Real Simple
Dec 2004/Jan 2005
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To survive and thrive in a complex world, Get It Together
At home, at school and at work, curing the chaos will help make your life more
livable
By Linda Rothschild
When I started Cross It Off Your List in 1990, I wanted to provide a service for
people too busy to manage all of life's details, like running errands, waiting for
cable installation or
basic bookkeeping. As I found myself orchestrating a move
or sorting out closets, it became clear that I was simply organizing. But back then
if you told people you were an organizer, they thought you meant union
organizer.
Not now. Several television shows, from Clean Sweep to The Life Laundry, deal with
the topic, and retailers like Hold Everything and The Container Store specialize in
products to help consumers bring order out of chaos. It took the National Association
of Professional Organizers (NAPO) from 1985 until 2003 to enroll 2, 000 members, but
in the past year alone, the group has gained another 800. You might say that disorder
has finally come out of the closet.
What's fueling this interest in organization? Let me offer three observations.
First, because our culture is busier than ever, it's difficult to establish and
maintain order. When every morning is a struggle to find the car keys or two matching
shoes, and every evening you come home exhausted, only to be confronted by piles of
clutter, it's unsettling. People are looking for peace of mind, control and balance,
especially at home and in their personal lives.
Second, because our lives are ever changing, our circumstances grow more complex. It
can be a marriage or divorce, a new baby or elder care, a job promotion or layoff,
household upsizing or downsizing. Any of these events can throw someone into absolute
chaos or magnify the chaos that already exists.
Finally, add to the mix that we're incredibly acquisitive. People are quick to
accumulate new stuff and ignore the old. They simply don't know how to manage it. As
this trend continues, I see a growing need for specialized services and products - in
a word, organization.
This is good news for my industry. In the future, I believe people will employ
professionals to help them manage specific aspects of their lives, the way they hire
CPAs, attorneys and personal trainers. The organizer will become as important as the
next specialized expert.
Within the home, the organizer will join the team that plans a new living space for
a client. Already, I'm frequently asked to review blueprints to see how much storage
space a new setting allows. Often I see plans for a beautiful, large home with
diminished space because the designer failed to consider how clients live and what
their needs are. This will change; the organizer will be consulted at the beginning
of the project instead of coming in at the end when the client has no place to put
everything.
Disorganization isn't just within our homes, however. Organizing professionals
already exist withi
n many corporate cultures, but we just don't call them that. We all
know companies where one methodical person is really running the show. It's usually
the administrative/executive assistant or office manager who maintains the conference
room schedule, keeps the petty cash and has senior management's cell phone numbers.
When our super hero is out sick, the office goes haywire. I expect these people will
be identified as organizational experts, with certification or advanced
degrees.
Businesses will hire full-time organization specialists just as they have
information technologists, human resource managers and payroll departments. If
workers are sitting at desks so crowded with papers they can't spread out a report
and read it, they're not being productive.
This cluttered environment can cloud their thinking and ability to focus; it can
heighten stress and reduce productivity. It's true that companies bring in
organizational consultants now, but it's usually to help high-level executives, not
the rank and file. That too will change.
I also believe you'll start to see schools teaching organization skills, so students
can better manage their assignments, class materials and time. Kids too often
struggle with concepts as simple as which books to take with them every day. Unless
organized parents have influenced them, they just don't get it. If children can learn
these skills at a young age, they'll grow up to be organized adults who can minimize
the stress that disorder brings into their lives.
This will make organization a priority for everyone.
