• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer

Bev's Tips for a Better Work Life

Tips for a more rewarding and resilient career

For almost 20 years, Bev has been coaching
professionals to thrive at work, navigate
transitions and grow as leaders.
  • Home
  • Bev’s Books
  • Blog
  • Podcast
  • Services
    • What is Coaching?
    • Coaching Structure
  • Bios
    • Beverly Jones
    • Merry Foresta
    • Randy Rieland
    • Rosa Maríaa Barreiro
  • Clients
  • Media
  • Contact us

clutter

Need new energy? Clear some clutter!

Posted by Beverly Jones on November 14, 2015

A little bit of tidying

can bring you a big boost

Are you feeling stuck, bored or besieged?

A good strategy for getting out of the doldrums can be to attack the clutter that is clogging up your desk, your office, your home or your life.

You have a clutter problem if you don’t have enough room to get your work done; if your things always look muddled; if you can’t quickly find what you need; or if you have too much paper or other stuff to neatly stow away.  Clutter can waste your time, drain your energy, repulse your friends and colleagues, and block your efforts to move forward. Even if most of your belongings appear to be in good order, you can generate fresh energy by getting control of the excess that may be piling up in drawers, closets and secret corners.

Untidy office (c)trekandphoto fotolia
Untidy office (c)trekandphoto fotolia

Here are reasons that it might be time to do some tidying:

  • To increase productivity. A chaotic workspace is not an efficient workspace.  One reason is simply that you waste time whenever you have to search for the papers or tools you need. More profoundly, clutter can distract you, repeatedly pulling your attention away from wherever your focus should be.
  • To reduce stress. Clutter can make it difficult for you to relax. It can bombard you with too many distracting stimuli, and send the message that your work is endless and out of control. And if you’re surrounded by things you’re not using anymore, you many find it harder to let go of past struggles and shift attention to your bright future.
  • To clarify priorities. Sometimes people like to have key projects within sight, to remind them about their most important goals. But if files and reports are stacked across your office, nothing stands out. When you limit visible projects to the ones that are most urgent today, you’re forced to think about your goals and make decisions about how to spend your time.
  • To project a positive image. Although you may feel comfortable in your disorderly office, your boss, colleagues or clients may be disgusted by your mess. If you want to come across as an organized professional your workspace should look shipshape.
  • To generate fresh energy. It can feel liberating to purge stuff you don’t love, aren’t using or are unlikely to finish. Tackling clutter is a keystone of feng shui, the ancient Chinese art of balancing natural energies in our surroundings to create harmony and well-being. Practitioners associate clutter with stagnant energy, saying that it leads to many forms of disharmony, like lethargy, depression and repressed creativity.

Once you decide it’s time to tidy up, give some thought to the best way to go about it. Three key steps to banishing clutter are to:

  1. Purge. Gather up stuff that you aren’t using, that you don’t truly value, or that’s taking up more space than it’s worth. Then decide which items to toss and which to immediately give away.
  2. Sort. Organize remaining items by placing them in categories.
  3. Store. Assign storage places for each category and put documents and objects away, keeping similar ones together and placing frequently used things close to where you’ll need them.

Many writers recommend some variation of the purge/sort/store approach to banishing clutter. Where there’s considerable disagreement among the experts, however, is on the question of whether to clean up everything at once or do it gradually. For myself, I prefer to break a de-cluttering effort into small chunks, and to create change a little at a time.

Author Marie Kondo has a different view, however.   Her wildly popular book, “The Life-changing Magic of Tidying Up: The Japanese Art of Decluttering and Organizing,” urges that you “tidy up in one shot.” She urges that you “concentrate your efforts on eliminating clutter thoroughly and completely within a short span of time.” She advises you to make tidying a special event, not a daily chore.

Whether you’re ready to try Kondo’s sweeping approach, or just start getting rid of one item a day, a de-cluttering effort may bring you surprising benefits, including new oomph in your career. Are you ready to give it a try?

Filed Under: career resilience, finding new energy, team building Tagged With: clutter, energizing

Clutter clearing eases the winter blahs

Posted by Beverly Jones on January 27, 2010

Recently we were feeling down, sad about some friends’ problems and tired of the winter weather. I was tempted to spend the weekend reading by the fire, but we came up with a better idea. We began going through the house collecting items to take to Goodwill.

We started by exploring closets, then began going carefully through each room identifying items that weren’t being used. We tried to take a fresh look at memorabilia and other items that were so familiar that we no longer really saw or appreciated them. [Read more…] about Clutter clearing eases the winter blahs

Filed Under: finding new energy Tagged With: clutter, energizing

Primary Sidebar

Learn About The Book!

Bev’s book can help you build career resilience
Think Like an Entrepreneur
Act Like a CEO

50 Indispensable Tips to Help You Stay Afloat, Bounce Back, and Get Ahead at Work

Beverly E. Jones

President
Clearways Consulting LLC

Sign up for “Bev’s Tips”


Explore Past Ezines

Links to occasional colleagues

ECCA
Kerry Hannon
Ohio University's Voinovich School
Congressional Management Foundation
WOUB
ShadowComm Web Solutions

Watch for Bev’s new podcast, “Jazzed About Work,” coming soon from WOUB Digitable. Featured will be lively discussions about building engaging, resilient careers.

Bev at Ohio University,
where she is a visiting
executive with the
Voinovich School of
Leadership & Public Affairs


Bev's garden at Buckeye Farm

Bev in the Media

Bev’s career coaching is featured on NPR

Bev’s job search tips, in AARP.org

Entrepreneur.com suggests you stop complaining about your job and do something about it by reading Bev’s book and working toward your dream goal

Bob Garlick chats with Bev about career success in this Business Book Talk interview

The Palm Beach Post suggests that you share gifts of knowledge, motivation & self-improvement, including with Bev’s book

The Voinovich School of Leadership and Public Affairs writes about Bev’s history as an Ohio University “campus feminist

Bev on key communication habits, in stilettosontheglassceiling.com

Science Magazine reviews Bev’s book and explores how becoming adept at "leading up" helps you to enhance your career and contribute more within your organization.

John David's Huffington Post article talks about how Bev’s book evolved from her blog

In her Journal Record book review, Terri Schichenmeyer says Bev offers soothingly civil, workable ideas that can make your life and your career better

AARP features a book chapter on dealing with colleagues who make your life miserable

Congressional Management Foundation says thinking like an Entrepreneur can help Capitol Hill staff

AMA Playbook shares Bev’s tips on building your leadership brand

The News-Sentinel offers a nice book review

The Journal Gazette agrees that an entrepreneurial attitude can help in any job

Kerry Hannon’s Forbes article quotes Bev

Bev discusses career tips for Boomers on WOUB

Bev writes about how to avoid getting distracted by political talk at the office, on bizjournals.com

Money quotes Bev about how to fall in love with your job again

Forbes describes how to find a second act with purpose

The Journal Gazette says an entrepreneurial attitude can help with any job

Rich Eisenberg interviews Bev about fresh career starts at any age, in Forbes.com

Bev speaks about Ohio women supporting women

Bev and thought leader Dave Goldberg discuss ways to build durable careers in changing times, in this VoiceAmerica Business podcast

Bev speaks to Ohio University alumnae in Columbus, Ohio

Bev writes in Forbes about how some high achieving women aren't moving confidently into leadership

Listen to "The Leadership Coaching Revolution," with Bev as a panelist on "Big Beacon Radio," on VoiceAmerica Business

Hear Bev's podcast about writing her book, on WOUB Digital

See Bev's YouTube channel, with career tips from the Buckeye Farm garden

More Links

See Bev's book on Facebook

Leadership & Management Books

Career Press

C-Suite Book Club

More About Bev

Beverly Jones is a master of reinvention. She started out as a writer, next led university programs for women, and then trail-blazed her career as a Washington lawyer and Fortune 500 energy executive. Throughout her varied work life she has mentored other professionals to grow and thrive.

Since 2002, Bev has flourished as an executive coach and leadership consultant, helping professionals of all ages to advance their careers, shift directions, and become more productive. Based in the nation's capital, she works with clients across the country, including accomplished leaders at major federal agencies, NGOs, universities and companies of all sizes. Bev is a popular speaker and facilitator, and she creates workshops and other events around the needs of her clients.

When she's not working, Bev is often found in Rappahannock County, Virginia, in the garden of the farmhouse she shares with her husband, former Washington Post ombudsman Andy Alexander, and their two dogs.

See more career tips from Bev in Kerry Hannon's prize-winning book, "Love Your Job"



Read about Bev’s coaching in Barbara Bradley Hagerty’s best selling book, "Life Reimagined"

http://www.barbarabradleyhagerty.com

Footer

Contact Us

coach@clearwaysconsulting.com

Beverly Jones
54 Pophams Ford Road
Sperryville, VA 22740

Beverly Jones
2925, 43rd Street, NW
Washington, DC 20016

Newsletter

Submit
Your Email Address to Receive Bev's Newsletter:

Bev is associated with Executive Coaching & Consulting Associates.

©2019 Clearways Consulting, LLC. All Rights Reserved.
Website by ShadowComm LLC