Learn a simple 3 step process to help you eliminate paper pile-up forever.
  • Register for my FREE teleclass on June 19: Find ANYTHING in 5 Seconds or Less! Get a free 30-day trial version of The Paper Tiger software, along with expert instruction on how it works.
  • Register for my Taming Your Paper Tiger teleclass on June 18 or July 24.  Turn your Paper Tiger shelfware into a powerful software tool that will enable you to find things instantly!
  • Register for my DeClutter Your Life teleclass series beginning July 9. 
    If you feel like you’ll never catch up…like you’re on constant overwhelm and overload…I invite you to participate in this teleclass series.  You’ll learn how to define what’s truly important to you, and you’ll receive support as you learn to close the gap between what’s most important and what you actually spend your time doing.  



Our Mission
I help individuals committed to moving their lives forward in powerful ways
by decluttering their schedules, spaces, and minds.

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This article is by Kathy Paauw of Paauwerfully Organized. Kathy's web site is a comprehensive resource devoted to helping busy professionals and small business owners de-clutter their schedules, spaces, and minds so they can focus on what's most important. Kathy is an organizing & productivity consultant, certified business & personal coach, and speaker. Contact her at kathy@orgcoach.net . For free resources and valuable productivity tools visit http://www.orgcoach.net .

E-mail your comments, questions, and suggestions for future newsletter content to me. I'd love to hear your thoughts!Warm regards,

Kathy Paauw, Paauwerfully Organized
425-881-6627
kathy@orgcoach.net



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