Monday, June 25, 2018
Don't Let Disorganization Get In Your Way!
Many of us think we are organized and are not aware of how the contrary affects us. It is not always obvious how disorganization is affecting the quality and efficiency of your work. Let's try is this short test to see if you are disorganized:
1. Do you spend a large part of your day looking for things, rummaging through piles, files, and drawers?
2. Do you forget important appointments and important tasks?
3. Do you spend less than 60% of your day focused on your most valuable tasks?
4. Have you missed deadlines or been late with responses to requests?
5. Do you complete lower priority task first?
6. Have you led a meeting without sending an agenda or missed to follow-up with minutes?
7. Do you have action items on your To-Do list that have been there for a while?
8. Have you discovered papers that needed your attention ages ago and now it is too late?
9. Do you have trouble retrieving files easily when needed?
10. Does it take you a while to find a key contacts information when you need it?
If you can answer yes to any of these questions then disorganization may be causing poor job performance. Being disorganized affects job performance and how others perceive you. Being disorganized can cost you and your company money, time and customers.
You've probably heard the saying, "Time is money." Let's consider the cost of disorganization for you and your employer for a moment. For example, suppose you are just spending one hour a day looking for things and your pay just $20 an hour. In one week you have cost $100 and over a yearly period of 50 weeks (with two weeks off for vacation) the cost to your bottom line is $5,000. Now, if your business has 100 employees and each of them is wasting one hour a day for 50 weeks of the year your bottom line is impacted to the tune of $500,000. Wow, that is a lot money!
There are other costs to you and the organization like buying duplicate and triplicate of things you can't find now only to locate them later. Missed deadlines can result in customer dissatisfaction, missed product launches, and lost revenues. Time is probably the largest impact to you and your company since it can never be replaced.
If you're always wading through clutter, misplacing key information or losing things in plain sight, then you need to start getting organized. An organized space is simply one in which the things you need the most are close at hand, the things you need often are easily found, and the things you need rarely are out of the way but easily retrieved when needed. The old adage often found in 5S describes an organized space as "a place for everything and everything in its place." You should be able to find things when you need them so you don't waste more time and money duplicating your efforts. That means that organization has to meet your needs, not some imposed notion of cleanliness.
Don't wait for something to happen, make something happen. Apply 5S to organize your life and work area to gain efficiency. 5S originates from Toyota and is defined in English (and Japanese):
Sort (Seiri) - Distinguishing between necessary and unnecessary things, and getting rid of what you do not need.
Set (Seiton) - The practice of orderly storage so the right item can be picked efficiently (without waste) at the right time, easy to access for everyone. A place for everything and everything in its place.
Shine (Seiso) - Create a clean worksite without garbage, dirt and dust, so problems can be more easily identified (leaks, spills, excess, damage, etc)
Standardize (Seiketsu) - Setting up standards for a neat, clean, workplace
Sustain (Shitsuke) - Implementing behaviors and habits to maintain the established standards over the long term, and making the workplace organization the key to managing the process for success
5S is a process and method for creating and maintaining an organized, clean, and high performance workplace. It enables anyone to distinguish between normal and abnormal conditions at a glance. 5S can be the foundation for continuous improvement, zero defects, cost reductions and a more productive work space. The 5S methodology is a systematic way to improve the workplace, processes and products through employee involvement.
Staying organized will save you time and money and allow you to focus on your tasks effectively thus increasing your personal productivity. Don't let disorganization hold you back.
Posted by
Tim McMahon
at
6:00 AM
Labels:
5S
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