Monday, December 29, 2014

Creating a Functional Kitchen


STEP ONE: ANALYSIS
As you ponder where to place your kitchen things, begin by analyzing your old storage systems. Were some things working well? If so, don’t change them! If you love storing your mugs by the coffee maker, stick with it. If it’s convenient to have your recipe books on the countertop, keep it up.

Now ponder anything inconvenient. How could you make those things work a little better? For example, if you hate having piles of cans and bottles littering your countertop as they await a trip outside for recycling, then make a new plan. Clear space under the sink to install a pull-out trash can to capture those recyclables immediately after use. If you hate reaching to the top shelf to get your favorite, frequently-used mixing bowls, make a plan to house them in a more convenient location like an eye-level shelf. Where you put your stuff is as important as what you own. If you can’t find it when you need it, or it’s inconvenient to reach, you’ll likely not use it!

STEP TWO: PLACEMENT
As you look over your groupings of kitchen items, start pulling aside the things you use most often. Then store them where you use them. For example, your everyday dishes might work great directly above your dishwasher or close to the table. Perhaps your pots and pans and cookie sheets could go near the stove.

Keeping similar things together will help you navigate your kitchen more easily. For example, store everything related to cooking in one area. You might group your pots and pans, bakeware, hot mitts, and cooking utensils in one area. Create a food preparation area by grouping cutting boards, knives, and mixing bowls. If you love to bake, consolidate cookie cutters, mixers, measuring cups and spoons in one area.

There are many helpful organizing products available to keep your kitchen orderly. Baskets and bins come in a variety of sizes and hold foods, like onions and potatoes, as well as cleaning supplies. A wall-mounted spice rack saves cupboard space. Inside cupboards, double-decker wire shelf stackers double storage space. Wooden cookware racks keep pot lids tidy. An attractive vase or crock near your stove top corrals utensils.

If you use something frequently, keep it close and convenient. Put infrequently used items way up high, down low, or in the back. Place anything you use daily (such as everyday dishes) at eye level, so you’re not stooping down or reaching on tip-toe. Keep heavy things down low and lighter things up high. For example, if you use your turkey platter or punch bowl only once or twice a year, place them on a bottom shelf.

STEP THREE: MAINTENANCE
Once your kitchen is organized, pat yourself on the back. Job well done! But you’re not quite finished... Establish an “in/out” system where some purging takes place before you purchase a new item. If you buy a new set of plastic storage containers, toss out an equal amount of your old Tupperware®. If you come home with a new mug, an old one must go! It may be helpful to stash a donation box somewhere nearby as an easy reminder of this rule. Also, take time once each year to review your kitchen and all its accouterments. Discard anything broken, donate
anything unused in the past 12 months, and make sure the storage systems still make sense for you and your housemates. Consider your kitchen a work in progress, and like fine wine it will only get better with time.

Strategize & Organize
http://annemcgurty.com/residential/
480-442-2014

Freshen Up Your Facebook Image

If you are in business  and are using social media personally, people will check you out and make decisions about whether or not to do business with you or hire you based on what you're saying online.  As a business coach here in Phenix, I often tell my small business clients that if you want to use a social media strategy to get to the next level of your business or your profession in the next year, take these handy tips to freshen things up.
1. SWEEP THE FLOOR: Go through your Facebook profile and remove all green “recent activity” icons by scrolling to the right of each message and clicking on the x. Click on the option “do not post my recent activity”.   There’s no need for people to see who you just became friends with or who you wished a happy birthday to, etc. Now view the items you posted in the last 3 months. If they are questionable, negative or unprofessional remove them. Finally, remove all posts placed by other people that are currently showing on your profile page.  Your profile should only contain positive posts by you. Great job sweeping the floor, now your profile page is clean. When people visit your page to read about you they see a positive image of you.
2. BE POSITIVE: Avoid posting negative comments. Don’t do it. Period. For example do not post: “I’m sick”, “I’m angry”, “I had a bad day”, trashy video or content, etc. You will attract what you put out there. Always be positive. Now that you’ve removed any negative posts, keep it positive moving forward in your timeline.
3. UPGRADE YOUR PROFILE PICTURE: Make sure your Facebook Profile Picture is professional. Take a look at Anne McGurty for examples. Anytime you have the opportunity to be photographed with a microphone at a corporate event, when you’re in business attire, or as you’re at a high- end resort or swanky restaurant, take advantage of it! Then post it on Facebook as your profile pic!
4. ADD A PHOTO TO Facebook ADS: photos add an impactful visual element to your profile page and to the ads you post. Be creative and edgy without crossing the line of professionalism. If you’re using the ad IT’S       MORE FUN HERE! Add a photo of a guinea pig skating on the sidewalk wearing roller blades! Yes we’ve done that! Why? Because people look at photos first… and IF it is intriguing & fun… they then read the post. Mission accomplished! Do NOT post more than 2-3 Facebook newsfeed ads per month. See #7 below.
5. PRIVATE MESSAGES ONLY: At the base of each ad ask them to respond to your business phone or via private message where they include their contact information.  If you choose to have them call, make sure your voicemail is also professional.  Check this one out custom to recruit people to a growing organic company, 1-800-394-4174.
6. MONITOR COMMENTS: monitor all the comments your posts receive. If anyone posts a negative comment remove it right away. They will NOT be notified that you removed their comment. Comments are public and are viewed by everyone looking at your profile so check them often and REMOVE all negativity.
7. LIFESTYLE POSTS ARE THE MOST MAGNETIC OF ALL: It’s not just about ads, ads, ads. All business and no fun will create a lopsided Facebook profile. What are people attracted to the MOST? … the way you LIVE LIFE!!! Anytime you go to the movies, the lake, the beach, dinner, traveling, host a party, attend a party, etc… POST IT WITH A PHOTO! Let people know you’re on track to be retired from your 9-5 job. Let people know how amazing it is to grocery shop or catch a movie MID-WEEK!!! Let them know you’re traveling more and working less…. or that you are on track to do that! People are attracted to fun, excitement, joy and THEY WILL WANT WHAT YOU HAVE … THEY WILL WANT TO WORK BESIDE YOU. THEY WILL            WANT TO MOVE TOWARD THE GOAL YOU ARE MOVING TOWARD.
8. As people private message you they will be from all over the country and beyond. If you're not able to meet with them face to face, send them to your blog, website or share your company with them right away directly over the phone.

And remember, just have fun!  Be authentic, people will always do business with people they know, like and trust.  Create the brand online and you will shine!
Happy New Year!
Anne McGurty
www.annemcgurty.com
480-442-2014
amcgurty@strategizeandorganize.com

lables:    facebooks social media social media marketing social media phoenix productivity consultant 

Sunday, December 21, 2014

How Mindfulness Can Sharpen Our Focus and Productivity

Mindfulness has become a popular and trendy movement recently. As a business consultant in Phoenix, I work with clients recognizing the act of focusing on awareness on the flow of the present moment. It brings into the center of the present moment so that we are aware of what we do while we are doing it. It may seem both easy obvious yet when we focus, we can strategize and organize our attention to our thoughts we will discover that we waste the majority of our day thinking about past and future events. Or if we are fortunate enough, lounging around day dreaming instead of paying attention on what matters.

Most of us have a natural point of view and our thoughts are dominated by either past, present or future events. What we don’t want is that past or future events dominating our present experiences or that we live too much in the present that we don’t learn from past experiences nor plan for the future. So like most things in life we seek balance.

The practice of mindfulness teaches us to become aware of our thoughts and the present moment. It is a habit we need to nurture because our natural tendency is to stray from the here and how to tomorrow, next week or next month. When we practice mindfulness we keep calling back our wandering mind to rest on the current moment.

Some of the Benefits of Mindfulness
Below are some of the many benefits of mindfulness and how they can improve our focus and productivity.

More Effective Planning
On the outset, mindfulness may appear to conflict with the concept of planning but in fact they complement each other greatly. Planning allows us to practice mindfulness by reducing the burdens that the mind needs to worry about. If we are to schedule and plan all our responsibilities and duties we have less to distract us from our daily tasks. When applying mindfulness techniques planning can be a much more effective process and not be delayed by the disruptions of other activities and ideas.

Greater Focus
One of our biggest challenges to getting things done is the distraction of the mind, even though we try to get one job done, our mind reminds us of twenty others that still need doing. We readily check our email simply because our brain alerts us to the idea there could be unread emails in our inbox and in the event they remain unchecked we could be missing the fact that the planet is soon to be demolished by an extraterrestrial construction crew!

As this thought comes into our head we then remember that our copy of the Seven Habits of Highly Successful People was lent to a friend so maybe we should shoot over to Amazon and buy a fresh copy. Mindfulness jumps in the way of all these distractions of the mind and says “Hey, come back to the present moment, get what needs to be done, done!”

Stress Reduction
A lot of stress is brought about by imagining negative future scenarios, if we were to live completely in the present we would not suffer from this stress. But the human brain has the ability to cast itself into the future, so for now we are stuck with this capability, and will have to learn how to manage it. Stressing about future scenarios that haven’t happened is a pointless habit; mindfulness can teach us how to redirect these negative and worrying thoughts back to the present moment and remind us that the future hasn’t happened and so far is not controlling our present circumstances. Mindfulness can also help with the insomnia that often accompanies stressful situations.

As we lie awake during the night thinking about the poor sales figures or perhaps the debts that need to be paid, it's important to bring our focus back to our physical body, noticing our breath, and the simple fact we are lying comfortable and warm in bed and stuff whirling through our minds have not happened yet.

Take this moment to know that the future hasn’t happened, the past is gone and the present, the wonderful present, is all we have and all that is assured. Remember to be part of every second that you live and experience to gift which is Now.

Source:
Anne McGurty
www.annemcgurty.com
480-442-2014
amcgurty@gmail.com



Sunday, December 14, 2014

Five Sure Fire Ways to End Your Year of Filing

As we’re approaching the end of the year, it’s time to take a day and do what is called “the file clean out day”. Once you know what you have, you can make decisions on what to purge, save, and possibly scan or archive.

Are you asking yourself, “what’s going on here?”. Consider what shape your filing system is in? Are your filing drawers stuffed so full that it’s nearly impossible to get another piece of paper into – or out of them? Are you hurting your knuckles every time you pull a file out? This time of year is a great time to review your files and purge as much as possible, creating space for next year’s papers.

If you’re using The Paper Tiger software, it’s pretty easy, as all you need to do is run a “file clean out report” and review it to assist you in the process. Don’t use Paper Tiger? Here’s what you can do to get through all your old papers and prepare yourself for the new year.

1. Determine what to keep. As you sort through papers, ask yourself, “What’s the value of keeping this piece of paper?”, “Can I find it somewhere online?” and “Are there any financial or legal concerns if I did not have the original?”. If the answers to these questions have minimal value, let the file go. Statistics indicate that 80% of the things you file will never get referred to again!

2. If you don’t have corporate records retention guidelines, create guidelines and use them as you purge your documents. Your accountant, attorney, or productivity consultant can advise you which documents you should keep for non-proprietary papers.

3. Keep only day-to-day paperwork at your fingertips. For rarely-used files that must be kept, I call these reference files. Store them in an out-of-the-way area. For rarely accessed but critical to keep files, store them ideally at an off-site storage facility or consider streamlining those types of papers to an electronic filing system. Scanning these documents upfront will minimize the need to keep moving them from one area to the next.

4. Toss the obvious. Instruction manuals for products you no longer own, research materials for no longer active ideas, drafts of letters, out-of-date magazines and articles, and receipts for items not needed for reimbursement or tax purposes.

5. File important documents in a fire safe filing cabinet. For your home office, consider a safety deposit box. The contents of your safety deposit box or home safe would include: passports; birth, death, and marriage certificates; deeds; divorce decrees; adoption and citizenship papers, insurance policy papers; lease agreements and loan documents; mortgage papers; personal property appraisals (jewelry, collectibles); Social Security cards; stock and bond certificates; vehicle titles; copies of wills; and powers of attorney papers. You get the picture. We still need the originals of a lot of these documents, so protect yourself and your assets. Remember to protect your combinations.

While you’re in the mood to be cleaning out files, don’t forget your PC. It also has files that you no longer need, slowing down your processing of work.

You can run maintenance programs which can ‘defrag’ your files– in other words clean up and arrange them in a way which makes it easier for your PC to find and the speed for running programs will be improved.

Empty your recycle bin. When you delete a file, you are only moving it to the Recycle Bin. If you do not regularly empty your Bin, the files inside may take up valuable disk space. Oftentimes, people overlook this task. You should empty your Recycle Bin regularly, at least once a week. So if you haven’t been doing it, add it to your file clean out day.

Remove Temporary Files. Temporary or junk files are left over by programs and are usually no longer needed. Internet Explorer stores many of the files used on the web pages you visit so that next time you go to a site it doesn’t have to download the same files again. However, this can build up over time and take up a lot of disk space. They waste space and that may eventually slow your PC down.

Another benefit of getting your papers organized is that you will feel more confident to go paperless. When you go paperless, you can store your files in the cloud with Google Drive.  You'll have the best of both worlds being organized with paper and digitally.  

Thursday, December 11, 2014

5 Ways to Boost Personal Productivity

Are you always looking for a way to stay sharp, gain an edge and boost your personal productivity? If so you are in good company of a big portion of the rest of the population of the world. With so much to do and the list seemingly ever-increasing daily many of us are aiming to increase our individual efficiency if for only to simply make it to tomorrow.

Increasing productivity begins with getting the most out of what skill sets you already have. With that said here are 5 ways to find the productivity improvement you are looking for by 'fine tuning' what you already have.

1.  Begin Early

The old saying 'early to bed early to rise makes a man healthy, wealthy and wise' is something most people have heard and it bears a lot of truth. Starting your day early will give you the chance to make the most of your energy level while at it's highest. Both your body and mind  usually tend to wear down throughout the course of the day so it just is sensible to be sure to get the most out of both when they're at their optimal levels.

2.  Establish a Fitness Routine

Along the lines of maximizing personal performance a healthy body is going to possess more stamina and 'staying' power so you can remain 'sharper for an extended period of time. Also, it is a well-known fact that exercise delivers more oxygen to your brain allowing it to function more effectively. So here is what you get for exercising, sharper brains on a more fit body, what else might you ask for?

Additionally following a routine exercise program will help you to fall asleep easier at night so that you can wake up early the next morning refreshed.

3.  'List Out' Your Day

Preparing a daily list of priorities will make it easier to keep your focus on finishing those tasks you determine as important. Typically just simply listing out your 'day in advance' will automatically guide you to prioritize the tasks on your list. As your 'to do' list is being put together you are able to make any necessary changes as to schedule or perhaps a change in your priorities. This is an effective technique for 'scheduling goals' on a daily basis!

4.  Build Up Your Strengths

Whatever strength you have can always be improved upon! Possibly the best strategy to increasing productivity is to simply get better at what you are currently good at. Besides if you find yourself proficient at something you generally also enjoy doing it so you will likely not mind spending more time on it to make positive changes.

5.  Work on Your Weaknesses

In order to get better we quite often will need to venture outside our 'comfort zone' this means facing something we are not proficient at. Simply by dedicating a small amount of time each day to work on some of our weaknesses we are going to begin to see progress in these areas over a short period of time. Before long we are going to improve and be more comfortable with these 'former weaknesses' which will make it even easier to spend more time working away at them.

For those who are driven it is only natural and quite commendable to want to boost your current personal productivity. With an ever growing list, discovering ways to increase our personal performance is the best way to tackle these new challenges. Developing new talents and skills is one way to find the productivity improvement necessary to meet these challenges. Another more practical approach to increasing productivity however and possibly even easier is to further develop the skill sets we already have. The 5 ways to do this as discussed above focuses more on ways to strengthen or better utilize any current assets we have. In this way we can easily improve upon whatever we already know in doing so making us better at that which we already do.

Sunday, November 30, 2014

Home Safe Home -- 7 quick tips to keep you safe!



Going over the river and through the woods for the holidays? Let's make all your memories be positive with these 7 quick tips to keep you safe.

Consider these simple preventative measures to help keep your home safe and secure while you're away.

Don't put out the "we're not home" sign -- set up timers on lights and a radio or television so that your home appears and may sound lived in.


  1. Tell trusted friends and neighbors know how long you will be away and ways to get in touch with you in an emergency. Ask them to help keep an observant eye on your home. Ask them to collect your mail and newspapers, or you can suspend delivery until you return. 
  2. Perhaps your neighbor could park their cars in your driveway periodically. In snowy climates, ask them to shovel your walk and driveway.  The last suggestion is really a big one, so I would offer them a bonus for that extra work.
  3. Detach home address and phone numbers from your luggage tags and include only your cell-phone number, in case an unscrupulous baggage handler gets any shady ideas.
  4. Lock up and hide your valuables. Keep some shades partially closed to keep expensive items (such as your big-screen TV) out of view. (But don't completely close all window coverings, or it will be obvious that no one is home.)
  5. Set the thermostat to an energy-saving level. Unplug most appliances to save electricity.
  6. Remove all perishable items from your refrigerator, and take out the trash so you don't return to unpleasant odors.
  7. It may seem obvious, but don't forget to lock all doors and windows. If you leave a vehicle in the driveway, be sure to remove any garage door openers.
Last year, I published this blog. I had a family member who was away in college have her sorority house broken into, unfortunately, her mom didn't send her my newsletter.  These tips would have been really helpful to her.  If you have any kiddos away at college, please forward this article to them.  They're probably just as excited to come home and may not be thinking about how to keep their home away from home safe. 

Happy Holidays! 

Sunday, November 23, 2014

Organizing Tools: what you need to get organized

One of the keys to staying organized is to routinely edit your closet, home office, or workplace.  The reason most people think they don’t want to clear the clutter  is because  it takes too much effort or it’s too time consuming.  Truth be known, it’s more about the fact that clearing the clutter is a very emotional process that feels like therapy.  It takes emotional stamina to declutter.    –  Anne McGurty, NAPO Colorado Past President, CEO/Founder, Strategize & Organize. www.strategizeandorganize.com  480-442-2014

My favorite words are “I’ve been looking for that.” It makes me smile when my clients say that. I like to give people something they thought they had lost. For many of my clients make organizing is  a low priority, without realizing that disorganization is such a major trigger of stress. Organizing allows you to be in control of your things instead of the other way around. As a professional organizer, I never know what I’m going to come up against. Sometimes I’m sorting paper; sometimes I’m discovering that forgotten coin collection. My job is to solve problems, so I never go to a client’s home or office unprepared. Here’s what I keep in my workbag:

IN THE TRAVELING BAG
  • Brother Label Maker (and extra batteries) 
  • Post-it notes for everything
  • Screwdriver, hammer, pocket knife, tape measures
  • Ziploc bags, for sorting
  • SmartPhone with  camera, crucial for restaging so you can re-create an area.  Not to mention the satisfying before and after pictures.
  • Paper clips, pens, pencils, tape, scissors, rubber bands, clipboard, calculator
  • Pendaflex hanging file folders, insert tabs, and Avery labels
  • Personal Emergency and Stamina items: Stevia packets, hand cream, protein bar, water bottle with Super Reds, Q96 and stain remover
THE BAG:   A garage sale find in my Paradise Valley, Arizona, neighborhood. SCORE!

Sunday, November 16, 2014

Office Space! Are you squeezed into a corner?


Maximize whatever space you have.

Winston Churchill once said, “We shape our buildings; thereafter, they shape us.” How true, not just for buildings but for our offices as well.

Studies have found that the physical space in which we work affects satisfaction, productivity, and even learning. Yet few of us take time to strategize and organize our workplaces or our homes.  Business consulting is more than creating strategies, it starts with building a foundation with the right space.

Imagine an office where you show up every day and feel excited each day to get started because your desk is inviting you to sit down. Your chair is ergonomically correct, you have all the latest technology, and you have comfortable seats for your guests. When your office is right, you will feel comfortable and energized. When you check into your office each morning, you will have the right keys for being organized.

Here are a few keys and a few simple steps, ranging from the right workspace system to ergonomic-friendly products that can help businesses boost employee productivity and ease.

1.  Be ergonomically correct
Keep a massage ball handy to free your hands from stress. People performing repetitive activities on a keyboard or an adding machine can injure their hands. A stress ball will help you or your staff exercise your hands in new ways, rather than just typing.

Arrange your office room in such a way as to maintain appropriate air circulation. Position yourself away from air conditioning vents that push air right on top of you.

Position your computer monitor twenty-four to thirty-seven inches away from you with the screen at or below eye level to reduce strain on your neck and shoulders.

If you are on the phone a lot, use a Bluetooth device, headset or a quality speakerphone so that you can listen and write notes at the same time.


2.  Create an at-home workspace
Designate a spot in your home to do your business and money activities such as Internet research, writing thank-you notes, managing your schedule, and paying bills.

Always do work activities in that space and only that space.  Then you’ll always know where everything is.

3.  Arrange your main office
Arrange your office furniture for maximum use of the space.

Create a specific location for specific things, such as client files, supplies, books, calendar, briefcase, and appointment book.

Place your most frequently accessed files nearest your work desk.

Place peripherals and hardware where you can reach them without crossing the room.

Secure cables off the floor. Label them, so you always know what they are and to which equipment they connect.

4.  Work anywhere
Wherever you are, keep your work flowing.

5.  Create a portable office
Have an “on the go” system ready to roll whenever and wherever you go. Even at a moment’s notice, you can always have your schedule, work plan, and appointments list handy—in the car or however you travel.

6.  Get set up for mobility
Keep your critical information at hand by using a SmartPhone. These devices have the functionality of a computer but are compact enough to throw in a briefcase, handbag, or pocket (e.g., iPhone, Droid). This mobility can also be done with a laptop, which can be set up so you can work offline on your email, and once you hook up to the Internet it will synch, send, and reconcile your email.

Through Microsoft Outlook, you can synchronize your task list, calendar, and address book to your home computer using Microsoft Exchange or Google Apps for Business.   However, assess your true needs before you purchase. Keep it simple.

7.  Use the same organizing methods
Wherever you work—at the office or at home—consistency simplifies your thought process.  Use the same system.

Unclutter your brain. Let organizing do the work for you…so you do not have to try to remember what you were doing or where you put something.


Tuesday, November 11, 2014

Overwhelmed by Email? Maximize this invaluable resource


Are you way behind in your email? Think about how you handle email and why. Then strategize and organize to get your email under control.

Take a look at some of these key tips to organize the volume of email.

Synch your email

  • Use a SmartPhone that is synchronized to the email on your computer it's really easy these days as most phones are automatically configured to your Gmail our Outlook account with just a few simple minutes configuring the settings. 
  • Take those free minutes standing in line or waiting for an appointment to clear your email, keep scrolling and delete what isn't necessary. 

Set aside a time for email

  • Focus time to check business email once a day, but not first thing in the morning. Does your morning (or main) work first so you do not get sidetracked
  • Limit yourself to focus one hour of answering emails to keep your work goals on plan rather than respond to new inquiries. 


Answer business email within twenty-four hours. Set up an auto-responder when you can’t.

  • Turn off the audible or ghost alert. 
  • Check personal email during non-work time. 
  • Unsubscribe from email lists you do not read.

Send efficient messages

  • Use the subject line to clearly describe the purpose of your email. This helps the recipient, and it helps you when you are trying to find a message you previously sent.
  • If your email requires an action by the recipient or is urgent, put URGENT or DECISION in the subject line or use the “urgent” notation provided in your email program. 
  • Keep it short. Keep it simple. One topic per email. Do not overload with too much information. It might be overlooked…and where would you file it?
  • Compose lengthy or complicated emails in your word-processing program, and then copy/paste into the email. If you have a glitch during the sending process, you can easily retrieve the message. 
  • When replying to email, include enough of the old message that the recipient knows what you are talking about. Delete unnecessary information.
  • When forwarding an email, delete the other email addresses. 

Follow up weekly

  • Review your sent emails weekly. If you haven’t received a response, follow up.

Use BCC

  • When sending an email to multiple addresses, put your email address in the “To” line and the recipients’ addresses in the “BCC” line (blind carbon copies). That way, only one name shows up and the recipients do not see everyone else’s names. Do not broadcast other people’s email addresses. 

Monitor attachments

  • These two steps will keep your computer from receiving and spreading viruses: Do not open an attachment unless you know who sent it and you’re expecting it. Only send email attachments when the recipient is expecting it.
  • If a file is too large to send through regular email, use Google Drive or DropBox.  These free services (for initial accounts) allow you to upload files and send invitations to specific individuals to open and download that file.  These services prevent the email from clogging the recipient’s mailbox and slowing down the sending and receiving process.

Monitor downloads

  • Do not download anything unless you know who sent it, what it is, and you are expecting it. 
  • Set up your email program to manually download upon your direction. 

Set preferences for receiving emails

  • Set a file size limit for receiving emails; most are thirty to fifty kilobytes. This is especially useful if you travel without fast Internet access. 
  • To prevent your inbox from overflowing, ask yourself: “Does this information contribute to my professional or personal goals?” If not, delete (such as by using Orla). 
  • If you are unavailable for a period of time, set the “Out of Office” feature so senders will receive one automatic message as to when you will return. 
  • Some email programs allow changing the subject line of an incoming message, so you can more easily find and retrieve the letter later. 

Eliminate clutter

  • Open and read an email only when you are ready to act on it. 
  • Before you read your emails, go through and delete the ones that obviously do not interest you or do not need to be saved or clearly are spam. 
  • Set up block controls for spam. 

File online and offline

  • Take some time to manage and organize email files, folders, and cabinets offline on your hard drive, and online through your service provider, where it remains even if your hard drive crashes. 
  • Copy an email to your hard drive by using F12 on your PC.  This action converts your email into document that you can store in its appropriate folder within your hard drive, for example, under My Documents; create new folders such as My Finances, My Clients, My Correspondence, or Personal. 
  • Turn emails into tasks by using Microsoft Outlook. Left-click on the email, drag it to your designated task folder, and drop it. A task window pops open with the email appended to it. Write in the task description; assign a priority and a due date. Click Save. Now you can delete the original email. Change the subject line to reflect the action required (e.g., change “re: Annual Meeting” to “Call travel agent re: Chicago trip”). 
  • If you use a “tickler” date file system for hard copies (days 1-31, months Jan-Dec), print the related email and file into the folder for the day you will need it (e.g., a message with driving directions you will need on the date of the appointment).  

Get organized. Continue to think about how you work each day. When you understand why you feel like you’re always running but never getting ahead, you can change how you process your email. When you do, you’ll be able to check out of the office, feeling like you’re in control and on top of your job.

This blog post is an excerpt from Anne's book, Lost in Your Own Office.  Available at www.annemcgurty.com

Monday, November 3, 2014

Are you doing what is your passion?

This morning I was working on my website and I had the television on in the background and was listening to Wayne Dyer talking.  He said something that really struck home with me.

“When we live in a place of passion, we can create anything.  Passion is the creative source in our soul.. live it and let it be your number one source of living life.. it is God guiding you.”

As a business consultant, I know that may be a little too “God focused” for a business dialogue, but I see the value in living your passion.  When we feel something inside of us,driving us, and we ignore, I think we are destined to live in chaos.  The chaos is the conflict of doing what we think we should be doing versus what we enjoy doing.

I know I get so excited when I am working with people as a business coach, being productive, being of service.  It is obviously nurturing my soul when I am working with others, my clients, my friends.


Think about your life, try to feel it in your heart and soul.  Is it serving you? Or are you serving another force outside your comfort zone.  If your life is calm, organized, and balance, chances are you are living your passion.  If you are feeling conflict and disorder, there is opportunity to strategize and organize yourself into a more fulfilling life.




Sunday, November 2, 2014

VIP Day - Flash Gratitude Offer

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Pick my brain here! 


 FAQ About This Crazy Good Offer of Gratitude

 1. Can I do it over Skype or Google Hangout?

 Sure! If you are outside of Arizona, you can break it up into 2 four hour sessions for each day you buy.

 2. Can I think about it and still get the offer?

 Not if you want this sales price. Decision makers get rewarded with executive perks. Your executive perk is this price for booking now.

 3. Can I buy more than the 2 days offered?

 Absolutely, just fill out the form and pay for as may days as you would like. aching calls that are laser-focused weekly by phone or by SKYPE.

As my business coach tells me, “The Universe helps those who take action. Click BELOW To set your success in motion!"


VIP Day with Anne


Testimonials 

Anne is a professional and expert in organizational development and strategies. She inspires others with her knowledge and experience to become more productive and to seek out solutions to everyday obstacles in the workplace and home. Her dedicated approach towards her clients gives them that personal attention lost in today’s fast paced society. As both a friend and colleague I highly recommend Anne! — Lisa Jimenez, Director of Human Resources, Allied Business Schools

Anne McGurty of Strategize and Organize has made a tremendous impact on our business. Her skill in client service and experience has created significant results inside our firm. — Rob Ekern President/CEO, C.R. Ekern & Company and author of ‘Consultative Brokerage®: A Value Strategy

I have worked with Anne in the private sector, the public sector, and at home. Anne has a remarkable talent which makes initial organization, as well as continuity in knowing where things are, simple and logical. Anne’s coaching technique is very personable and caring. If I move to another job, I’m taking Anne with me! -- Sharla Allen ORH Manager at Wyoming Department of Health

Managing time and resources efficiently and effectively is critical to success. I found Anne skilled in identifying what aspects of time management and organizational management I needed help in and then being able to customize an approach to fit my needs (and then proceeded to do the same for my management team). It seems these days we are all pressed for time, thus I highly recommend you take a few minutes and learn where Anne can help you and your business. — Jeff Poe, CEO, Vision Care Specialists (formerly Executive Director of US Oncology)


VIP Day with Anne

Thursday, October 30, 2014

Hello Healthy http://blog.myfitnesspal.com/?native_client=1

Saturday, October 25, 2014

7 Tips for Clearing the Clutter from Your Closet

Clear your Closet: Change your Life

Discover 7 tips for clearing the clutter from your closet so you can make space for more of what you want in your life. In Feng Shui your closet represents secrets. Once you unlock the energy in your closet you could possibly find something beautiful coming your way.

Imagine you've written your life long autobiography and it didn’t flow well?  How do you fix it?

At my www.howtospeakinaweek.com seminar recently one of my clients was surprised to hear my recommendation:

"First you declutter your stories. You eliminate any phrases which doesn't sound right..... words, anecdotes, whole ideas. And even if you are left with only one short story, you've created space for something totally new to surface."

Does this sound familiar?

While working with a busy executive client the other day, we decluttered her closet - we took out two thirds of her clothes and gave them to charity. Within 2 days she found herself writing, day and night. She couldn't stop.

Four years earlier, she had started writing her autobiography and she'd got stuck. It had been on her mind ever since.

Now it was flowing out of her. She told me her family had a lot of secrets and she'd got stuck trying to write about them.

What she didn't know until then, was that closets represent secrets. Things hidden away. Once she freed up the energy in her closet, her writing energy freed up and she found herself writing about the secrets that had stopped her in her tracks years before.

So, how is your closet, and what do you think decluttering might free up in your life?

If your closet has clothes you don't wear, it's messy and disorganized and/or you have clothes that don't make you feel great when you wear them, this will create an energy block which will keep your life from flowing as easily as it might. As you're decluttering ask yourself these questions about each piece of clothing:

1. When was the last time I wore this? Sometimes you need to give things a rest for a while - but if your reason for not wearing it is that something else always feels better then perhaps it's time to let it go.

2. Does it fit? Keeping clothes you no longer fit into can really bring your energy down. Let go of them and focus on living in the present. It doesn't mean your weight might not change in the future.

Having clothes that don't fit is a constant reminder of the past. Consider promising yourself some new clothes if you clear out those clothes that represent who you used to be?

3. Do I look good in it? There's no point keeping things that don't make you look your best - even if you paid lots for them. You're not going to wear them. Take them to a consignment shop and get some money for them. Take a look at what inspired you to purchase them in the first place - how can you make a wiser decision next time? Now, go out and buy yourself something that makes you feel on top of the world.

4. Do I feel good in it? Given that your clothes are a reflection of who you are, why keep anything that doesn't make you feel good?

5. Does it fit my current or desired lifestyle? Do you have clothes from a past lifestyle still in your closet? Any corporate suits that are no longer appropriate? Anything you bought because it looked wonderful but it doesn't fit who you are? In Feng Shui it's important to surround yourself with things that represent who you truly are now.

6. Is it in good condition? You'll not wear old clothes, except to paint in and you only need one set of those. Throw anything out that's past its best.

7. Is it ready to wear or does it need repair or cleaning? Set it aside to do now so you can wear these things.

The clothes that will be most difficult to let go of will likely be those you paid a lot of money for. Giving clothes to charity can help move past those guilty feelings. It will make you feel good if you focus on the value you're creating in someone else's life.

Action Step: This week set aside some time to declutter your closet.

Just as in reworking a poem, the easiest way I know to declutter a closet is to take everything out, clean the closet, and only put back what you'd like to keep.

And once you've done that, do the same in a month's time - you'll find you can let go of even more.

When you unlock the energy in your closet, you might just find something wonderful coming your way. Perhaps you'll start writing again and get that book published.

Friday, October 24, 2014

3 Measurements to Increase Productivity


Walk into any thriving business, and you won’t travel far before you can see and experience what productivity looks like. It’s in the air—it’s contagious! The business vision, mission and core values play the most significant role in nurturing a culture of productivity and satisfaction.

The key measurements

What does productivity look like in your business? You will need to first find out your position when it comes metrics to create targeted goals for your business’s direction. Working with your staff or downline to explore and create new systems will radically increase your efficiency and skyrocket team morale. Set objectives and think outside of the box using the following three critical productivity measurements.

1. One success at a time.  Rather than focusing on total sales or volume, mastering one success at a time may be a more manageable goal. Determine your team’s current status; if  there's room for improvement in the process, if you're cutting corners, or unprepared for meetings, just imagine where you’ll land when you reach one success at a time. Another way to increase your success is to take into consideration what your ideal client looks like and use a checklist to go through the prospeciting and service of the client.  . When it comes to increasing your productivity and gross margin, systematically mastering your level of service can pay immense dividends.

2. Reward client rebooking, prebooking or going on autopayments. What is repeated is rewarded. Add incentives for clients who prebook their next appointments or go on auto payments.  In a direct marketing company, the team will most likely to be successful will be the one with the most customers on autoship.. constantly reordering products they need.. You may even find that certain clients prefer the convenience of prebooking all of their appointments. Create a buzz by offering any client who prebooks their next three appointments, consultations or orders, or more a chance to win a free gift each week. Announcing the weekly winner on Facebook is also a great way to engage fans talking about your brand. Your free gift may be a product you’re launching or a service with a new team member. Purposefully rewarding your clients will efficiently increase productivity.

3. Keep an 80% busy rate. Ask owners and team members how busy they wish to stay when working with clients and the answer you’ll most likely hear is 100%. The problem with having a 100% busy rate is that you become overly immersed in your business, which means you’re not taking time to work at your business.

It is tricky to balance your time, but when you put more time into strategically building relationships with existing and new clients, you will achieve greater long-term productivity. Consider writing personal thank-you notes to every client who came through your doors last week or for every person who you felt a connection.. That’s impossible, right? Wrong. If you set aside time for building client relationships, you will meet that goal and create raving fans along the way.  I used an automated card program to make this much easier.

Creating a plan that adds value, creativity and focuses on what’s in the client’s best interest will consistently trump being busy 100% of the time. It will also continuously give you a fresh business perspective.


Strategically rewarding your clients, letting them know you value them, will definitely boost productivity in your business.

Thursday, October 23, 2014

Manage Your Inbox: 4 Tips to Take Control of Your Email

If your email inbox is out of control, you might need to rethink your methods for organizing your email and emptying your Inbox. Developing a new approach to handling your Inbox will help you to gain more control, improve your response time, and stay up with critical actions and deadlines.
This post details four important aspects that can help you process your email more efficiently-both at home and at the office. Although some of the productivity tools mentioned here are specific to Microsoft Outlook (Outlook 2010. Outlook 2007, and Outlook Web Access), most of the techniques-and even the organizational attitude described here-can help you to more efficiently process email and empty your inbox, even if you use an email application other than Outlook.

1.   Set up a simple and effective email reference system.  The first step toward an organized inbox is learning the difference between reference information and action information.

•   Reference information is information that is not required to complete an action; it is information that you keep in case you need it later. Reference information is stored in your reference area, email reference folder, your My Documents folder, or in the cloud on Google Drive, for example.
•   Action information is information you must have to complete an action. Action information is stored with the action, either on your to-do list or on your Calendar.
Nearly everyone receives plenty of reference information through email. It may seem as half, if not more, of your email is reference information. So it is essential to have a system that makes it easy to transfer messages from your inbox into your email reference system-a series of email file folders where you store reference information to ensure you have easy access to it later.

After you take care of filing your reference information, you can use the next three steps to handle the email that you have to do something with-your action information.

2.   Schedule uninterrupted time to process and organize email

How many times are you interrupted every day? It's nearly impossible to complete anything when there are constant interruptions from the phone, people stopping by your office, and instant messaging. So it's critical that you set aside uninterrupted time to process and organize your email.
Many email messages require you to make a decision. The best decisions require focus, and focus requires uninterrupted attention. Establish a regular time each day to process your email so that you can empty your linbox Of course. you can scan your email during the day for urgent messages or requests from your boss or clients.

Book yourself a recurring appointment for an hour a day to process email, and mark that time as "busy." During that hour, don't answer the phone or take interruptions, and work only on processing your lnbox. You can also turn off the audio alert that chimes each time you receive a new email-which can be a distraction in itself. In Outlook, click the File tab. Click Options. On the Mail tab, under Message arrival, clear the Play a sound check box.

At first, keeping these appointments will take discipline. But over time. the discipline becomes habit. And after you completely empty your lnbox, you'll see the value of this one hour a day and you'll stick to it like glue.

With today's technology, synchronizing email to your Smartphone, it makes it easier to keep this email appointment and to process your lnbox. This standard Smartphone technology means that you don't have to be at home or at the office to keep your daily email management appointment.

Conversation view in Office 2010 enables you to organize email folders by date and conversation. When Conversation view is turned on. messages that share the same subject appear as conversations that can be viewed as expanded or collapsed, helping you to quickly review and act on messages or complete conversations.

Also, improved search tools in Office 2010 make it easier to narrow your search results by using criteria, like sender or subject keywords, and other information, such as attachments. The Search Tools contextual tab includes a set of filters that efficiently focus your search to isolate the items that you want For more information, see Find a message or item by using Instant Search.

3.   Process one item at a time, starting at the top.  When you sit down to process your email, the first step is to sort it by the order in which you will process it. For example, you can filter by date, by subject, or even by the sender or receiver of the email message.In Outlook 2010, on the View tab, in the Arrangement group, click the arrangement option you want.


From the View tab, you can filter your email by date, category, sender or receiver, and more. You can also change the arrangement directly from your lnbox. To display the list of options, under the Search box. right-click the Arrange By: box. The Arrange By: box in your lnbox gives you convenient access to even more options to arrange your messages.

Tip: If you use Outlook 2010. enable the reading pane (called the preview pane in Outlook 2007) so that you can view your messages without having to open them. To enablP. the reading pane. on the View tab, in the Layout group, click Reading Pane. To enable the Outlook 2007 preview pane, on the View menu, click AutoPreview.

Resist the temptation to jump around in your inbox in no particular order. Begin processing the message at the top of your inbox and only move to the second one after you've handled the first. This can be hard at first, when you might have thousands of messages in your inbox. But as you reduce the number of messages over a few sessions, eventually you'll get to the point where you can process the 60-100 messages you get every day and regularly get your inbox down to zero.

4.   Use the "Four Os for Decision-Making" model

The "Four Ds for Decision-Making" model (4 Ds) is a valuable tool for processing email, helping you to quickly decide what action to take with each item and how to remove it from your inbox.  The expanded Ribbon in Office 2010 is designed to help you quickly find the tools that you need to complete your tasks. Features are organized in logical groups collected together under tabs. You can also customize the Ribbon to include tabs you personalize to match your own style.

The expanded Ribbon in Outlook 2010 replaces Outlook 2007 menus, giving you easy access to tools on conveniently organized tabs.

The Quick Steps feature, new in Outlook 2010, speeds up managing your email even more. This feature enables you to perform the multi-stepped tasks you use most often, such as moving email to a specific folder or moving a message and replying to it with a meeting request, with a single click. The Quick Steps gallery includes buttons for one-click file and flag, sending messages to your team, and other popular commands. For more information, see Automate common or repetitive tasks with Quick Steps.

The Quick Steps feature turns your most frequent tasks-whether forwarding messages to your co-workers or copying messages to a specific folder-into one-click operations.

Tip: Learning a few basic keyboard shortcuts in Outlook 2010 can make performing these tasks even easier and faster. Read our article on how to save time with quick computer shortcuts.
Decide what to do with each and every message

How many times have you opened, reviewed, and closed the same email message or conversation? Those messages are getting lots of attention but very little action. It is better to handle each email message only once before taking action-which means you have to decide what to do with it and where to put it With the 4 Ds model. you have four choices:

1.   Delete it
2.   Do it
3.   Delegate it
4.   Defer it

Delete it
Generally, you can delete about half of all the email you get. But some of you shudder when you hear the phrase "delete email." You're hesitant to delete messages for fear that you might need them at some point. That's understandable, but ask yourself honestly: What percentage of information that you keep do you actually use?

If you do use a large percentage of what you keep, your method is working. But many of us keep a lot more than we use. Here are some questions to ask yourself to help you decide what to delete:

• Does the message relate to a meaningful objective you're currently working on? If not. you can probably delete it. Why keep information that doesn't relate to your main focus?
• Does the message contain information you can find elsewhere ? If so, delete it.
• Does the message contain information that you will refer to within the next six months? If not. delete it.
• Does the message contain information that you're required to keep? If not, delete it.

Easily delete an entire conversation so that no new responses to it will appear in your inbox.
When a message contains all the previous messages in the conversation, you can click Clean Up to eliminate redundant messages. For example, as people reply to a conversation, the response is at the top and the previous messages in the conversation are below. Use the Clean Up command to keep only the most recent message that includes the whole conversation. For more information. see Use Conversation Clean Up to eliminate redundant
messages.

Cleaning up your conversations makes it easier to stay focused on the task being discussed.

Do it (in less than two minutes)
If you can't delete the email messages. ask yourself. ''What specific action do I need to take?" and "Can I do it in less than two minutes?" If you can. just do it.

There is no point in filing an email or closing an email if you can complete the associated task in less than two minutes. Try it out-see how much mail you can process in less than two minutes. I think you will be extremely surprised and happy with the results. You could file the message. you could respond to the message. or you could make a phone call. You can probably handle about one-third of your email messages in less than two minutes.

Instant message allows you respond to email messages faster. You can often view the availability of a person and instantly reach out to them using a variety of instant messaging methods depending on apps opened, ie., SKYPE, Facebook, or WhatsApp. Sometimes it's just easier to do a qucik message.  Caution, it will be more difficult to follow the thread as it will be in multiple places.  If the thread is essential, keep the communication in one place.

Delegate it
If you can't delete it or do it in two minutes or less. can you forward the email to an appropriate team member who can take care of the task?
If you can delegate it (forward it to another team member to handle). do so right away. You should be able to compose and send the delegating message in about two minutes. After you have forwarded the message. delete the original message or move it into your email reference system.

Defer it
If you cannot delete it. do it in less than two minutes, or delegate it. the action required is something that only you can accomplish and that will take more than two minutes. Because this is your dedicated email processing time. you need to defer it and deal with it after you are done processing your email. You'll probably find that about 20 percent of your email messages have to be deferred.
There are two things you can do to defer a message: Turn it into an actionable task, or turn it into an appointment. When you're using Outlook, you can defer emails that require action by dragging the messages to your Task List to turn them into tasks. Name the task to clearly state the required action so that you don't have to reopen the email message. The result is a clearly defined list of actions on your Task List that you can prioritize and schedule to complete on your Calendar. Or you can turn the message into a meeting request by dragging it to your Calendar.

One of my Favorite Tips on Outlook: Use the To-Do Bar in Outlook 2010 and Outlook 2007 to drag an email message from an email folder to a date on your Calendar or to your Task List. On the View tab, in the Layout group. click the To-Do Bar. (i've yet to figure this out on Google.  Please comment if you know how to do as easily on Google on a desktop or even better on a Smartphone.)
When the bar appears, drag the message to your Calendar or to your Task List. This copies the message to the new location; it doesn't move it out of the original mail folder. so you'll still be able to find what you need.

Use the 4 Ds model every day
A concept I learned from an email management software, Orla (which I don't support anymore, although it was a brilliant concept).  Using the 4 Ds model on a daily basis makes it easier to handle a large quantity of email. Our experience shows that. on average, people can process about 100 email messages an hour. If you receive 40 to 100 messages per day, all you need is one hour of uninterrupted email processing time to get through your inbox. Our statistics show that of the email you receive:

•   Fifty percent can be deleted or filed.
•   Thirty percent can be delegated or completed in less than two minutes.
•   Twenty percent can be deferred to your Task List or Calendar to complete later.


Naturally, for those who a backlog of hundreds of messages, usually it takes time to get to the point where your daily routine keeps you up to date. It's important to get that backlog down, so I would suggest setting blocks of time aside to work through it. Then, you can really enjoy processing your messages every day using the 4 Ds.

Tuesday, October 21, 2014

Four Ways to Easily Market Your Business Consistently

As small business owners and entrepreneurs it isn't difficult to get into the habit of feeling you're too busy to promote or market your business. Of course, this can be compared to stating that you're too busy to invest in your ongoing success. Find out the key 4 ways to help you make time to regularly and consistently market ' so that you can experience long-term success and growth in your business.

I think it's human nature to forget about our marketing when we've got clients coming in but as soon as the flow slows down a bit (which it will), we panic and start looking frantically around for ways to get more clients coming in.

By making time on a regular basis and continually to market, you ensure that you continue to find and maintain your most profitable clients. This is just what will give you success in the long run and growth in your business.

So, just how do you make marketing the # 1 priority?

Here are 4 tips to try...

1. Make sure you have a marketing action plan

When you have a roadmap which tells you where you're heading and ways to get there, then actually doing it gets easier. When you have a plan of action, you don't have to waste time scrambling around every time you try a new marketing activity.

A marketing action plan allows you to spend less time with your marketing and be more focused in the process.

2. Create a marketing action calendar

Having a calendar that plots out each marketing action acts as a great visual roadmap. You can see instantly any "holes" or overlaps of approaches and timing. I plan almost everything on my marketing action calendar - from newsletter submission dates, blog posting schedule, social media postings, special email reminders, networking events, teleseminars and so on.

Having a marketing action calendar enables you stay on top of the marketing you've committed to.

3. Set up marketing appointments with yourself

Set aside at least a day a week to work on marketing your business. Schedule this into your calendar and don't break it! Consider it as important as client appointments . Take this time to evaluate and track your marketing activities, research new opportunities, adjust your sales goals, write an article or blog post, conduct a client survey, and so on.

By booking appointments with yourself, you MAKE your marketing a priority.

4. Do bite-sized marketing chunks during the day

You can deal with the more extensive chunks (planning, writing, tracking, etc.) of marketing during your weekly scheduled marketing appointment with yourself. Bear in mind, there are plenty of little bite-sized marketing tasks that you can do between appointments or when you need a break from working on a large project.

Here are some bite-sized marketing tasks that can be done in 5 - 10 minutes:

* call up a client and ask for a testimonial

* sign up for your next networking event

* call a program chairperson about setting up a speaking engagement at an organization you're interested in

* email a potential referral source to set up a meeting

* jot down an outline for your newsletter content

* call a new client to find out if they have any questions on their recent purchase

* send an article, with a note, to a client you know is interested in the topic

* order a thank you gift, on the web or by phone, to be sent to someone who just referred a client to you

* submit an article you've written to an article directory website

* send a handwritten note to someone you met at a meeting recently (you can automate this process.

* write up something for your blog and post it

* check out a company's website that you are interested in possibly doing a joint venture with

Incorporate these 4 tips into your everyday work schedule and you'll soon find it easy and profitable to make marketing a priority.