Please Enter Item Description
 
 
   
 
 
December 2008

December 31:

It’s the last day of 2008. Get ready to take charge and get even more organized in 2009. Visualize where in your life you need to give some extra organizing attention and focus on how to get there. Franklinplanner.com can help you.  Experts such as Julie Morgenstern, Jean Chatzky, and The Buttoned Up Team  are just a few FranklinCovey partners featured on the site and offer a wide arrange of organizational advice. This year, don’t let things get away from you. Get organized!

Tags:

December 30:

A common pit-fall to success is procrastination. Typical reasons for procrastinating on tasks include inadequate planning time and waiting for the “right time” or the “right mood.”  Take a good look at your current organizing methods. Are you setting yourself up for success?  Maybe there are some adjustments you need to make to help increase your productivity and get in control of this bad habit.  Take that first step in recognizing and understanding why you put things off, and commit to making a change!

Tags:

December 29:

It’s time to get those closets organized! Follow these steps for a successful organizing session.

In order to visualize the total space you have, first remove all of the items in the closet. Next, it is a good idea to sort all of these items into piles according to what you’d like to keep, throw out, or donate, for example.  Third, use storage tools such as bins or shelving to keep items separate with other things that are similar such as sports equipment, winter clothing, or cleaning supplies. It is also a good idea to use clear storage bins so that you can easily see what’s in them.

Tags:

We'll be taking a very short break until the New Year. However, we'll still be posting our GO tips-per-day.

Or, if you're still looking for organizational advice, be sure to look into our archives. There you'll be able to find lots of organizational advice from our GO Gurus including how to purge the access amount of paper you might have, how going on vacation can help your productivity, or how to keep track of your Internet passwords.

Be sure to visit the end of next week, where we'll be sharing our New Year's Resolutions, and hope you'll share yours too.

Until then, good luck in getting organized!

Tags:

December 26:

These days, part of home organization also means identifying how you can make your  home  “greener” and more energy efficient. Just the simple task of exchanging your existing light bulbs with compact fluorescent bulbs can save a ton of energy, and save you money as well.  The bulbs use about 75 percent less energy than standard incandescent bulbs and last up to 10 times longer. Also, there are several sizes and shapes available to fit indoor and outdoor fixtures.

Tags:

December 25:

HAPPY HOLIDAYS!

 

December 24:

“Each of us tends to think we see things as they are, that we are objective.  But this is not the case. We see the world, not as it is, but as we are—or, as we are conditioned to see it. When other people disagree with us, we immediately think something is wrong with them. But, sincere, clearheaded people see things differently, each looking through the unique lens of experience.”---Stephen R. Covey; The Seven Habits of Highly Effective People, p. 28

Tags:

 

By April Welch

We still need to celebrate the big holiday, but here's an article to get you prepared for the day when the holidays have been celebrated!

As the year comes to an end and we begin to consider packing up the decorations, I have some wonderful ideas to make it easy clean up and even easier decorating next year.

Before you put anything away ... let's evaluate:

+ Are your containers sturdy?
+ What didn't you take out this year? (or what's left in the bottom of the box from the 90's?)
+ How many rooms do you decorate?

First, if it's time for new containers, determine a budget and purchase them (They will go a long way! You only use them once a year, but they last a long time!) each year set aside a little shopping money for this upgrade until everything is stored the way you want it.

Second, make some decisions regarding what wasn't used this year. Unless you are living somewhere temporarily or know you'll be moving into a bigger space by next year, you can probably safely discard/donate the items that haven't seen the light of the holidays since before the turn of the century. If items are staying with you for sentimental reasons, but your tastes have changed, find a way to honor/cherish the item at some point.

Third, depending on how many rooms you decorate in and how much decorations you keep year round - consider a container (or more) per room/space.

And don't be shy - let the kids help! Any chance you have to include them in this decision making process is just another way to show them the life cycle of their purchases.

So now that you've purged, let's pack up. Place the container(s) in the room and begin putting it all in. By putting everything away by room/space you allow yourself a more efficient way of handling things next year. If you have limited time, you can grab the bin(s) for, let's say, the family room and get one room done. Then the next pocket of time you have, tackle another room/space. Another great benefit is to ask the 'muscle' around the house to put the bins in their appropriate areas. As the kids get older they can help with this delivery method and with the "retrieving" or things as you put them in tissue and pack them up.

Finally, a tip that I use every year in my own home is a "miscellaneous" bin. This is for all those orphaned decorations we missed when we did the big clean up. By the end of January I've usually found everything and the "misc" bin gets put up with the rest of the storage.

I hope these tips will help you get organized for next year.

I wish you and your loved ones an amazing 2009!

Tags:

 

By April Rockmore & Sarah Welch

This time of year, the “spirit of giving” starts to make its way into our lives. With a little advance planning, you can extend that spirit of giving beyond your close circle of loved ones to a broader community. It’s one of the best times of year to introduce your family to the importance of community service. Opportunities abound for people to get involved with different causes, be it collecting toys, working in a soup kitchen, helping out at a senior center, or volunteering at an animal shelter. Organizations are always looking for help during the holiday season, and most are happy to get kids involved. By getting involved with any kind of community service, children end up learning valuable lessons and are introduced to people and ideas that they might otherwise have been sheltered from. Hopefully, these lessons and ideas will stay with them for a long time, making their lives, and the lives of the ones they help, that much better.

Alicia on “Giving Them Choices”

“To a child (and especially to a teenager), volunteering can seem like a pretty stupid thing to spend your time doing, and getting them to go along can be an exercise in negotiating. Instead of just forcing them to take part in an activity of your choosing, talk with your kids and try to discover what they causes interest them, and what activities they may like to do. If they love playing in the outdoors, there are plenty of opportunities provided by local Parks Departments. If they enjoy reading, many senior centers have needs for volunteers to read to residents. Animal lovers can spend time at a shelter taking care of pets in need of adoption. Don’t scare off your children to the idea of volunteerism with a intimidating or unhappy first experience. There are opportunities to fit everyone’s tastes.”

Sarah on “Going Light On The Guilt”

“We all have different reasons for volunteering for our different causes. But what we all share is a sense of satisfaction about giving your time and effort to something we care about. Kids don’t necessarily have that history to base their volunteering on, and, as parents, it’s easy to fall back on using a sense of guilt to encourage kids to engage in community service. As you may guess, guilt doesn’t go very far, especially when you’re dealing with younger children. It’s important to go into a volunteering project with kids emphasizing what you can give, instead of highlighting what the people you are helping don’t have. With the right mindset, kids end up coming away from these experiences with the knowledge that they are important enough to make a real difference in someone’s life, and that’s a feeling they’ll want to relive over and over again.”

Alright everyone. Let’s turn off the TV and put away the video games. Here are some simple steps to introduce your kids to the world of community service.

#1: One Toy In, One Toy Out

Before anyone opens up any presents this holiday season, talk with your kids about setting up a “One Toy In, One Toy Out” rule. It’s a tough conversation at first, as, no matter how long it’s been since they played with a certain toy, giving it away seems like a tragedy. But let them know that, while they’re enjoying their new toys, they would be making the holiday season extra special by making one of their old toys the favorite present of someone who doesn’t have any toys at all.

#2: Family Community Service Hour

A great way to showcase all the different ways of volunteering to your kids is to make an hour out of every week into Family Community Service Hour. Each week your family can participate in a different activity, from cleaning up a local park, to helping at the local animal shelter, to planting flowers or trees, to renovating low income housing. The possibilities are endless, and you’ll no doubt find a family volunteering activity that becomes a favorite.

#3: Soup Kitchen Tradition

Everyone has family holiday traditions. Well, it’s never too late to add one. Whether its around Thanksgiving, or closer to Christmas and Hanukah, volunteering at a soup kitchen for a meal is an amazing way to come together as a family and get into the holiday spirit of giving. It will easily fall into one of the special traditions you share that will give everyone a unique appreciation of the things they have, while being able to give something of themselves at the same time.

Tags:

December 22:

Happy Hanukkah!  Hanukkah began yesterday evening, but today is the first day of the celebrated eight-day Jewish holiday also named the Festival of Lights. A candle is lit each night for eight nights to celebrate the Jew’s defeat over one of the mightiest armies on earth to reclaim the Holy Temple in Jerusalem. It also signifies the triumph of light over darkness, of purity over adulteration, and of spirituality over materiality.

Tags: