Posts Tagged ‘your brain at work’

Get the most reward out of your small business office clutter

Tuesday, May 11th, 2010

I actually made money early this year by selling unneeded office furniture, ink & toner, etc. I also donated some presentation supplies to one my favorite non-profits, “Women’s Initiative for Self Employment.”  That created more space for my webinar production push.

So I thought you would like to use the first tip below to either cash-in or recycle all the stuff that is getting in the way of you and your small business growth.

Cash-in or Donate office or business supplies you haven’t used in the last year. Return them to the store for credit or donate them to your favorite charity. You may also know someone who would be happy to pay you for your unused discount ink or toner if you buy a new printer. Recycle other discard if you can, because it is just less clutter in your office and your mind.

Plus, here is my ‘ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure’ tip on using your calendar before that important date.

Make a calendar note, one week before any event or project due. For example: Do you need to review the work done and which recommendations you’ll make before a client meeting date?

Whatever it is, make a note of it in advance so you can stay of top of your tasks. Because you don’t want that calendar date to turn into “Did you need to send flowers last week for Mother’s Day?”

Simplify Your Life Checklist: Avoid ID Theft & Credit Fraud

Tuesday, May 4th, 2010

Get Rid of Junk Mail:

For severe infestation contact http://www.41pounds.org/ and sign up for 5 years of protection for just $41.00. They donate more than 1/3 of your fee to environmental or community organizations–you choose.

Junk mail production makes as much pollution every year as 2.6 million cars!

Social Security:

O Review your Earnings and Benefits Statement carefully for errors once a year. Order a free copy by calling (800) 772-1213.

Credit Ratings and Credit Fraud:

O Reduce the number of pre-approved offers you get by requesting these credit bureaus remove your name from their lists:  Experian (800) 353-0809 Equifax (800) 219-1251 TransUnion (800) 241-2858.

O Every quarter carefully check your free credit report from one of the three credit bureaus by contacting the only authorized source at  www.annualcreditreport.com OR by calling (877) 322-8228.

Opt Out of ‘Prescreened’ Credit Offers:

O Go to www.optoutprescreen.com or call (888) 567-8688) to protect yourself, elderly family members and college-aged kids from solicitations of creditors. This improves your credit rating as well!

Government Agencies: Birth, Marriage, Home Purchase, & Death

O Public records of all our major life events are sold to advertisers. Call the largest dealer, Acxiom, at their Consumer Advocate Hotline (877) 774-2094. OR go to www.acxiom.com and hit the ‘Contact Us’ link to request an opt-out form.

Terminate Unwanted Catalogs:

O Contact Abacus at optout@abacus-direct.com or write Abacus, PO Box 1478, Broomfield CO 80093.

Supply your address and the full names of everyone in your household or company.

Prevent Your Internet Browsing Data from being shared:

O Register at www.networkadvertising.org to opt out of advertisers selling your browsing ‘cookies’.

Reporting ID Theft or Credit Fraud: (Hope you never need these resources. But, just in case…)

Equifax (800) 525-6285

Experian (800) 301-7195

Trans Union (800) 680-7289

Social Security Administration fraud line (800) 269-0271

Federal Trade Commission ID Theft Hotline (877) 438-4338

The FTC ID Theft website provides guidelines for  identity theft victims: http://www.consumer.gov/idtheft/recovering_idt.html

SCORE: Small Business Success Resources online & local

Tuesday, April 27th, 2010

One of the single most cost-effective and results oriented resources small business owners can access easily is SCORE.

SCORE: Service Corps of Retired Executives small business resources and counseling can be found at: http://www.score.org/business_tips.html

There is also a SCORE site just for women business owners and their challenges at: http://www.score.org/women/site.html

There is a complete online library of small business advice available for free. Also, there are many SCORE agencies throughout the U.S. where you can get personalized advice and resource referrals for your exact business situation from a retired executive.

I’ve supplied links to just a few  of the hundreds of articles I think any small business owner can benefit from…

Business Management

5 Tips on Creating an Office Where You Can Work Check out these tips on creating a space that inspires you.


5 Tips on How to Be More Efficient Take a look at these tips on organizing for success.

5 Tips on How to Stop the Work Pile-Up
Discover how to manage workflow in your small business.

5 Tips to Make Your Home Office Child-friendly Balance life and work with a kid-friendly office environment.

Check out SCORE resources available to help you succeed in business:
Business Planning
Business Management
E-Business
Finance & Capital
Human Resources
Leadership
Legal
Marketing & Public Relations
Sales & Customer Service
Tax
Training
Web
Good Luck with using these business success resources to improve your bottom line without breaking the bank!

Small Business & Home Office Tax Records Retention Tips

Monday, April 19th, 2010

80 percent of the paper that small business owners file in our offices is NEVER referred to again.  After one year that unnecessary document storage statistic increases to over 90 percent.

Eegads !! It’s no wonder we can’t find what we’re looking for. Use my paper retention tips to melt your small business paper blizzard  and for tax-time at home.

Home Tax Audit records retention guideline tip:

Written documentation for each deduction: house improvement receipts, buy/sell/donate/yearly investment statements, 1099s and/or W-2s, credit card/bank statements & checks.

After six years; Put actual tax filing papers and any essentials (W-2s/1099s into a permanent tax records archive. For details see: http://www.organizer-extraordinaire.com/Small-Business-Tax-Records-Guidelines.pdf

Then, dispose of outdated backup documentation and SHRED.

If you turn your personal tax insurance and financial record shredding over to a company — make sure they will let you watch them shred your documents.

For more tips on records retention guidelines for business and personal tax documentation check out: http://www.organizer-extraordinaire.com/Small-Business-Tax-Records-Guidelines.pdf

If you don’t need it, why not dump it?

Small Business Tax Tips: IRS targets you for audit!

Tuesday, April 6th, 2010

Small businesses have a higher risk of IRS audit than employed individuals. One of the simplest and easiest ways to offset being targeted by the IRS is to do your tax return anytime before April 15th. BUT wait until April 15th to mail your small business tax return.

The computers used to process all filed taxes are set to pick one out of a certain number of certain types of returns to be audited. By waiting to file until April 15th your return goes in with the largest number of tax returns to be processed.

The numbers have it: if your return is one out of a million your audit risk is higher than when you file your return with 40 million other returns.

Remember the old saying, “the only sure thing in life is death and taxes.” No one can do much about death.  So, give yourself every possible edge you can when it comes to dealing with the tax man.

Prepare early but, file on April 15th to be part of the largest group of returns filed at the same time.

Color-Coding Email: Save Time, Get more done and Stress less

Monday, March 29th, 2010

Color coding is an easy way to manage email…Once you know how to do it! My email tip is number 24 on the TPE blog of experts this week and I’ve included it below.

Mike at TPE has a great idea–he asks for input from other small business owners and then shares their best practices in his blog.

24. Color is just like a Porsch…There is no substitute!

To organize important email, use Outlook 2003 to color-code message headers.

At the Inbox: Select the message/sender to color-code
Choose: Tools, Organize, click on the Color option
Set the coding for ‘from’ or ‘to’
Choose your color from the drop down menu
Click: Apply Color

Now the Inbox message/sender appears with your color subject header.

Pay no attention to the pre-assigned categories. Use the colors you like for your email management categories.

Thanks to: Eve Abbott of Organizer Extraordinaire.
You can get even more of Mike’s entrepreneurial email tips at: http://www.toiletpaperentrepreneur.com/blog/manage-overwhelm-email-inbox

Six Tips for Small Business Success: brain-boggling words to not use

Tuesday, March 23rd, 2010

Our brain’s top priorities include survival of our self, our family and our business. That is why the basis of every human transaction is “What’s in it for me?” To increase your successful communications, here are six words to avoid using with your small business prospects, clients and everyone else too.

1. No
Humans hate to hear no’ (brain MRIs shift to stress patterns). Humans love to hear yes’ (brain MRIs light up in an instant).  So, if you are about to say no to someone: Stop. Think what it would take to say yes to their request. Especially if you both can work together for a win-win outcome!

2. Don’t
The human brain always processes a negative in language by defaulting to the positive. When you say, “Don’t judge a product by brand alone,” what they really hear after not processing the negative is, “Judge a product by brand alone.” Communicate positively, by telling everyone what you want them to do, not what you don’t want them to do.

3. Can’t
Speaking of ‘don’t’, ‘can’t’ is another word that can frustrate or maybe anger anyone from your customers to your spouse. When people process “I can’t”, they hear, “I choose not to.” Instead of focusing on what you can’t do, focus on what you can do.

4. But
As soon as you say the word ‘but the listener deletes the previous words spoken. For example, “You did good work, but…”) Now they are waiting to hear what you are really going to tell them. Replace but with either the word ‘and’ or start a new sentence. For example:

“You did good work and I wish your bonus was bigger.”

“You did good work. Unfortunately, this year’s bonus pool was less than before.”

5. Honestly
When your listener hears you say, ‘honestly,’ you imply to them that some (or all!) of everything else you’ve said has not been honest. Delete these next two words from your vocabulary for the same reason: frankly, truthfully. I use the words, In fact but only when I have a relevant fact or new information to share.

6. If
If always implies the opposite, “if not” as your brain processes language. When is a more definite word for the brain; it knows how to use when easily. For example:

“If you want to grow your business, here are six words you will be more successful by not using.”

When you want to grow your business, here are six words you will be more successful by not using.”

Changing these words is guaranteed to get you better results in your small business and life!

Excerpted: “How to Do Space Age Work with a Stone Age Brain: Using your brain for small business success with less stress.” Copyright 2010 Eve Abbott All rights reserved.

7 Fast Computer Clutter Clean Up Tips

Monday, March 15th, 2010

The secret to getting your self organized and keeping your business organized is the same as the answer to “How do you eat a computer?”  The answer is “One byte at a time!”

With software applications taking up increasing amounts of hard drive space and people using multiple applications simultaneously, it is easier than ever to run out of space or just have your work crawling along slowly.

BACKUP BACKUP BACKUP: Backing up your work on a regular basis gives you the security of knowing that even if you do toss something before its time – you can retrieve it.

This makes computer clutter maintenance a worry free activity. You may be amazed at how much you never refer to again.

Remember, 80 percent of what we e-file never gets referred to again!

7 Organizing Computer Clutter Tips:

  1. Put an underscore (_) in front of any folder and an exclamation point (!) in front of any file name that you use most frequently.
  2. Review temporary (.tmp) files before deleting.
  3. Back up large unused files (or when finishing a project) onto media of choice (Memory stick, CD, DVD, External hard drive).
  4. Make an Archive folder in each major directory and/or in each major folder for outdated files and compress these folders.
  5. Empty the recycle bin.
  6. In Explore, Windows, Delete all files in Temp folder.
  7. At Start Pearl, select Explore, Search (magnifying glass icon), Files or Folders. Do a FIND ALL, key in .tmp and  delete.

Your computer will thank you and run faster. Your small business will thank you and run smoother. Any business owner will thank themselves for being so smart as to use my easy brain-based organizing tips!

Excerpts from: “How to Do Space Age Work with a Stone Age Brain: Using your brain for small business success with less stress” Copyright 2010 Eve Abbott All rights reserved.

Which New Year’s Resolutions are more important for you and your business?

Monday, January 11th, 2010

For many small business owners, their Top Ten New Years Resolutions include less smoking and less drinking. You may change your resolutions after seeing these amazing images from Dr. Amen’s new book which show that long-term, heavy use of nicotine and caffeine can be just as (or more) brain damaging as addicted illegal drug use!

I highly recommend his book, “Change Your Brain, Change Your Life.”  Dr. Daniel G. Amen is a neuroscientist  and professor of Psychiatry and Human Behavior at the University of California, Irvine, as well as director of the Amen Clinics.

Keep your eyes peeled for Dr. Amen’s expertise on PBS specials!

We only get one brain and cannot grow another one.                                       Remember to concentrate on changing one habit at a time.

Your brain will thank you! And so will your business.

Eve Abbott, Organizer Extraordinaire, Small Business Success Interview

Thursday, August 28th, 2008

This lively audio interview includes three segments with Eve Abbott on taking better care of your brain while “Getting It All Done in a 24/7/365 Small Business World”. Your host is Bridget Beck of “Get Wise – Get Organized”.

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