Organize + Energize: 4 Ways to Maintain Your Organized Space
Kristin MacRae, GoLocalProv Organizing Expert
Organize + Energize: 4 Ways to Maintain Your Organized Space
You’ve just completed an organizing project and you stand back and admire what a great job you’ve accomplished. You’ve worked really hard to complete this project, but now the real work begins. Decluttering, itemizing, categorizing and setting up your working organized systems are only half of the process when you are getting organized. The real work occurs when you need to follow through with your systems and maintain your organization. How many times have you completed an organizing project and failed to maintain it?
Here are 4 ways to maintain your organization.
Be mindful. You walk into your home with a handful of mail. Are you going to throw it on the table with the rest of the unopened mail? You’ve just arrived home from shopping and have receipts in hand. Are you going to shove them in a drawer? When you walk into your home, be mindful of what you have in your hand and take one minute to think about how you are going to process it. You’ll walk in your home, drop your keys and phone in their designated spot and have a process to handle your mail and anything else you need to handle.
Tackle it now. Would you rather spend hours tackling months’ worth of mail or would you rather take one minute to handle it and not have to look at it again? I hope you said the latter. You will make your life much less complicated if you take the time to tackle it right away than spend countless hours on it down the road. The more you accumulate in the form of paper and clutter, the more overwhelmed you will get and you’ll get further away from maintaining your organization. Don’t let the piles get out of control. Handle it in the moment and you’ll have a handle on maintaining your organization.
Simple systems. Create a process and a system for everything you do in your home. The simpler the system, the more likely you’ll be able to follow it. People think they need to create these elaborate systems. The more complicated the system, the more likely it will fail. You want to be as efficient and productive as possible. If it takes you 5 steps to tackle a project when it can be tackled in 2 steps, why not simplify? You’ll be more likely to maintain your organization if simple systems are in place.
Choosing the right organizing products. You have to have the right organizing products in place if you are going to maintain your systems. You don’t have to spend hundreds of dollars on organizing products. How much money have you wasted on products you didn’t even need or products that didn’t work well with your system? You can’t maintain a system, if the organizing products don’t work. It’s impossible to function with a broken system. Function with a simple system using the right products and your system will be easy to maintain.
There are many reasons why you don’t follow through with your organized systems. Call it laziness, lack of motivation to keep it organized, or you are too busy to keep up with it. You’ve worked so hard to create those working organized systems. Make a plan and put it into motion and strive to maintain that organized space.
Kristin Carcieri-MacRae, the founder and owner of Organizing in RI, has always enjoyed finding creative ways to streamline the environment around her. She has appeared on air on Patricia Raskin's Positive Business Radio and her articles have been published in the Rhode Island Small Business Journal and New England Home Life. Kristin's CD, Organizing Basics, is a 1-hour guide for the person who wants to get organized but doesn't know where to start. She is also available for organizing workshops. Tune into her weekly radio show, Organize, Energize! on talkstreamradio.com.
5 Organizing Blunders
Not planning ahead
Getting organized is a process and you have to have a plan on how to conquer your project. You can’t tear apart an entire room all at once. You need to break the project down into small pieces. Plan to tackle your project in 3-hour increments. If you work longer than 3 hours at a time, you are setting yourself up for burnout. Plan ahead to try to avoid distractions and stay focused.
I know you are excited to get organized, but don’t rush out to the store and purchase products just because you like the way they look. Get organized first. Figure out what you need to contain, and then purchase your container to match the items you need it to hold.
Once you set up the organized system, you have to get everybody in your home on board. Show them the systems and how you are going to function with this system going forward. Label everything if you must, so everybody gets in the habit of putting items away. Remember, the simpler the system, the easier it’s going to be to maintain.
Use every inch of space and use it well. Take everything out of the area you are organizing. You can’t get a clear visual of the space if it is filled with clutter. Shifting items around is not going to work.
You are creating more work for yourself if you continue to clear spaces once a month. Create a system and allow everything in your home to have its own place, and you will never have to clear a space again.
Kristin Carcieri-MacRae
Kristin Carcieri-MacRae, the founder and owner of Organizing in RI, has always enjoyed finding creative ways to streamline the environment around her. She has appeared on air on Patricia Raskin's Positive Business Radio and her articles have been published in the Rhode Island Small Business Journal and New England Home Life. Kristin's CD, Organizing Basics, is a 1-hour guide for the person who wants to get organized but doesn't know where to start. She is also available for organizing workshops. Tune into her weekly radio show, Organize, Energize! on Mondays at 8:30am on www.talkstreamradio.com.
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