Archive for efficiency
10 Great Uses for Backpack
Posted by: | CommentsLet’s cut to the chase- If you don’t know what Backpack is then go here and take a tour using their handy videos.
- Take a group of people- any people- examples would be a group of students, a group of colleagues in the same industry, a small business, a family that is very involved, a team of distributors, a civil organization and connect them via a shared calendar, message board, journal and writeboards.
- If you are a consulting business you can share individual pages with each customer or business who work with. The rest of your backpack site would still be private, but the shared page is much more powerful than an email chain back and forth.
- Implement GTD (Getting Things Done). The home page is a great place for your next actions list, your waiting for list, your errands list and your upcoming meeting notes. Each major project can become it’s own page.
- Use the icalendar feature in Backpack to share your calendar with Google, Apple or Mozilla Thunderbird calendars. I use Google Calendar, because I haven’t got a MAC yet. It’s on the horizon.
- Use the message board to streamline your communication with family, your employees or staff, your fellow students and your civic club. Post a message instead of bothering someone with a phone call or email. This way people can respond when they actually have time to think about and reply to your issue. What a way to prevent the 50 interruptions most small business owners experience in a day.
- Never get caught at a meeting with your pants down. Show up without your laptop- no problem just use anyone with an Internet connection and login to your web-based Backpack account. I keep a reference page that has some passwords, key forms along with other key files, pictures and notes.
- Use Backpack as a presentation page. No it’s not as fancy as Powerpoint but it’s far more flexible. Plus as I mentioned in #6 it’s web-based. It’s everywhere as long as you have two things: an Internet connection and a phone or computer to access the Internet.
- Use the Writeboard feature if you collaborate on writing, researching, reporting, developing or any other business where you and several others work together on a project. The writeboard saves new version each time someone edits the main document. You can compare each old version with the new ones with the click of a button.
- A popular question these days within Facebook, Twitter and all the other Social Media tools is what are your doing? Well the journal in backpack answers that question without asking it. You can keep tabs on what your staff has been working on without asking each of them individually. The same goes for a busy family. What has mom or dad been doing all day? What has been finished and what still needs to be done?
- Organize, Organize, Organize. This tool will help you organize your calendar, your conversations, your collaboration, your projects, your daily tasks. You may say- well Bryce it doesn’t have email. You’re right, but Google does and it has your contacts to. Backpack is very intuitive and easy to use because it doesn’t try to be all things to all people. Trust me. I love it in combination with Google Apps for email, contact and shared calendaring.
In David Allen’s GTD System- he talks about collection baskets.
Posted by: | CommentsCollection baskets would been any designated means to which you collect information that requires an action by you. That action could be a variety of actions but the key is that it requires your mental energy to decide what to do with this information.
What are your collection baskets? I’d love to know.
Here are some of mine:
My digital recorder on my black jack cell phone. If I meet someone new I will shortly after talk into the recorder. If I have a great idea at night- then I’ll wake in a stupor and record my thought.
Next I have a physical Inbox on my desk.
I have my email inbox.
I have a white board on the wall in my office where I’ll record ideas, schematics, plans etc.
I use 37 signals backpack and highrise products. Both of these web-based productivity software’s have collection buckets.
I also have a small notepad that fits into my pocket. It doubles as a second wallet. I keep business cards, notes and receipts in here until I empty it.
Organizing your filing system
Posted by: | CommentsIf you are planning on organizing your filing system, then the one thing I want you to do above all other things- is create a map of your files. A registry listing each and every file. I follow David Allen’s GTD system which advises an A-Z system. I hated it when I heard it. I was accustomed to filing by association and groups, but now I’m a believer in the A-Z system. I’m a convert. Now, I do break down my files into a few different categories and I store them separately by these categories as well. For instance, I keep all my work files in one file drawer A-Z. I then keep all my personal working files in an A-Z system in a separate cabinet or drawer. I keep this years financial files in their own system. This one is not A-Z. It’s separated based on income, expenses and bills. Last but not least I keep all important financial files in a fire/proof water/proof safe.
The File Map is still the cog that holds the whole system together. I refer to it every time I file and whenever I conduct my weekly review. Sometimes I think, I don’t have a file for that yet, but to my amazement I do. One little trick to keeping the File Map accurate is to make a note of each new file you add. Periodically add those new files to the Map and your system has no holes in it.
The Organized Virtual Office Worker
Posted by: | CommentsThe trend is growing and I’ve seen stats that say 1 out of 2 workers will be either home based businesses owners- work at home contractors or small business owners by the year 2010. Wow- the corporate world is certainly shrinking, isn’t it?
You can see the trends before your eyes. Go to any small coffee shop or cafe. Look at all the people conducting meetings and working online. Just start asking the question- where is your office? You’ll be shocked how many times you here the answer- I work out of my home. What about the growing trend of home based business owners? When Warren Buffet starts acquiring network marketing companies and large corporations start using the same business model- take note.! What about the number of people starting small businesses these days. It’s staggering. How many people do you know that are with the same corporation that they were 5 years ago? What about 3?
What does this mean? It means a huge paradigm shift in the employment model. It raises questions about how one maintains efficiency and effectiveness while working from the home. How does one organize the office?
First, the most crucial thing you’ll need to think about is where is the office going to be?
Instead of telling you exactly what you should do, given that I don’t have any idea of your unique situation-all I can do is offer some very good thought provoking questions.
Do you have children.. do you plan to.. if so when.. if so how old are they .. if not do you have pets?
Assuming you have small children- what floor do they spend most time on while you “work”?
Does you work require phone conversations often?
Do you plan on having a high speed cable connection or a phone dsl?
Will you have a wireless network, a wired network or both?
Do you store many files? Should you?
Is your software tied to your PC or is most of it web-based?
Do you have good self discipline and self control?
Do you need separate phone or fax lines? Are you thinking about an alternative like Vonage? Or do you just use a cell phone?
Will there be others in the home using the Internet or sharing a printer?
Will your spouse share you office or will there be a separate office/home management area?
If these questions have your head spinning, give me a call. With our organizational coaching program we can save you time, money and frustration by taking time to plan upfront.
Digital Coaching
Posted by: | CommentsDigital Coaching is on the rise. I have been paying my own digital coach to teach me ways to be more effective with technology. Aaron Marshall with Techsmo has taught me so much about cutting edge web tools and cool tricks to increase my productivity on my PC (soon to be MAC). He’s done this over a few hour long sessions.
I would consider myself a 7 on the scale of 1-10 tech savvy. I can usually figure out most things by trial and error, or by using the free support most sites provide.
I’m now offering as digital coaching as a service to small businesses, home based business owners and working professionals. Because most of these tools deal with efficiency and effectiveness on your PC or MAC, they fit right in with my overall focus on organization, time management and efficiency.
These two articles explain the need for more professionals in this niche.
More to come on this in the future:
