Organizing Your Digital Life: Part II

Last week we posted Part I of ‘Organizing Your Digital Life:’, which outlined general strategies for keeping your digital information contained. This week, we will delve into more specific digital functions, including calendars, photos, and website tracking.

Digital Calendars: If you’re the type of person who prefers to maintain a digital calendar, you probably know that this can be a great tool for time management and organization, if used correctly. There are two strategies for calendaring. Some chose to use calendars strictly for appointments, which is fine. Others use their calendar as an extension of their task list. They create reminders for everything and add them to their calendar during times of the day when they know they can complete the task. This method often helps to ensure completion of the task. Another calendar organization strategy is to use color coding to delineate between personal, family, professional, or task-related entries. In general, I always suggest reviewing your calendar each Sunday for the week ahead and each morning for that day.

Websites: The number of great websites and blogs that pop up each day is staggering. In order to help you keep up with your favorites, without monopolizing all of your free time, there are several excellent tools. A feed reader, such as Google Reader allows you to ‘subscribe’ to sites you like and receive all new content in a single place. Given the typical frequency of use of Facebook, other clients prefer to ‘like’ or subscribe to all of their favorite sites and brands there in order to receive updates via their newsfeed. Either way, these tools will help streamline the content into one place so that you can avoid accessing many sites each day.

Photos: Clients often have difficulty keeping their digital photo collections stored in a way that allows for easy searching and access. With this problem I suggest two things. First, set aside a particular day (or two) each month to download the photos from your camera or phone. Following the download, immediately create well-labeled folders that include dates to categorize the new photos. The second step is to add these folders and files to your external hard drive, online backup (SOS), photo storage website (Shutterfly), or social media site for additional safe-keeping. Although we all fear a computer crash where all of our files are lost, few actually maintain a system for backing up their files on a regular basis. The monthly photo download process is a great time to transfer additional new files or items to their respective backup locations.

No matter the extent to which you maintain a digital life, it is important to keep the files, tools, and processes just as organized as you would your home.

Good Luck!
TWOW

Organizing Your Digital Life – Part I

Just like the physical items in your home, having an organizational strategy for your digital life can increase productivity and peace-of-mind. Your email inbox, music library, and computer desktop can quickly get out of control, so it’s important to take the extra time to develop a process and system around organizing your data.

Computers: The number one piece of advice I can give any client when it comes to the content on your devices is to use your inbox, home-screen and desktop only for the items you need to access that day or regularly. Consider keeping your desktop clean by only leaving your itunes shortcut, email inbox and gym class schedule on it, for example. Everything else goes in well-labeled folders or secondary screens for easy access. The same goes for your email inbox where well-labeled folders are the key to a clear mind and a clear plan of action for each day. In other words, your inbox should double as the day’s to-do list. If it’s in the inbox, you need to respond or take action on the item that day.

Smart Phones and Tablets: Most smart phones have a homescreen with a menu of apps that pops up every time you turn on the phone. This is the screen where you should house your calendar, email accounts, texts, alarm clock, notes, calculator and any other information you access several times each day. Group together your entertainment apps, including all social media and web platforms like twitter, facebook, pinterest, weather, fandango, etc. on another screen. For financial accounts that you don’t use daily, group them together a layer or two under the most important screens. You can organize your tablets in a similar way. For traditional Kindle, try the archiving feature to get the books you’ve already read out of your main view.

Music library: If you’re like me, your iTunes can get a little out of control with songs you’ve gathered along the way that weren’t named correctly. Most of us have thousands of songs which could take a lifetime just to rename consistently, so I often recommend editing just 5 mis-named songs per day (and if you have the extra time, do 10). By the end of the year, you’ll have a consistent library that is easily searchable for those moments when you MUST hear that song you love.

Each of these recommendations will take a bit of your time to organize, but it really is in your best organizational interest to take that time and get your electronic life in order. If you’re feeling overwhelmed, break each technological arena down by month – by the end of the year, you’ll have your electronic life in order and a few organizational resolutions, resolved!

Good luck, and enjoy!
-TWOW

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