Jump to

Managing your documents.. and your time
  • It's a job interview, not a beauty pageant

    In a beauty pageant, the judges look over a slate of contestants, ask them a few questions, perhaps have the contestants perform a talent of some sort, and then all the contestants parade around the stage in fancy dresses or bathing suits. At the end of all this, the judges proclaim a winner.  She cries because...

    02/06/2010

  • Migrants gaining residency via scam

    Immigrants are entering agreements with employers to pay their own taxes and wages in order to obtain New Zealand permanent residence, and the "scheme" even has its own name - PYO (pay your own). Immigration New Zealand says it is investigating a case where such a scheme has allegedly been used to help a migrant to...

    02/06/2010

  • Getting a Ferrari when you only want a Lada...

    It's no secret that the global economic crisis has had far reaching consequences in terms of employment. The most common has been companies downsizing and resultant redundancies. What this has in turn created is record high unemployment, leading people to apply for jobs they might otherwise consider beneath them. In employment law cases, employees have a duty...

    18/05/2010

  • Workplace pet peeve 2010

    Employees would rather deal with gossiping co-workers than with colleagues who have poor time management skills, according to Randstad, a leading staffing firm and workforce solutions provider. The company’s new Work Watch survey, conducted by Ipsos Public Affairs among more than 1,000 employed U.S. adults, revealed the top three workplace pet peeves to be: people with...

    18/05/2010

  • Mice love to dine 'al desko'

    Take a good look at your keyboard when you get to work tomorrow - you may be surprised what dangers could be lurking beneath the keys. The modern habit of dining "al desko" is leaving a smorgasbord of crumbs for unwelcome visitors in offices across New Zealand, say pest control officers. They say rodent numbers -...

    18/05/2010

  • Are salaries on the rise?

    Over the past month or so people have been asking me about salaries a lot - employers want to know if other companies have started to increase their staff's take home pay and candidates want to know if it's okay to start asking for more. When our clients have annual reviews coming up they call...

    06/05/2010

  • Job market reaches a turning point

    It is getting slightly easier to find a job and workers are getting longer hours after big cutbacks in the recession, according to economists' forecasts for figures due out later this week. But pay rises are still hard to find, with wage growth likely to be at its lowest level for about a decade in figures...

    06/05/2010

  • Are resumes still relevant?

    LinkedIn has a great feature allowing its members to ask questions of other members as well as answer questions.  Besides the obvious benefits of social networking, this is one of my favorite features!  I have always been surprised by the amount of information that has been returned when I have asked a question or when I...

    06/05/2010

  • Is Australia slow & behind?

    This morning I had a sensational meeting with a potential business partner for SR360. The one thing that we were both on the same page with is that Australian companies right now don't know where to start with being involved with Social Media. Backing this up, after the meeting I received an email asking the...

    16/04/2010

  • Changing the world, one career at a time

    Ethics: the word seems to be everywhere. The idea of ethical investment has been around for a long time, and this year a travel guide was published to point out green (read ethical) tourism operators for discerning tourists. Fair trade, free-range and organic, air miles, carbon footprints - the language of ethical decision-making is all around...

    09/04/2010

  • 5 travel lessons you can use at home

    Here are 5 key ways in which the lessons you learn on the road can be used to enrich the life you lead when you return home… *1 Time = Wealth* By far the most important lesson travel teaches you is that your time is all you really own in life. And the more you travel,...

    09/04/2010

  • A cultural shift is needed to encourage flexible working

    The secretary of state for work and pensions is expected to call for a "major cultural shift' in the way firms approach flexible working. In an interview with The Independent on Sunday, Yvette Cooper said part-time work should not mean an end to career progression in a company. According to The Independent on Sunday, Cooper (pictured) will...

    17/03/2010

  • Study says Gen Y wants easy, high paying jobs

    A study out in the Journal of Management offers some hard data to demonstrate how the generations do – and do not – differ, and the results are surprising. The study claims that it has finally managed to tease the influence of generation from career stage by using a large nationally representative sample of young...

    17/03/2010

  • Jobs of the future

    It's January 2020. You've commuted to the office in your titanium flying car, to be greeted by a robotic receptionist. You travelate to your 3D, virtual, interactive desk which pours you a tall decaf and scans the morning's to-do list on to your retina ... Or maybe not. Just as we're still waiting for the...

    19/02/2010

  • No gain from blocking access to social media

    More than two-thirds of New Zealand employers do not have a policy on their employees' use of social media, according to a survey. Employment services company Manpower surveyed 34,000 employers in 35 countries, including over 500 New Zealand respondents, gauging employer attitudes toward social networking sites like Facebook and Twitter being used at work. It found globally 75%...

    19/02/2010

  • Job scene set to brighten next year (NZ survey)

    Job seekers can look forward to more opportunities in the New Year, according to the latest Manpower Employment Outlook Survey. The survey indicates that employers in all industry sectors and all regions are reporting a more upbeat hiring pace for the first quarter of 2010. 521 New Zealand employers were surveyed. The Outlook confirms that employer...

    16/12/2009

  • Job seekers to gain upper hand despite unemployment

    JOB hunters could be back in the driver's seat next year despite predictions that unemployment will continue to rise until mid-2010, according to one of Australia's largest recruitment firms. Hays managing director Nigel Heap has warned employers that their workers are restless and that areas of skills shortage are starting to appear. "Financial and commercial analysts,...

    16/12/2009

  • Studies Confirm Looks Still Matter for Working Women

    Psychological Reasons Behind Why Better Looking People Get Promoted If you want to get a raise or a promotion, you might want to throw on a pair of heels and suck in that belly. Your looks can help or hinder your chances of getting a well deserved promotion, regardless of qualifications, especially in a sour economy...

    16/12/2009

  • Top 5 best practices for writing effective e-mail

    Writing e-mail isn't exactly Shakespeare, but there's an art to it nonetheless. Indeed, if Shakespeare were alive today, he'd probably have committed the occasional e-mail faux pas, like YELLING AT Christopher Marlowe or sending typos by forgetting the U in colour. Read on for the top 5 e-mail dos and the top 5 e-mail don'ts. *Top 5 Dos* 5....

    25/11/2009

  • Skills shortage will return next year

    Skills shortage will return, says experts Due to drop in training positions Business Smarts: Check the latest COMPANIES will again find it difficult to recruit and retain qualified staff as trading conditions improve, experts warn. The Australian Industry Group (Ai Group) and consultant Deloitte warn that the skills shortage will re-emerge because of a drop...

    18/11/2009

  • Five rules to take control of your email

    I have a few questions for you: How much time do you spend in your inbox every day?How much of that time is truly productive?Does your boss pay you to read e-mail? If your answers were, in order: A lot, a little, and no, then step right up, because it’s time for an e-mail intervention. Here...

    18/11/2009

  • The tangled Web of social media in the workplace

    Twitter, blogs, Facebook and the like are wreaking all kinds of havoc on the workplace. Read More

    10/06/2009

  • How to write a resume that doesn't annoy people

    The best you can do is try to achieve the maximum content with minimum peculiarity. Read More

    10/06/2009

  • LinkedIn Observes The Rise of Professional Ninjas!

    Recently, our Chief Scientist, DJ Patil highlighted an interesting trend[http://blog.linkedin.com/2010/02/18/linkedin-analytics-financial/] around the migration of professionals post the collapse of several of the major financial institutions.  In that post, we also solicited your ideas and questions.  Well, this week we take on one of the more popular topics - the emergence of new job titles. What's an example of...

Managing your documents.. and your time

Have you ever sat there while your boss stands over you, desperately searching for that missing document he or she needs RIGHT NOW? Or have you kept a client waiting on the phone for several minutes while you've searched for a status report?

If you have, then however organized and effective you are in your day-to-day work, your boss and your client may have a less than perfect opinion of you, because in a key encounter, you've let them down. And if it's your job to help people, how much of other people's time are you wasting if you can't find the information you need when you need it?

You owe it to yourself to file effectively, however boring this may seem. Imagine how much more impressive it would have been if - when asked - you'd smiled, accessed a well-organized filing system, immediately found the document, and quickly given the answer!

Managing Time

On a typical work day, we deal with many documents, presentations, graphics, and other files. There's a flurry of data pouring in from all directions that we need to process and, usually, store to retrieve later. We want to be able to lay our hands on the information we need - at the right moment, when we need it - so it can be used for further analysis or report writing, or perhaps for creating a presentation.

All too often, though, we waste our own time (and often the time of other people) searching for data that's sitting on the very computer we're using! This adds to our stress, and makes the task of putting the data to use more difficult than it ought to be. So we need to get more organized and efficient with our file management if we're going to get our work done in a timely manner.

Managing Information Efficiently

When you receive a file in an e-mail from a co-worker, vendor, or customer, it's tempting to "just put it away" in some folder for the time being. "Hmm. looks interesting, but I'll take a closer look at this later, when I've got more time." Sound familiar? Or, worse still, perhaps you just leave the message and its attachment sitting in your Inbox. After a while, many such documents build up, leading to a lot of clutter. It's highly unlikely that you'll ever find time to go back and get all of that information organized, especially considering that you're usually under pressure with other things and have hectic work schedules to meet.

You can spend hours of precious time searching for data you've filed away somewhere, because it's easy to forget the filename - or even to forget that such information is on your computer in the first place. How can you go about simplifying your work? Get better at managing files.

Effective File Management

Managing files on your computer isn't much different from the way you've always stored and managed your paper files. It boils down to this: Store the information in folders - by category, and in a sequence that makes sense to you.

Here are some tips to help manage your files:

  • Avoid saving unnecessary documents. Don't make a habit of saving just about everything that finds its way into your Inbox. Take a few seconds to glance through the content, and save a file only if it's relevant to your work activity. Having too much data on your computer adds to the clutter that makes it harder to find things in the future - and it may, over time, slow down your computer's performance too - so be selective about what you keep.
  • Follow a consistent method for naming your files and folders. For instance, divide a main folder into subfolders for customers, vendors, and co-workers. Give shortened names to identify what or whom the folders relate to. What's more, you can even give a different appearance or look to different categories of folders - this can make it easy to tell them apart at first glance.
  • Store related documents together, whatever their type. For example, store Word documents, presentations, spreadsheets, and graphics related to a particular project in a single folder - rather than having one folder for presentations for all projects, another folder for spreadsheets for all projects, and so forth. This way, it's much quicker to find, open, and attach documents for a particular project.
  • Separate ongoing work from completed work. Some people prefer to save current or ongoing work on their computer's desktop until a job is completed. Then, once it's done, they move it to the appropriate location, where files of the same category are stored. At periodic intervals (for example, weekly or every two weeks), move files you're no longer working on to the folders where your completed work is stored.
  • Avoid overfilling folders. If you have a large number of files in one folder, or a large number of subfolders in a main folder - so many that you can't see the entire list on your screen without scrolling down - break them into smaller groups (subfolders or sub-subfolders). Think of creating a sequential menu, arranged either in chronological or alphabetical order, to make retrieval easy. For instance, you can divide a folder called "Business Plan" into subfolders called "BP2005," "BP2006," and "BP2007." Likewise, you can divide a folder for a client named Delta Traders into subfolders named "Delta Traders sales presentations" and "Delta Traders contracts." The idea is to place every file into a logical folder or subfolder, rather than have one huge list of files.

    Having said this, there is usually little point in creating a folder for fewer than about five documents. If you do, the time you spend clicking through subfolders to get to the documents you need may not be outweighed by the greater ease of finding them.
  • Install Google Desktop on your PC. If you can (sometimes IT departments don't permit this), install Google Desktop on your PC - you can find this at http://desktop.google.com. This neat tool creates a desktop search engine that indexes all of your files and emails, meaning that you can search for them quickly and easily. This can be invaluable when you need to answer offbeat questions!
  • Make sure your filing system is backed up. Again, this is a bit tedious, but it's so important, as anyone who's had a failed disk drive will testify! Make sure, firstly, that your PC is backed up regularly and, secondly, that the backup includes the directories where you file information.

Prioritizing Your Files for Action

Take these approaches further by customizing your file management. This can help you prioritize your work, which can lead to better efficiency.

  • Organize files by dates. Incorporate a date into the file name. This will help you determine which is the most recent document in the folder, without having to open the file and read through the content. For example, a file named "Guidelines 12Oct07" would indicate a version of the Guidelines file dated October 12, 2007. (If you're working internationally, be aware that in some countries this date can be presented as 101207, while in other countries, this same date can be shown as 121007. This can be very confusing!)
  • Some people use version numbers to distinguish between documents that have been reworked or changed. Examples would be "Delta Traders contract v1" and "Delta Traders contract v2." This also makes it easier to pick out the most current file.

Tip:
If your document is going to be looked at, used, or amended by several people, you need to be particularly careful about version control: People quite rightly can get very annoyed if versions are mixed up and their work on the document is lost.

Make sure you put the version number in the file name here, and also consider having a version control table at the beginning of the document showing the version number, the date of the version, the person making changes, and, perhaps, the nature of changes made.


  • Use "Tickler" files. Tickler files, also known as the "43 folders" method, are a unique system that's used by many people for organizing files. Create 12 folders (one for each month of the year) and an additional 31 subfolders (for each day of the month). Fill each folder with the documents that you need to work with on that day. At the beginning of each day, open the folder for that day. Take all the items out of the folder and move them into a "today" folder or onto your desktop. Then move the empty folder into the corresponding slot for the next month. If you can't complete some work items by the end of the day, transfer them to the folder for the next convenient day. This system of file management helps you keep track of everything you need to do, and it also doubles as a diary.

For any system to be useful and effective, it must also be convenient for you. To some extent, this depends on the nature of your business or the work that you do. So, although there's no "one size fits all" solution to file management, you will likely profit by using some of these file management tips, and by customizing them in a way that best serves your own needs.

Key Points

Are you losing too much time searching through the clutter on your computer for files that you need? And when you're under pressure, can you retrieve information quickly and easily?

Spending precious time looking for data can take the pleasure out of any kind of creative work you might be doing - and it adds to your stress levels as well. Simple tips on file management can show you how to get organized with your information storage and retrieval.

Making This Part of Your Life:
We know this is boring, but you know you need to do it!

Clear an hour in your schedule somewhere in the next 7 days, and set your filing system up!

 

19/02/2010

 

Courtesy of Haines

 

http://www.mindtools.com/pages/article/newHTE_85.htm