December 20, 2009

Happy Holidays!

Just wanted to wish everyone good times with family and friends, safe travels and happy holidays.

Best wishes for an organized 2010!

Stacey

December 8, 2009

Get Organized Month

I know we haven't gotten through 'the holidays' yet but I'd like you to start thinking about an event that occurs in January--'Get Organized Month.' It is the professional organizing industy's national event dedicated to raising awareness of the benefits of getting organized and of hiring a professional organizer. It's not a coincidence that 'GO Month' (as we organizers call it) comes at the start of the new year. It's a time when many people make resolutions to get their homes and lives more organized and NAPO is here to help.

If there's a local chapter of NAPO in your backyard, chances are there's a GO Month event planned. If you're in and around Northern New Jersey between 11am and 3pm on Saturday, January 30, 2010 take some time to attend the NAPO-NNJ Get Organized Month Event at IKEA of Paramus, NJ. We're calling it 'Organize to Economize' in the New Year with IKEA Products. And the event is FREE!

There will be professional organizers on hand to greet you as well as staffed 'Tips Tables' in the Restaurant and Marketplace area. We'll also have members of our NAPO-NNJ chapter giving presentations on organizing closets, home offices and kitchens as well as mini-workshops for kids. I'll be there early to greet IKEA guests and I'll be photographing the event for the chapter.


So come on down, grab a famous IKEA cinnamon bun and get your organizing questions answered. It may not fulfill your resolution to lose weight but you'll be on the road to getting and staying organized in 2010. See you there!


November 29, 2009

Cool Product - Dinnerware Storage

Have you finished your turkey leftovers yet? Good--now it's time to buckle down and get ready for the rest of the ho-ho-holiday season.

Today's 'Cool Product' goes out to those who celebrate Christmas. I have worked with many clients at the holiday season who have special dishes for the Christmas holiday. At least half of them store them in a cardboard box wrapped in newspaper. Half of those people never utilize their dishes because in the hustle and bustle of the season, they can't find the time or energy to unwrap dishes (cups and platters, too), wash them and then rewrap and store them after the holidays.

If this sounds like you or someone you know, check out Lillian Vernon's 'Jolly Holly' quilted/padded dinnerware storage pieces. Whether it's the fine china you inherited from Grandma or the wine glasses you rarely use, I recommend storing them in these types of dinnerware storage pieces--also called 'China Keepers.' The come in canvas or plastic and come with cardboard or flat/foam dividers to separate each dish.

Why the 'Jolly Holly' storage pieces for your Christmas dishes? Placing your Christmas dishes in Christmas-themed storage pieces will help you identify them very quickly on the shelves of an overstuffed closet or basement/attic space. Who has time during the holidays to hunt down dishes? Gotta make life easy and less stressful during the month of December and that's what these 'Jolly Holly' china keepers do.

To read more about them, go to:


November 10, 2009

National Clean Out Your Refrigerator Day

In an attempt to bring you correct information, I have scoured the Internet looking for the correct date for National Clean Out Your Refrigerator Day. Some websites say it's November 14th or 15th and some say the holiday was declared to be the third Wednesday in November by the Whirlpool Corporation (which would make it the 18th this year).

Regardless of the exact date, it's a good idea to clean out your refrigerator from time to time. Believe it or not, food can be clutter. Don't you have to make room for the Thanksgiving turkey and all the trimmings, anyway?

A while back I wrote an article about this very topic. If you're not sure where to start, check out my article, 6 Tips for Organizing Your Refrigerator.

Bonus Tip: Use a marker or pen to write the 'I opened it' date on food items you don't eat often. This will prevent many a stomach ache from food that's been around too long.

October 31, 2009

It's Catalog Season!

Today is Halloween. Tomorrow, all the candy will be on sale and on Monday the holiday catalogs will start to fill your mailboxes.

Now, for some people, catalogs are pure fun--they're flipped through and recycled. For others, catalogs represent temptation. "I need that! I must have it--I never knew I needed it," they cry.

For many of us who feel rushed even when it's not the holiday season, catalogs are our salvation. We don't have to fight the crowds at the mall. We can go shopping at 3 a.m. in our bunny slippers.We can make ourselves and others happy with a phone call or a click of a mouse.

Regardless of the catalog personality you fall into, here are some tips for organizing your catalog shopping experience this holiday season:

• Create a folder or file and label it 'To Buy' or 'Holiday Gifts' or 'Why I'll Be Broke Come January'--whatever speaks to you. This is the place where all information regarding holiday gift giving will live.

• Compile a list of every person you need to purchase a gift for: relatives, friends, teachers, service providers, etc. You can do this on a spreadsheet or a lined pad of paper will work just fine, too.

• Create a few columns going across the page--"Gift Ideas," "Purchase By," "Actual Gift Sent," and "Delivered." "Gift Ideas' is a spot to jot down ideas if you're not 100% sure of what to buy. "Purchase By" is the date that the gift must be purchased to arrive in the recipient's hands on time (pad with extra days if gifts are going through the mail). "Actual Gift Sent' is a spot to record the gift you gave the person so you won't replicate it next year by accident and "Delivered' is the column where you'll write the date the gift was mailed or personally delivered.

• On the back of most catalogs there is an ID# in a colored box that is connected to your information. If you're thinking about making a purchase from a catalog, rip off the back page of the catalog. Then, rip out the pages that contain the items you wish to purchase. Staple these pages to the back page so you are ready with all of your information when you make that call or place your online order. Don't forget to write the name of the gift recipient next to the picture of the item in the catalog--just another way of saving time (which we have so little of this time of year).

The holiday season is just around the corner. I hope these tips will assist you in keeping your gift shopping stress free and organized. If more people shopped via catalogs, there would be less traffic and more parking spots at the mall. Now that's what I call 'stress-free...'


October 24, 2009

NAPO-NNJ Meeting

Besides being a member of the National Association of Professional Organizers, I also belong the local chapter in my area, NAPO-NNJ (NAPO-Northern New Jersey).

We meet at the American Red Cross in Fairfield, NJ every fourth Monday of the month (except August and December). Members attend meetings for free and guests may attend for a $25 fee.

This Monday, October 26th we are having a speaker come to talk to our group on the topic of 'Working With Students.' Our speaker, Donna Goldberg is the author of "The Organized Student." She'll be talking about understanding and recognizing learning difficulties, advocacy, and educational milestones for various grade levels.

For more information check out the NAPO-NNJ website at http://www.naponnj.org

October 22, 2009

Decluttering Tips

This week I had the pleasure of speaking to a lovely group of people at the Montclair YMCA (NJ). Half of the group wanted to know how to organize papers and the other half wanted to know about organizing their closets. They ALL wanted to know how to minimize the clutter in their homes--who doesn't?

So, here are two tips for minimizing clutter and saving time that I shared with them--they'll work for you, too...

1. Give Everything You Own a Home (A Place for Everything and Everything in it's Place)

I know it sounds a little like micromanaging but most of the items you own have logical homes. Your toothbrush lives in a spot in the bathroom. The TV Guide and remote live somewhere near the TV. Unless the item is out of the ordinary, it shouldn't take long to come up with a logical spot for all of your belongings to live.

I'll tell you a little story...

Once upon a time there was a new husband and wife who took their tape measure with them when they went shopping for items for their new home. Upon returning home, they would drop the tape measure wherever it landed and the next time they went shopping they had difficulty finding it. Until one day when the wife (that would be me if you haven't figured that out already) said, "Why don't we just pick ONE spot to house the tape measure? That way, we'll always be able to find it when we need it."

Long story short, that tape measure is still in the same home we created for it almost 9 years ago. It takes us no time to locate it when we need it and it is easily returned to it's 'home' after a day of furniture shopping.

2. Immediately Dispose of Items Not Needed

Clutter is anything unfinished, unused or unresolved. But, it can also be items you just don't need anymore like expired medicine, clothes beyond repair, and food that's turned blue in the back of your fridge. These items have what I call, "The Duh Factor." They require very little thought when it comes to their disposal due to their poor condition. When you see them, you're most likely to say, "Duh, I should have gotten rid of this a long time ago. It's taking up valuable space in my home!" Getting rid of this type of clutter is easy and is a great way to start chipping away at your crammed closets and cabinets.

The best example of clutter that can be tossed immediately is JUNK MAIL. I'm convinced that even if you live in a shack in the woods, catalog companies and charities will still find you. When your mail comes, grab the pile and immediately toss the junk mail in your recycle bin (remove your name and address first). Thanks for saving a tree... ;-)

Take 15 minutes a day to try out these tips. You'll soon see a difference in your home and notice that you have a bit more extra time in your day. Not bad, eh? Well, 'duh...'