March 27, 2010

WEEKLY BACKUP OF DATA?

HAVE YOU BACKED UP YOUR COMPUTER FILES THIS WEEK?

You can backup files onto CDs, DVDs, or a USB Flash Drive. When you buy a USB Flash Drive from London Drugs or Staples, insert it into your computer’s USB port (the port looks like a small rectangle), and the Flash Drive program should either search for a “driver” or it will open automatically. Be patient the first few times. A little dialogue box will open, basically asking what you want to do: choose something that says “Open files…” or whatever, then you can choose what files to drag an’ drop into the Flash Drive. Or you can do it this way…see the two versions below…

  • Top Producer must have a way to backup its files: Click on “File”, then look for the word “Backup.” But first go to ”Help” and do a search. (I’d have also to do a search to see how-to, probably under “backing up your files”)

  • MS Outlook also has a way to backup files: Click on “File” then “Import and Export” – the Wizard opens. Then choose “Export to a file” (top one) then click on “Common separated vales” for Windows, and it will export it into an Excel sheet for you. Choose what you want, e.g. “Contacts” or “Inbox”. Keep clicking “Next.” Then it will ask you where you want to save it by “Browse.” Here you can save to a drive by clicking on the appropriate drive under the basic C-Drive (such as A, B, D, E, etc.). Next. And then Finish.
FOR WINDOWS VISTA: Here’s a good website if you have Windows Vista: The Back Up Files wizard backs up the most common file types.

Hope that helps a little bit,
Kind regards,
“MJ”
~Your Office Nanny

March 14, 2010

CLUTTERED DESK, CLUTTERED MIND?

Cluttered desk, cluttered mind, or not!

Not too long ago, there was a popular expression “a cluttered desk is a sign of a cluttered mind.” Or is it? It can also mean that “a cluttered desk is a sign of genius” and “a messy desk is only a sign of a messy desk.”

Many people see nothing wrong with piles of paper covering the desktop, even spilling on to the chair seats and office floor. I’m somewhere in the middle. When my desk, chairs, and tabletops are of full of paper, it means I’m in the middle of something important, or else I’m utilizing my creative potential and am writing. This is a good thing. But when I proceed to the next round of creativity without clearing off my clutter---that’s a problem!

What works for you?

The key is to work in a manner that allows you to be most effective. Almost everyone needs to get rid of some of the clutter. Here are a few ways to make your desk less cluttered and more efficient:

1) Keep, toss, or move. Find three containers. Label the smallest "keep." Label the largest "toss." Have another container labeled "move." The really vital stuff will go into your keep container to be sorted later. Anything that you want to take home from the office or give away goes into the move container. Everything else goes into the toss container. (Ideally your toss container will be two parts. One part will be trash to be disposed of. The other will be paper products, which can be recycled.)

2) Start with the oldest. You can tell by looking at them which pile is the oldest. Usually it is farthest from your chair. It will be the easiest to throw away items from this pile.

3) Evaluate each piece only once. Look at each item in the pile. Decide which container it will go into. You can't set it back on your desk for later, you have to decide now. Put everything into one of the three containers. There is no other option.

4) Ask yourself this... The first question is "do I have this somewhere else, or can I get it from someone?" If you have a copy in email, or in a report, or on the desk of the person who prepared the market analysis, etc., you don't need to keep a copy. Toss it. Then ask "why do I need this?" If the answer is a) to take action on it, b) to do something with it when I get more information from someone, or c) to refer to as I do other work, put it into the keep pile. (After you get rid of the clutter you will re-sort your keep pile by those three categories, so feel free to separate them now. It will save time later.) If your answer was anything else, toss that item.

5) Be ruthless. Be brave.  As you progress through each pile, getting closer and close to the things that just arrived, be ruthless in your decisions. Take no prisoners. If you really don't need it, toss it. And be brave. Don't hang on to something just because you might need it someday. (An old friend of mine used to keep stacks of newspapers in case she reads them one day; her entire house towered with stacks of newspapers and she never did read them. Mind you, she also had thirty-six stray cats! Hmmm. . .)

Hope that helps in your spring cleaning, which is anytime of the year!

MJM
Your Office Nanny to the Rescue!