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Casual Articles - Taming the Paper Tiger at Home
Diamond Engagement Rings - So Many Beautiful Choices will be using the right tool. Here are some essentials:Diamond engagement rings are proudly and traditionally worn by a bride-to-be as a powerful symbol that she is "taken" and will soon be married to her true love. The ring is viewed as an indication of love, faith, fidelity, celebration, and the wealth of the groom. By placing the ring on his soon-to-be-wife, the groom gives the world an outward demonstration that he not only loves his bride, but also can afford to marry her and take her from her father's care. Diamond engagement rings, with their perfect clarity and indestructible nature, have come to symbolize the purity and eternal commitment between a man and his wife.Diamonds are relatively new as gemstones for engagement rings, the result of some very clever marketing by the diamond trade industry about 150 years ago. Other precious gemstones like sapphires, rubies, pearls and emeralds ser 1. A wastebasket/recycle bin – or shredder, if you’re concerned about confidentiality. 2. An “In Basket” to hold mail and other papers you haven’t look at yet. 3. An “Out Basket” for papers you need to take someplace else. 4. A “To File Basket” for papers you need to put in your reference filing cabinet at a later time. 5. A calendar for scheduling your time and tracking other family member’s schedules. 6. A Rolodex (or computer program such as Outlook) for managing names and contact info. 7. A small plastic file box (without a lid!) designed to hold a dozen or so hanging files for papers requiring your action. 8. A filing cabinet for reference files, which can be located outside your paper management center. Create a “Finding System” Does just the idea of filing give you knots in your stomach? Staying Excited About Your Business Have you ever sat down at the kitchen table with the day’s mail and started sorting it into piles?
• bills (you always recognize those first!),I had a blast at the Albuquerque International Balloon Fiesta events.When I told some Albuquerque natives and semi-natives how excited I was about attending, I usually got the same response: “Oh, you won’t get that excited after you’ve been here awhile.”Who knows. Maybe that will be true. But, I hope not. I felt like a little kid. Watching several hundred balloons taking off during early morning Mass Ascension. Walking amongst the same balloons during the evening Balloon Glow. The number of balloons, the organization of the events, and the lack of chaos just amazed me.The Fiesta is obviously second nature to some. But, it was brand new to me. Of course, this made me think about business. How many of us see our business as something that is "second nature"?Let’s say you’ve been in business for a few years. You have your produc • “to read” pile (that’s always the tallest), • stuff to go in the wastebasket (but that’s on the other side of the room), • papers to discuss with your significant other (who isn’t there at the moment), and finally • “I don’t even know how I got this” pile (but you really want to read it!) Then the phone rings -- or the kids come in -- or it’s time to go to a meeting. By this time, you can’t remember which pile is which, and you don’t have time to think about it – so you scoop it up into a bigger pile and put it in the bay window. This goes on all week – in a different place each time! Saturday night you have company coming – and you certainly don’t want your friends and colleagues to think you’re disorganized, so you stuff everything in a drawer…or under the bed. If you can identify with this scenario, you’re not alone. Research shows the average person spends 150 hours per year looking for misplaced information! Certainly nothing creates a crisis in a household faster than when your 15-year-old needs a copy of his birth certificate to get into driver’s Ed class – or the IRS wants proof of that $200 deduction you took on your taxes three years ago –and you can’t find it. Are you looking for a way to stop this endless cycle of clutter and crisis – and be able to find what you want (and better yet, let other members of the family find what they need themselves!)? Here are some principles to help you “attack the stacks!” Today’s mail is tomorrow’s pile. Don’t worry about the piles from yesterday – they’ll take care of themselves in time. Your road to success starts by establishing a “paper management center” in your house – a place to put new papers where you will go regularly to manage your mail. Caution: Make sure it is a place you like to be! If you pay bills and make phone calls while you’re cooking or watching the kids, a corner in the kitchen may be best – but if you only work in solitude, creating a cozy office in a corner somewhere may be more effective. Eliminate everything from your paper management center except what you know you will use. Clutter is postponed decisions?. The key to your new system is to decide now! As you take papers out of your “In Basket”, remember The FAT System?. There are only three decisions you can make: File, Act, or Toss. In other words, if you want to eliminate the “fat” from your desk and your like, think “FAT”! Instead of taking papers out of your “In Basket” and putting them back again without making a decision, ask yourself, “What’s the worst possible thing that would happen if I didn’t have this piece of paper?” If you can live with your answer, toss the paper! Practice The Art of Wastebasketry? Determine whether you want to keep each piece of paper at all by asking yourself these Art of Wastebasketry? questions: 1. Does this require any action on my part? 2. Does this exist elsewhere? 3. Is this information recent enough to be useful? 4. Can I identify specific circumstances when I’d use this information? 5. Are there any tax or legal implications? If you answer “No” to all the above questions, but are still not comfortable throwing something away, ask one last question: 6. What is the worst possible thing that could happen if I did not have this information? If you can live with your answer, toss – or recycle it – and live happily ever after! Half of any job is using the right tool. A major factor in your success at attacking your stacks will be using the right tool. Here are some essentials: 1. A wastebasket/recycle bin – or shredder, if you’re concerned about confidentiality. 2. An “In Basket” to hold mail and other papers you haven’t look at yet. 3. An “Out Basket” for papers you need to take someplace else. 4. A “To File Basket” for papers you need to put in your reference filing cabinet at a later time. 5. A calendar for scheduling your time and tracking other family member’s schedules. 6. A Rolodex (or computer program such as Outlook) for managing names and contact info. 7. A small plastic file box (without a lid!) designed to hold a dozen or so hanging files for papers requiring your action. 8. A filing cabinet for reference files, which can be located outside your paper management center. Create a “Finding System” Does just the idea of filing give you knots in your stomach? Blogging and Article Marketing - Untapped Home Business Resources thing in a drawer…or under the bed.The most valuable tools to promote your home business are free. Yes, they are completely, totally free. Blogging and article marketing are the most important things you can do for your online business opportunity. You can use blogging and article marketing to promote any niche that you want.You can sign up for a free blog online and start posting entries. This blog will then have its own address where people will be able to view the information you post. If you set this blog up to offer some great tips that relate to your services or products you are showing yourself to be an expert and people will start to trust you.Blogging can be a trust builder but it can also be a traffic builder. If you establish this blog and post regularly you will want to include links to your website where you sell your products and services. When you crea If you can identify with this scenario, you’re not alone. Research shows the average person spends 150 hours per year looking for misplaced information! Certainly nothing creates a crisis in a household faster than when your 15-year-old needs a copy of his birth certificate to get into driver’s Ed class – or the IRS wants proof of that $200 deduction you took on your taxes three years ago –and you can’t find it. Are you looking for a way to stop this endless cycle of clutter and crisis – and be able to find what you want (and better yet, let other members of the family find what they need themselves!)? Here are some principles to help you “attack the stacks!” Today’s mail is tomorrow’s pile. Don’t worry about the piles from yesterday – they’ll take care of themselves in time. Your road to success starts by establishing a “paper management center” in your house – a place to put new papers where you will go regularly to manage your mail. Caution: Make sure it is a place you like to be! If you pay bills and make phone calls while you’re cooking or watching the kids, a corner in the kitchen may be best – but if you only work in solitude, creating a cozy office in a corner somewhere may be more effective. Eliminate everything from your paper management center except what you know you will use. Clutter is postponed decisions?. The key to your new system is to decide now! As you take papers out of your “In Basket”, remember The FAT System?. There are only three decisions you can make: File, Act, or Toss. In other words, if you want to eliminate the “fat” from your desk and your like, think “FAT”! Instead of taking papers out of your “In Basket” and putting them back again without making a decision, ask yourself, “What’s the worst possible thing that would happen if I didn’t have this piece of paper?” If you can live with your answer, toss the paper! Practice The Art of Wastebasketry? Determine whether you want to keep each piece of paper at all by asking yourself these Art of Wastebasketry? questions: 1. Does this require any action on my part? 2. Does this exist elsewhere? 3. Is this information recent enough to be useful? 4. Can I identify specific circumstances when I’d use this information? 5. Are there any tax or legal implications? If you answer “No” to all the above questions, but are still not comfortable throwing something away, ask one last question: 6. What is the worst possible thing that could happen if I did not have this information? If you can live with your answer, toss – or recycle it – and live happily ever after! Half of any job is using the right tool. A major factor in your success at attacking your stacks will be using the right tool. Here are some essentials: 1. A wastebasket/recycle bin – or shredder, if you’re concerned about confidentiality. 2. An “In Basket” to hold mail and other papers you haven’t look at yet. 3. An “Out Basket” for papers you need to take someplace else. 4. A “To File Basket” for papers you need to put in your reference filing cabinet at a later time. 5. A calendar for scheduling your time and tracking other family member’s schedules. 6. A Rolodex (or computer program such as Outlook) for managing names and contact info. 7. A small plastic file box (without a lid!) designed to hold a dozen or so hanging files for papers requiring your action. 8. A filing cabinet for reference files, which can be located outside your paper management center. Create a “Finding System” Does just the idea of filing give you knots in your stomach? Brainstorming Do's and Don'ts our house – a place to put new papers where you will go regularly to manage your mail. Caution: Make sure it is a place you like to be! If you pay bills and make phone calls while you’re cooking or watching the kids, a corner in the kitchen may be best – but if you only work in solitude, creating a cozy office in a corner somewhere may be more effective. Eliminate everything from your paper management center except what you know you will use.We tend to put brainstorming in a box and assume that it is a no-holds barred, free form meeting with no structure or focus. But quite the opposite is the case. In fact there are lots of things that can derail a brainstorming meeting and put the meeting into a permanent tailspin.Perhaps the most important don't for brainstorming is don't be critical or judgmental of ideas presented during brainstorming. Successful brainstorming generates massive quantities of diverse and sometimes fantastical ideas. Fantastical ideas are good during brainstorming, not bad. You want a high quantity of ideas during brainstorming, not quality. There will be plenty of time later to dissect and analyze.Do make sure you have a clear purpose for the meeting and stick too it while brainstorming. Tangents and off beat thoughts are great during brainstorming Clutter is postponed decisions?. The key to your new system is to decide now! As you take papers out of your “In Basket”, remember The FAT System?. There are only three decisions you can make: File, Act, or Toss. In other words, if you want to eliminate the “fat” from your desk and your like, think “FAT”! Instead of taking papers out of your “In Basket” and putting them back again without making a decision, ask yourself, “What’s the worst possible thing that would happen if I didn’t have this piece of paper?” If you can live with your answer, toss the paper! Practice The Art of Wastebasketry? Determine whether you want to keep each piece of paper at all by asking yourself these Art of Wastebasketry? questions: 1. Does this require any action on my part? 2. Does this exist elsewhere? 3. Is this information recent enough to be useful? 4. Can I identify specific circumstances when I’d use this information? 5. Are there any tax or legal implications? If you answer “No” to all the above questions, but are still not comfortable throwing something away, ask one last question: 6. What is the worst possible thing that could happen if I did not have this information? If you can live with your answer, toss – or recycle it – and live happily ever after! Half of any job is using the right tool. A major factor in your success at attacking your stacks will be using the right tool. Here are some essentials: 1. A wastebasket/recycle bin – or shredder, if you’re concerned about confidentiality. 2. An “In Basket” to hold mail and other papers you haven’t look at yet. 3. An “Out Basket” for papers you need to take someplace else. 4. A “To File Basket” for papers you need to put in your reference filing cabinet at a later time. 5. A calendar for scheduling your time and tracking other family member’s schedules. 6. A Rolodex (or computer program such as Outlook) for managing names and contact info. 7. A small plastic file box (without a lid!) designed to hold a dozen or so hanging files for papers requiring your action. 8. A filing cabinet for reference files, which can be located outside your paper management center. Create a “Finding System” Does just the idea of filing give you knots in your stomach? Condemnation of Capitalism and Gift Giving Around The World thing that would happen if I didn’t have this piece of paper?” If you can live with your answer, toss the paper!Too often environmental groups, human rights groups or anti-capitalism groups will condemn Corporations, World Leaders, NGOs, USA and Wealthy Families for the woes of the Third World. Yet, is this really fair for all concerned? After all so much effort, assistance and much needed money has been given to the poorer nations and people of little means often living on less than a $1 per day.Often there are problems when giving aid, sometimes it never gets where it is suppose to get, sometimes it worsens a situation. But the there are people who care very much. When these unfortunate potential eventualities occur, we should try to find a solution, if we do not have one; we must brainstorm so others may join these noble efforts, or come forth with additional or superior ideas.But let's not condemn the givers of the world or look a gift horse in Practice The Art of Wastebasketry? Determine whether you want to keep each piece of paper at all by asking yourself these Art of Wastebasketry? questions: 1. Does this require any action on my part? 2. Does this exist elsewhere? 3. Is this information recent enough to be useful? 4. Can I identify specific circumstances when I’d use this information? 5. Are there any tax or legal implications? If you answer “No” to all the above questions, but are still not comfortable throwing something away, ask one last question: 6. What is the worst possible thing that could happen if I did not have this information? If you can live with your answer, toss – or recycle it – and live happily ever after! Half of any job is using the right tool. A major factor in your success at attacking your stacks will be using the right tool. Here are some essentials: 1. A wastebasket/recycle bin – or shredder, if you’re concerned about confidentiality. 2. An “In Basket” to hold mail and other papers you haven’t look at yet. 3. An “Out Basket” for papers you need to take someplace else. 4. A “To File Basket” for papers you need to put in your reference filing cabinet at a later time. 5. A calendar for scheduling your time and tracking other family member’s schedules. 6. A Rolodex (or computer program such as Outlook) for managing names and contact info. 7. A small plastic file box (without a lid!) designed to hold a dozen or so hanging files for papers requiring your action. 8. A filing cabinet for reference files, which can be located outside your paper management center. Create a “Finding System” Does just the idea of filing give you knots in your stomach? Medical Machining will be using the right tool. Here are some essentials:Medical machining process is used for manufacturing different types of medical tools such as scissors, clamps, surgical knives, syringes, and others. Medical instruments manufacturing uses advanced machining processes that help in producing precision medical tools and equipment required in the medical industry.Medical machining involves fabrication of metal parts, which are extremely intricate and are mainly made from thin metal sheets. Different techniques used in medical machining include chemical etching, metal stamping, and EDM machining. Chemical etching machining process is mainly used for producing typical precision medical parts. The machining system offers a great flexibility for producing precision medical tools with unusual configuration as well as metals with tight tolerance within .0005'. Besides this, chemical etching machining is c 1. A wastebasket/recycle bin – or shredder, if you’re concerned about confidentiality. 2. An “In Basket” to hold mail and other papers you haven’t look at yet. 3. An “Out Basket” for papers you need to take someplace else. 4. A “To File Basket” for papers you need to put in your reference filing cabinet at a later time. 5. A calendar for scheduling your time and tracking other family member’s schedules. 6. A Rolodex (or computer program such as Outlook) for managing names and contact info. 7. A small plastic file box (without a lid!) designed to hold a dozen or so hanging files for papers requiring your action. 8. A filing cabinet for reference files, which can be located outside your paper management center. Create a “Finding System” Does just the idea of filing give you knots in your stomach? Not surprising – most filing systems don’t work! Why? Because the same information can be filed under “Car”, “Auto” “Vehicle” or “Chrysler” – and it’s highly unlikely that any two family members would agree on what to name a file, much less be able to remember it when they want to find it later. The solution to this age-old problem: A File Index – a list of the names of your files. You can create a File Index as a word processing document – or you can use Taming the Paper Tiger software (www.thepapertiger.com) to generate an alphabetical list of your files automatically. (The system is so simple, your kids can help you file!) From Ideas to Action But what about those papers that do require your action? Bills to pay, phone calls to make, things to discuss with another family member. Some projects may require a folder of their own, such as “PTA Fundraiser” or “New York Trip.” Often we shuffle papers from one side of the desk to the other because there are so many things that need to be done. To solve this problem, create an Action File System for recurring activities. To identify what Action Files you need, ask the question, “What is the next action I need to take?” Never mind that there are several things you need to do! Just file the papers according to the next action. Typical answers include: • Call Put these Action Files in a desktop file holder, along with the current projects you are working on, so you will have a visual reminder. This system encourages effective time management – when you are making one phone call, you can often squeeze in another one – since all the papers requiring phone calls are in one place. Afraid you’ll forget to look in the file? Make a note in your calendar on the day you need to take the action. Does this system guarantee that your kitchen table with never be piled with papers? Hardly! But you will be able to clean up the clutter quickly, and know exactly where to put it. Your ability to accomplish anything is directly related to your ability to find the right information at the right time. Happy paper taming!
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