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Organize Your Office: Simple Routines for Managing Your Workspace

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Ronni Eisenberg, who lectures and gives workshops on organization skills throughout the U.S., is also author of the popular but slightly more intimidating Organize Yourself!. Here she's brought a slew of practical tips for managing your workspace, from your briefcase to your bulletin board, from your e-mail inbox to those endless interruptions from coworkers. She covers the basics, including organizing your desktop and stemming the flood of junk mail (send a note to the Direct Marketing Association). She also hits upon modern organizational dilemmas, such as how to decide if you'd be better off with or without a PalmPilot. Some of the hundreds of handy tips she offers for making both in-person and telephone meetings quicker and more productive; methods for confronting procrastination and poor work habits; 10 rules to adhere to when filing; and 14 ways to make meetings run smoothly and accomplish what you want them to. Much of Eisenberg's advice is geared toward the executive; she advises closing your office door to really concentrate on big projects, something that the cubicle-bound can't do. But if you aspire to have that corner office, or if you're prone to losing important documents or rushing to big meetings several minutes late with sweat beading up along your forehead, Eisenberg's words of wisdom should help you get your act in gear.

192 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 1995

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Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews
Profile Image for Emi Yoshida.
1,690 reviews100 followers
January 5, 2011
Quick little read, I finished it in 2 hours waiting at the doctor's office and then at the pharmacy. The reader who could get the most out of this book is setting up a home office. While it seems targeted to those with a rampant case of Attention Deficit Disorder, there are a ton of tips to suit anybody in whatever their state of disarray - even the already organized. A lot of the book is outdated -- there's a big emphasis on written correspondence rather than email, unintentionally comical references to calendars and computers, etc but still I did get some useful tips out of it that I'm implementing already.
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