Archive for Organization

Jan
08

4) Organize your domains

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OK this is a loaded post. I use godaddy to register my domains. I even have a reseller account with them since I consult with small businesses and non profits. I host a couple sites with them and use their template builder for a couple sites as well. Primarily I register with godaddy and then change the nameservers at godaddy to point to Media Temple where I host all my wordpress blogs and blog/websites. Media Temple has a one click application and grid hosting plan that I like.

Now here is my key to organizing domains. Stop buying them compulsively. You know who you are. I am so guilty of this. I get a creative idea or thought- boom, I buy a domain. It’s only $9-$10 bucks with godaddy. Here’s the kicker. When you buy 30 to 40 to 50 of these puppies over the course of a year, they start renewing on you like 3 per month. That’s $30-$40 bill each month.

Here are couple tips I have used lately to tame this domain madness.

  1. I set up my view in my control panel to see what domains I have, when they renew, and whether of not they are forwarded. That’s pretty much all I care about.
  2. I eliminate all the .nets I have purchased. Since I have .com, I’m not too worried about someone else getting .net. What does it matter anymore? They’ll just come up with a creative play on words or get .tv or .us or .me. So I don’t know that you are really protecting your brand that much if you do buy up all the different extensions. One exception to this that I have been toying with lately is buying the .com and .net or .whatever and using one for my main blog and the other for a website or ning social network site. Just a thought.
  3. I really analyze which domains I have purchased and which ones I’m using or will use. I let the others expire. Yes I know it’s crazy. I can hear the murmurs now. “As soon as I throw something away I need it.” You cannot wait until you get a notice of a annual renewal, because you will not take the time to log in and take the renewal off of autopilot.
  4. Since many domains I purchase are catchy names that I want to advertise with, I try to make sure the splash page or forwarding is set up. The problem with this is setting up landing pages for multiple sales pages takes a long time. Are you going to load each one with Google Anayltics and track it as well. Before long your business will be SEO, web design, and online marketing- when you actually own a coffee shop, sell houses or do free lance consulting. The other problem is that Google Adwords and organic seaches really don’t like it when you forward domains. One alternative to splash pages is to create Squidoo lenses, but don’t be spammy.
  5. Last but not least- do not register with multiple registrars and hosting companies. You will create a nightmare of web architecture and you will save a couple dollars. I have worked with some customers organizing their computers or offices and others with blogs and online marketing. It can take days to reconnect the dots when you have domains registered with 2 different resellers, yahoo, godaddy, bluehost, hostmonster, etc. It’s the equivalent of spending 2 hours, and 2 gallons of gas saving $8 shopping, by driving all over the city to 3 different stores.

So to summarize.

  • Buy less domains by actually thinking “will I use this and when.”
  • Periodically log in and take inventory of the domains you have renewing soon. Take them off autorenew and they will be canceled with no more effort on your part.
  • If you have multiple domains for sales purposes- set up your sales pages or forwards and use them. Set a deadline and get it done- or admit you won’t and cancel them.
  • Buy what you need now unless it’s a really big idea that you want to act on in the future. Maybe a blog you’d like to start, a social network you’d like to build or a book you’d like to write.

Hope this helped.

I love batching. I will try to batch just about anything I can. I will do it compulsively as part of my OCD. My latest attempt at batching is the monthly meal plan and grocery shopping excursion. Let me start by listing the problems I see with not planning a menu, not making a grocery list, and not shopping efficiently.

  1. If you don’t plan what you’ll eat (leaving some run for flexibility and creativity) then you will have many arguments that go like this. What do want? What sounds good to you? I don’t know, what sounds good to you? Do you just want to pick something up? I’m not going out. “Screaming hungry kids in background cause more stress.” Let’s just cook some chicken here. What there isn’t any thawed out? Well I’ll just whip something up real quick. OK what? That doesn’t sound good to me. Pause Pause- 15 minutes has gone by. OK what do you want? I’ll run out at get fast food so we can put off those weight loss goals, give the kids some quick junk, have heart burn in 2 hours and spend money we should save.  That is how the conversation went in the Raley Household. Did I hit a nerve?
  2. OK now we’re at the grocery, which in our case is Costco and Kroger. Hey how many cans of tomatoes do we use to make the chili? Do we have half the pot roast left in the freezer? Are we out of taco shells? I think I used the last of the ketchup, should we get some more? Without a list of ingredients for the meals you’ve planned, and a inventory of your pantry, fridge and freezer you would likely have multiple conversations like this while you’re at the store.
  3. Now that we’re back from the initial trip, here’s how the saga unfolds. I told you we were out of canned tomatoes. I thought we had some. My bad. Now I can’t make chili, spaghetti sauce or lasagna. Oh yeah and I can’t make the beef vegetable soup. We should have bought an extra pack of chicken too. I’ll run out tomorrow, and pack up our three small children to go and do this all over again. Two days later. Since I didn’t think it through again and make a list the second time- I forgot to have you pick up the oregano and parsley for the sauces. No big deal I’ll stop on the way home from work and pick it up. I have an enormous amount of free time and I’m independently wealthy. Whether you are lugging three kids or just yourself, making multiple stops for anything is a huge waste of time. I used to joke with my wife when she made her weekly pack up the kids and go spend $50-$75 at Kroger trip. I would ask her how long it would take and she would almost always underestimate the time by 30-45 minutes. This is true for me as well and probably for you. We are very good at misleading ourselves into believing that things take much less times than they actually do.
  4. Every time you do any of the above you are task switching and creating open loops of new tasks to do. Not to mention spending money in two transactions is much easier to record than having 8 receipts from 6 different stores on 6 different days. Tough to budget that way.

Just a small caveat based on my personal preference. If it were just me, which it’s not- as I have a wife and 3 small children; then I would eat very simply. I would eat the same things over and over for breakfast and or lunch and mix in some variety with dinners. I did this twice in my life and it helped me lose over 30 lbs both times. For me it is a chore and major pain to take time to think of what I want to eat. After all it’s just fuel for my body. Since it’s not just me, and I have little mouths to feed, we add more complexity to our meal plan, but at the same time I think you’ll see the simplicity in the concept.

Here is how we do it.

  • First we live an uncluttered life and this can be seen in our kitchen. The set up is very minimalistic and the pantry, cabinets, fridge and freezer (in the garage) all are very organized. It is simple to look in and see what we have in inventory and what we need.
  • Second we like to eat the same handful of meals. In our case we’ve picked out 24 meals. We take out a simple monthly paper calendar, you could create a separate Google calendar, I ‘ve done it that way in the past. We add the same four meals to Mondays from the previous month. Tuesday night is date night and we eat out somewhere fairly cheap with a coupon or gift card. Wednesday four more meals. Thursday four more. Friday you guessed it four more meals. That is 16 meals plus the four eating out meals. That leaves us four on Saturday and four on Sunday. These are typically caseroles, comfort foods, soups and chili while the meals during the week are quite healthy.
  • Each meal has it’s own side dishes that don’t change.  If we’re having Roast Beef, then it’s grilled cabbage and parmigiana potatoes. This makes it easy to scan the meal list, look at the ingredients, compare it to our pantry and alter our list. We don’t recreate the list each time. Of course we batched it. We made a template with all the ingredients and which of the two stores they typically come from- Costco or Kroger.
  • We line up my mom as our babysitter on Tuesday nights for our date night. Most Tuesdays we relax, have a meal or make our quick pick ups (I’ll explain in a moment). Every 4th Tuesday night, we pick a restaurant where we can eat quickly. Mexican and sandwich shops work great for this. We’re in and out in less than 30 minutes. We leave at 5:45PM or so and finish eating by 6:30PM. We head to Costco, divide and conquer our list. By the way we also pick up all the toiletries, baby stuff and cosmetics at Costco using the same list process. We leave Costco and head to Kroger. We divide and conquer the list at Kroger and are back home by 9PM.
  • When we get home I breakdown all food out of its packaging when possible for easier storage, while Ashley puts the kids to bed. We have successfully planned out, shopped for and stored all the food we will need for the month in three hours of shopping and about two hours of prep beforehand.

Now the world is not perfect so occasionally we forget something or use more of an ingredient that we thought. The dog runs out of food or the fruit molded in the fridge. In this case we make any quick stops as part of our date night routine. After a nice dinner and cup of coffee, we may bounce around a store or run into a Walgreens to pick up a knick-knack. We are pretty detailed about this process so this rarely happens to us, but it does give you a flexible way to keep the system in tact. The key is that it’s fun time and intentional. There is no stress because it was unplanned, untimely or the result of our own shortsightedness.

Here are a couple other keys to pulling this off.

Document your favorite meals. Some people eat their favorite meal once per week. We strive for once a month, and it’s cool because we never tire of the meals and we’re always looking forward to them. After all it’s been a month since digging into Ashley’s Chicken Kabobs with Cous Cous or her Chicken Enchiladas.

Empty out your car or van before you go. You will fill it up.

Keep the menu interesting but simple.

Plan your meals with the freshest ingredients earlier in the month.

Used your frozen or canned vegetables and fruits for later in the month.

We freeze 3 loaves of bread and the 6 gallons of milk we buy fits into our fridge and a small dorm fridge in our basement. You can do the same. The milk is organic and the expiration is much closer to a month instead of a week.

Separate your meats before you freeze them so they are easy to grab and thaw the day you need them.

Take everything out of it’s package when possible to create easier storage. I will post some pictures which show our pantry, fridge, freezer and dorm fridge. They are not overly cluttered even on the day we do our shopping.

Give this a try and use the time you save to do the following:

  • Spend time with your family
  • Read or write or blog
  • Practice a hobby
  • Volunteer
  • Connect with a ministry, missionary, or nonprofit you want to support
  • Watch an inspirational movie
  • Relax and do nothing
  • The possibilities are endless

Pantry after stock upPantry after stock upFreezer after stock up

Fridge right after monthly stockingFreezer in garageDorm Fridge in Basement

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OK, this video should be pretty self explanatory. I’m organizing my backpack for the first time in months. You know the thing I carry with me daily, transporting all my key work tools and belongings. I touch it everyday of my life. I put things in it, take things out and it’s probably with me more than my wife and kiddos. So why would it be one of the last frontiers of organization in my world? Because it became second nature and blended in.

This video is two parts and the second one cuts off at the end. My cell camera ran out of memory. Our main camera was out of batteries. We buy those things once a quarter and Murphy’s law got us. My Macbook isight camera was too stationary for this shot. I apologize for the muted somewhat bumpy shot, but listening to my explanation should help you tackle your own small organizing project.

Part 1


Organizing my Backpack from Bryce Raley on Vimeo.

Part 2


Organizing my Backpack part 2 from Bryce Raley on Vimeo.

Here are links to some of the items in the video.

Retractable Mouse

Case Logic

Flash Drive

Moleskin Notebooks

Vibe Liquid Nutraceutical

Jan
04

1) Organizing Gmail and Labels

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OK I’ve done it. It took about two hours, but would have been much shorter had I not tried multitaskingMultitasking Juggler. Why did I multitask? The only exception I make for multitasking- watching sports, namely the NFL playoffs and Kentucky versus Louisville annual rivalry game in basketball.

I had let my Gmail inbox get way out of hand lately. I have followed David Allens GTD system in the past, by addressing emails when they show up if they take less than two minutes to address. I also had created a series of @ labels to capture next actions. For example @ read/review and @ add to database and @ waiting for. The missing ingredient was a whole lot of elimination. I realized last week that I cannot keep up with the endless emails coming into my inbox on a weekly basis, nor do I want to. It’s not like they all lead to profit. Between comments from my blogs, twitter and facebook notifications, email newsletters, email advertisements (why can’t everybody send one update per week max), customer conversations, billing statements, reminders, and everything else; I could no longer find the important messages amongst the clutter. After reading a few other blogs and books, and using organizing principles I decided to tackle this problem of information overload via email.

  1. I decided that I would much rather get my content from RSS (google reader) than from email newsletters. If the ezine (email newsletter) I was subscribed to had a blog with an RSS feed, then I subscribed to the feed and unsubscribed to the ezine. This presents a small issue because some, myself included, send ezines and do blog posts. Here is the difference: I only send one very well organized weekly ezine. Everything else is posted to my blogs. If I couldn’t get the feed or the ezine had different content, oh well. I have the websites bookmarked and I can always go there if I really want to check in on the authors latest information. This cut back drastically on the number of incoming emails I was getting.
  2. I decided to unsubscribe to all email ads. Even the really cool ones from Apple, 37 signals, and Igourmet. It didn’t take much will power to boot the uncool like Vistaprint. I love their printing for certain products but I don’t want to hear from them every time someone at their office uses the bathroom. This cut out a lot more incoming mail.
  3. I turned off many of my reminders and notifications, except Twitter. I love Twitter and really feel it’s useful. Although lately, many people have stopped answering the question and started using Twitter as 2nd email.
  4. I deleted all the unread ezines and updates in my @ read/review label (works like a folder except better for non Gmail users). Let’s face it I wasn’t going to sit down and read all 200 backlogged ezines. If it was important enough it will be recycled.
  5. I consolidated many of the labels I had created to store my mail. Google already has great search features for finding your messages and they give you so much storage space you don’t really need to delete. I love to delete though. It’s liberating. I do label and archive most semi important messages. When consolidating my labels I looked for common bonds when sorting through my system. For instance I took all funny emails, political emails and neat stories and put them into a label called Keepers. Then I purged the labels for Funny, Politics and Misc. In Gmail you can edit any message or multiple messages by selecting the email via clicking it and then by clicking “More Actions” new label or existing labels. The cool thing about Gmail verus using a folder system is that messages can have multiple labels. Maybe you got an email that was from a customer but pertained to a software or blog they recommended. You might want to label it with both the customers name and the new blog.
  6. Now my inbox is empty. My @ read/review can now be managed on a weekly basis. I batch (let it accumulate and do it all at once to avoid start up time and task switching) this activity for Saturday afternoons or Sundays while watching football, basketball or golf. It’s not power reading and doesn’t require a lot of concentration, so I just quickly sift through and see which ones interest me.
  7. Last I use the star function in Gmail to star the emails that require a next action. These would be responses, info requests, passwords or billing info to print or record for future reference. This could also be a thread that needs a reply. I like to use a @ waiting label for emails that have been sent or that require someone else to act.

contactus

Now that I’ve given you a game plan, get on top of your email inbox this month. January is a great time to clear out the clutter and close those open loops in your head. The fact that your inbox in cluttered up probably means that you don’t know what you might be missing. Here is the rub. It may be nothing and all your worry is for naught, or it could be a very important opportunity that is going unaddressed. Don’t procrastinate it any longer. Block out a couple hours with no task switching and get er done.

Here is a list of topics that we may organize during January to promote “Get Organized Month”.

  1. My Documents- Finder in MAC
  2. My PC
  3. My Backup Files
  4. My Delicious Bookmarks
  5. My Fridge
  6. My Pantry
  7. My Physical Files
  8. My Supplies
  9. My Pictures on PC and Flickr
  10. My MAC
  11. My Backpack Account
  12. My Contacts in Google and Highrise
  13. My Domains
  14. My Blog Posts
  15. My Van
  16. My Garage
  17. My Wife’s Craft Room
  18. My Wireless Network
  19. My Home Office
  20. My Notes
  21. My Books
  22. My Email and Labels(folders)
  23. My Google Reader
  24. My Children’s Toys
  25. My Shed
  26. My Closets
  27. My Fireproof Safe
  28. My 2009 Calendar
  29. My Equipment
  30. My Itunes
  31. My Basecamp Account