The Fixers
Who says you have to decorate your own Christmas tree? A new
class of specialists is ready to tackle every task - big,
small, and unheard of.
By Tom Prince
SO LITTLE TIME, SO MANY LOOSE ENDS.
All those boxes of photos are spilling out of the closet -
Colorado white- water rafting in 1995, Gobi desert in 1996 -
and you're afraid you'll book the same vacation if you don't
organize them. You've forgotten which clothes are in the
closet, and your collection of American presidential
biographies has Glover Cleveland-size holes in it. You'd love
to upload those 10,000 songs onto your iPod, but there are
holiday decorations to put up and presents to buy … and
wrap … and deliver. All these details dangle in the back
of your brain, separating you from sleep and sanity, keeping
you from pursuing the finer things in life. You possess the
means but not the method. You need a Fixer.
As Americans increasingly seek organized, art-directed,
curated, and quality-controlled lives, the market for fixers
has grown more specialized. The ones on the front lines will
reduce stress, fix problems, and make life bearable. Behind the
scenes, others will help build collections or dismantle them,
teaching clients how to have and have not. Still others
orchestrate three-hour celebrations and catalogue long-lasting
memories. In every case, for prices varying as widely as the
tasks, fixers wrap up the minutiae that would tie mere mortals
in knots.
MOVING IN STYLE
Robin Domeniconi, a Manhattan publishing executive, could have
hired movers to help her relocate from the Flatiron District to
her new Chelsea apartment, but she refused to deal with a
truckload of movers named Manny who might decide to hold her
headboard hostage. Instead she turned to Linda
Rothschild, the founder and CEO (chief executive
organizer) of Cross It Off Your List, then escaped to her East
Hampton house.
Rothschild tagged every item (including the tea bags), oversaw the move, and unpacked. "I never saw any boxes," says Domeniconi, who arrived at her new apartment to find her cashmere twinsets color-coded in drawers.
