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Organization Tips for Your Home Office

by The Organizer Lady dot com

Organization Tips for Your Home Office

If you are running a home-based business, you must have a home office right at your own home. However, after some time, that home office could look and feel more like a storage room. The result: you go there seldom and you dread having to enter the room to find business stuff. You might be forced to work at the kitchen or at other places in your house. Here are several organization tips that could help you properly organize your own home office so that it could always be functional and presentable no matter what.

First, get cleared out. You have to categorize each item in the home office and decide which things should stay and go. Perform a basic de-cluttering activity. It would be advisable if you would classify items into things that you would: Keep, Trash, Donate, and Hold on while Deciding. The last could be given a six-month shelf life. After that, you must already be decided what to do with the item. If you are not able to do so, you could put it into your trash items. Items that are not useful anymore should be categorized at trash and should immediately go to the trash can. Keep things that are obviously and logically useful and important. Donate or recycle for other purposes things that could still have other uses other than its former function in the home office.

Then, clean the room to dust it off. It would be ideal if you would decide to paint or repaint the room. Prefer bright and stimulating paint color like bright blue or yellow so you could re-energize the room. Experts assert that a room designated as a home office could be more useful and cheerful if it would be painted or repainted with attractive colors.

Turn to the desk. It is a table you would be using most time of the day. An ā€˜L’ shaped one is most advisable. Put your computer, fax machine, phone, and printer in one wing. Assign the other wing for spreading out on. If you are right handed, put the phone on your left side so that you could talk and at the same time take down notes with your right hand (Do otherwise if you are left-handed). It would also be advisable if you would prefer to invest in all-in-one equipment, which combines phone, fax, printer, and scanner in one device for space efficiency.

Take out al personal things from the home office. Such items could only be a cause of distraction and could practically and visually clutter up the home office space. Have a box where you could put in all your magazines and print outs. If you think all your magazines and periodicals are just piling up and you do not get to read them all, get rid of those and cancel your subscriptions.

You could save a significant amount of money, too. Put into a drawer all light office paraphernalia like staplers, paper clips, notes, and scissors. These organization tips would surely make your home office better.

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An Organized Office

by The Organizer Lady dot com

Instead of using somebody else’s definition of organization, let me ask you: How organized do you want to be? When we talk about getting organized people usually get an impression of a spick and span office with not a paper out of place. But my experience has taught me that a neat office does not necessarily have to be a very organized office. If you throw away every single piece of paper that comes to your office, certainly your office will be neat but not organized. I believe that organizing is a relative term. It is all a matter of convenience.

In an organized office there will be a place for every thing and everything will be in its place. But at the same time you should be able to lay your hands on the object you need the moment you need it. And in this respect a little bit of clutter is ok.

It is not enough that you know where every thing is, somebody else should know it too. In case you are not able to come in person and get something, somebody else should be able to do the job for you. It is here that labels and tags can prove to be very important. Every single file should have a label and every thing should be filed properly. It is not enough that you name things according to your convenience. The names should make sense to others as well..

For every working man or woman, the following are often pitfalls:

Forgetting Appointments
Forgetting Deadlines
Being Unable to meet deadlines
Being late for meetings and Appointments
Forgetting Names
Forgetting Telephone Numbers
Forgetting to take important documents and things along
Misplacing Objects and so on

By organizing your office, you can avoid most, if not all of the above maladies. In the end, both time and money are saved.

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More and more people are finding ways to work from home, either to replace a 9-to-5 job or to supplement the family’s income. One of the best things you can do to help improve your chances to succeed is to establish a home office. Not only is it a tax write-off (be sure to check with your accountant as to what you can and cannot deduct), but it is also a way to help stay organized and be more professional.

The type of business you are running will dictate the type of office you need. Will you be having clients meeting you in your office? Will it be your workspace? Will it be a multi-purpose room? For example, if you have a business based mainly on a computer and internet, then you won’t need as much space as you would for a craft production or product distribution business.

First, eliminate anything from the room that isn’t directly connected to your business (unless it is a multi-purpose room, such as a wall that serves as the family library). The fewer distractions you have, the better. It also helps reduce unnecessary clutter. Store things in boxes or move them to another room.

There are many nice filing systems – from the traditional filing cabinets, to hanging folders that can attach to the back of a door. Sort through all the papers in your office. Decide what you need to keep and what can be thrown away. When in doubt, set up another folder or box for things to look at again later. Once you establish a filing system, keep up with it on a daily basis. It is too easy to become overwhelmed if you don’t. Color-coded systems work nicely. One color for tax-deductible related items, another for invoices to clients, another expenses, etc. Then you simply place the papers or receipts in the appropriate color folder.

The workspace is often the most difficult to keep organized, but if you have a handle on the paperwork, it helps reduce one area of clutter. Make sure the workspace is large enough, and comfortable. Whether you have to sit or stand do to the work, make sure the surface is at the correct height. This will help reduce back strain and allow you to work for longer periods of time, thereby increasing your productivity.

There are many nice desk organizers that allow you to keep items close at hand but out of the way. If you only keep the items you need most often on the workspace, it will also reduce clutter. Keep the rest tucked away in storage units in your desk drawer, shelf or box. There are drawer organizers that can be customized to meet your needs.

If you use a computer, make sure you have enough space for the computer itself, the monitor, printer and any other hardware you may need, such as scanners and fax machines. Many companies produce multi-purpose units that combine those features into one machine, which takes up much less desk space.

Don’t forget to organize the computer itself. There are many organizational software programs that can help you track appointments, clients, and your work. By using these programs, you can keep on top of things and waste less time. Set up special folders in your documents folder, so you can file things away for easy retrieval. Databases and spreadsheets are also very helpful tools in tracking your inventory and other business related needs.


Organized For Home-Based Business Success

Organized For Home-Based Business Success

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