The Weekly Simplifier #14 - Work Smarter Not Harder
Welcome to The Weekly Simplifier, brought to you by…

Contents:
1. A Note From Shawn
2. Quote of the Week
3. Article: 13 Tips for Working Smarter, Not Harder
4. This Week’s Simplification Tip
5. In the News & On the Web
6. Featured at ProjectSimplify.com
7. Keep Smiling
If this was forwarded to you, you can subscribe here:
http://projectsimplify.com/lists/?p=subscribe&id=2
Unsubscribe instructions can be found at the bottom of the newsletter.
Check out our newsletter archive page for back issues.
Visit Project Simplify’s website at www.projectsimplify.com.
1. A Note From Shawn
Greetings fellow simplifiers!
The workshop last week was quite an exciting experience (for Moms, kids, and myself!) The turnout and feedback was rewarding and affirming. (Full report here.)
As this week’s newsletter came together, I saw that the theme is very similar to that which I repeated at the workshop: work smarter not harder by knowing what is essential to You. Being in touch with your priorities is the key to establishing life as you’d like it.
Consider our limitation of time as a positive, not a negative. This limitation forces us to be in touch with what is most important to us—if we want to be happy. Limitless time would allow me the ability to respond to every single email that has ever shown up in my inbox, I could rake up every leaf as it fell, I could keep my basement floor as clean as my kitchen floor… Ack! Stop!!
As you read each section of the newsletter, ask yourself, “What can I take from this to support the essence? What can help eliminate unnecessary clutter?”
Enjoy.
-Shawn Tuttle
Head Simplifier, Project Simplify
2. Quote of the Week
“A man must be able to cut a knot, for everything cannot be untied; he must know how to disengage what is essential from the detail in which it is enwrapped, for everything cannot be equally considered; in a word, he must be able to simplify his duties, his business and his life.”
-Henri Frederic Amiel
3. Article: 13 Tips for Working Smarter, Not Harder
Guest article by Jan Jasper
© Jan Jasper; 1999-2005
1) Aim for effectiveness, not neatness. Neatness as an end in itself can even be risky: Putting things away just to clear off your desk can cause you to lose or forget them.
2) Clutter is rarely caused by insufficient space or time. The culprit is usually indecisiveness. So be selective about what you bring into your office and home. If you know what you value and what your goals are, being selective is not hard.
3) Have a place for everything. Open your mail in the same place everyday so it doesn’t get strewn everywhere. Put unpaid bills together, separate from paid bills. Store all office supplies together to prevent duplicate purchases.
4) Do not use your entire desk surface as a giant In-box. Instead, determine your next action on every piece of paper and file accordingly. Tasks to be done soon (phone calls to make, questions to ask business associates) and current projects go into your “Action Files,” which should not be mixed with Reference Files. Action Files must be kept close at hand.
5) That maxim, “Handle each piece of paper only once,” is too extreme to be realistic. But it contains a grain of truth. Do try to take the next action that’s required each time you handle a piece of paper. How about that seminar advertisement you left on your desk, as a reminder to decide whether to sign up — you know, that paper you’ve shuffled ten times today already? Either call right now to get the information you need, or make a note in your appointment book to call later. Then you’re that much closer to being done with it.
6) Don’t save paper that you’re not willing to spend time filing. If you don’t file it properly, you either will forget you have it, or you won’t be able to find it when you need it. It does you no good, and the result is the same as if you’d thrown it out in the first place. If you are set up to scan information into your computer, be selective. If you cannot imagine a specific situation when you’d need to refer to the information again, don’t scan it. Most of us save a great deal of paper we’ll never use again.
7) Use your day planner to help clear your desk. If you avoid filing things out of fear you’ll forget to follow up, jot down a reminder in your appointment book or computer software.
8) Often we are own worst enemies, interrupting ourselves by jumping from one half-finished task to another. Stop doing “the desktop shuffle” - moving papers aimlessly around on your desk. Every time you handle an item, take an action towards completing it.
9) Learn to say “No.” You could live to be a hundred and still not have time to do everything you want—that’s the curse and blessing of being intelligent and having high expectations of yourself. The good news is you can choose what to focus on. You have far more freedom than you may realize. Aside from obligations like caring for vulnerable family members and paying taxes, very little of what you “have” to do is morally or legally mandatory. Review everything in your life and ask, “What’s the worst that can happen if I stopped doing this?” Saying “No” sometimes is the only way you can “Yes” to what you really value.
10) Beware of stuff. The more stuff you have, the more you must find a place to put, and the more you’ll have to clean, repair, and eventually replace. Stop buying things you don’t really need just because they’re on sale. You can always get more stuff, and you can always get more money. But you can never get more time.
11) Do buy more of things you use continually. Frantic last-minute shopping trips can be averted by purchasing things before your supply runs out.
12) Schedule appointments with yourself to get things done. Appointments aren’t only for business lunches or seeing your doctor. They’re for you, too. Commit to spending time on the things you keep “not getting around to.” This works for everything — from taking the next step on that back-burner project, to making sure you get yourself to the gym twice a week.
13) Beware of perfectionism. Most routine work doesn’t need to be done perfectly. Ask yourself — Is your effort disproportionate to the value of the task? Will other, more important projects be delayed as a result? Can you reduce the frequency or level of detail of this task?
About the Author:
Jan Jasper has been training busy people to work smarter, not harder since 1988. She helps clients streamline their systems and procedures, form optimum work habits, use technology efficiently, and manage information overload. Her specialty is helping people who’ve already worked with professional organizers and coaches and are still not able to get it all done. Jan is the author of Take Back Your Time: How to Regain Control of Work, Information, & Technology (St. Martin’s Press). She recently completed a North American media tour as the national efficiency spokesperson for IKON Office Solutions, Inc. In 2001, Jan was the office productivity expert for staples.com. She has appeared on radio and TV all over North America and is quoted regularly in print. Jan is currently on the board of the Tri-State Chapter (NY, NJ, & CT) of the National Speakers Association.
4. This Week’s Simplification Tip
The Mail Station
Does anyone send anything snail mail in our digital age? You bet. Email hasn’t replaced handwriting for everything. Call me old fashioned in this regard, but I’d argue that “Thank You” notes are best handwritten.
Oftentimes, we email just because we are out of the handwriting habit, or we just can’t think where the right size envelope is, or where the stamps are. This is more relevant to the home office because corporate offices just seem to be set up to handle logistics such as mailing out items.
The ideal “station” doesn’t have to be opened in order to get your hands on an envelope or return address label (though an easy-to-slide drawer is acceptable…) The following ideas can be expanded or slimmed down to accommodate your usage:
- standard #10 size envelopes
- first class stamps, currently $.39
- return address labels or return address stamp
- note cards and accompanying envelopes
- business cards, easy enough to drop one or two in when appropriate!
If you often send things weighing more than 1 oz. (1 oz is approximately 4 sheets of paper and a #10 envelope):
- small scale
- $.24 stamps (for each additional ounce over 1 oz.)
- larger envelopes
- mailing labels
Whether for bills, Thank You notes, birthday cards, or filled out forms, having all of your mail items in one place can help you from “going postal”. ;-)
——————————————————————————————————-
Spread simplicity - forward The Weekly Simplifier to your friends and colleagues!
——————————————————————————————————-
5. In the News & On the Web
If you know of something in the news or on the web that should be featured here, let us know!
In The News
Closet Organizing 2-parter (ABC.13.com/KTRK News)
URLs: http://tinyurl.com/gy5t2 and http://tinyurl.com/kosol
Last week we had a basement-taming article—this week it’s a 2-part article on closet-busting. The first page is more the “article” part; the second page is a tip sheet that goes over most of the main things to consider.
Take command - stay organized! (Loudoun Times-Mirror)
URL: http://tinyurl.com/jld4s
This article discusses how to create a useful “kitchen command center” for your home.
Going Clutterless — Cleaning a bit at a time the answer to the mess (The Monitor - McAllen, TX)
URL: http://tinyurl.com/geknc
This is yet another article on decreasing clutter, which repeats some themes we’ve heard before, but includes some new points and angles. (We try not to include articles that don’t bring up something new.) Examples? Accept that there is a certain amount of mess that you are OK with, and go from there. And recognize your clutter patterns—it’s the key to fixing them.
6. Featured at ProjectSimplify.com
The Search Feature
As our site grows, the Project Simplify site search tool becomes more and more important. Our site includes almost 300 pages of information at this point, which is big enough so that the search function is already essential for finding all our information on a certain topic.
Searching at ProjectSimplify.com is easy enough. There’s a box to enter your search term on the right side of every page, under the Main Menu.
It looks like this:
(<<--this is just a picture—not a working search box)
Type in your search term or phrase, then hit Enter (on your keyboard) or click the Search button. You’ll get a list of entries that contain your search term, with a short excerpt from each. Click on the title to read the entry that looks best to you!
Here are some sample searches. Click on a search term below to see the results page for that term:
Toastmasters balance time email backup simple others
7. Keep Smiling
A Single Candle
Thousands of candles can be lit from a single candle,
and the life of the candle will not be shortened.
Happiness never decreases by being shared
- Siddhārtha Gautama (”the Buddha”)
——-
Thanks for reading - see you next week!
Publication Information
————————————————————————–
The Weekly Simplifier is published by:
Project Simplify
P.O. Box 597
Nevada City, CA 95959
phone: 530.205.5775
web: www.projectsimplify.com
e-mail: (newsletter@projectsimplify.com) newsletter (at) projectsimplify (dot) com
