Clutter-Free Holiday Gifts for the Weird Year of 2020 (Part 3): Organizing Yourself & Others

Posted on: December 21st, 2020 by Julie Bestry | 18 Comments

What? Another post on clutter-free gifts? Yes!

First, Paper Doll gave you Clutter-Free Holiday Gifts for the Weird Year of 2020 (Part 1): New Twists on Old Favorites so you could give more memorable gifts of experiences. Then, I shared Clutter-Free Holiday Gifts for the Weird Year of 2020 (Part 2): Giving Well, Giving Back, to help you give gifts that give back to those less fortunate while still showing love to your friends and family (and acknowledging that they made it through this wackadoodle year).

Today’s post is different. While you can give these gifts, both tangible items and services, to the people on your list, they are (or can be) primarily for you, to help you make your life more organized.

Maybe Grandma sent you a check? Perhaps you got gift cards to order things online and avoid the stores? It’s possible one advantage of quarantining was that you didn’t have to lay in a supply of small, impersonal gifts to give acquaintances at the office in case they popped by your desk with small, impersonal gifts for you! If you have a little money left over, or if you’re good about budgeting for things that make your life better, then here’s a gift list to make your 2021 more productive and less stressed.

ORGANIZE YOUR PAPER

“Stuff” doesn’t automatically mean clutter. For example, paper shredders help you eliminate unnecessary paper while protecting your identity. How overflowing are your file folders? When was the last time you purged your files? 

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AmazonBasics 12-Sheet Cross-Cut Paper and Credit Card Home Office Shredder

Fireproof safes and bank safe deposit boxes allow you to safeguard your VIPs (very important papers, like birth certificates and passports) so they are protected and available when you need them.

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SentrySafe 1170 Fireproof Box with Key Lock

Label makers prompt you to decide how you will categorize your papers, and then give you clear, bold labels to encourage you to put papers where they belong.

 

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Brother P-Touch D210

And tickler files? They ensure that your action paperwork, the tiny pieces of paper that reflect tasks you have to perform, actually awaits you until the day you need to access it.

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Smead Desk File/Sorter Daily (1-31) and Monthly (Jan-Dec)

For some patented Paper Doll advice on selecting these gifts for yourself (or others), start here:

Shredding the Documents: Finding Your Shredding Solution – This classic post tells you everything you need to know about safely turning personal information into confetti.

Safeguard Your Very Important Papers: Safe Deposit Box Basics – Another post from the vault, this walks you through the basics of keeping your personal documents as safe as Fort Knox.

Wirecutter: The Best Fireproof Document Safe – The Wirecutter, an arm of The New York Times, reviews all sorts of home and office products, from toasters to luggage to, yes, safes.

How To Avoid Paper Management Mistakes–Part 3: Libel of Labels – It should be no surprise that Paper Doll has a lot to say about labeling your files to keep everything organized.

Tickle Yourself Organized – This is my best-selling ebook. It tells you how to use a tickler file, but it’s really a primer on keeping your action-related paperwork straight.

Do I Have To Keep This Piece of Paper? – The biggest reason people hold onto papers long after they’ve served their purpose is fear, primarily fear of not having a receipt or document when it’s needed. This ebook gives you the straight dope so that you can confidently maintain what you need and safely shred or discard the rest.

Although Paper Doll loves organizing paper, I know you need other resources to keep your “stuff” in place. Here’s a sampling of other gifts (for yourself or loved ones) to make life more organized.

ORGANIZING YOUR STUFF

Every holiday season, every birthday, every shopping trip brings more stuff (especially the expensive stuff) into your home. As much as you may work to develop systems to keep everything in order, sometimes little things wander away. (Sometimes, little people and little creatures help them wander away!) A little over a year ago, I wrote about bluetooth tracker solutions for keeping track of all your goodies.

Paper Doll Finds Your Lost Keys, Wallets, and Phones: Bluetooth Trackers 2019

Paper Doll Finds Your Lost Eyeglasses: Technology Beyond Checking the Top of Your Head (This has been my most popular blog cover, ever!)

Avoid the Lost & Found: Keep Track of Your New Goodies with Tile

The most popular of all of the Bluetooth trackers I’ve covered has been Tile, and the company is offering 20% off all Limited Edition Tile products (Pros, Mates, Slims, and combo packs) through December 22, 2020. (Reading this later in the week? Check back next week for a discount link that will carry into the New Year.) My favorite of the Limited Edition items is the Holiday Luxe, below.

You’re probably not traveling on planes, heading to campus, or dragging your backpack to the local coffee shop to get work done. Sigh. It’s been that kind of year. But, with hope, 2021 will be a year when we’ll all get back to going places and schlepping our stuff with us. When that happens, my favorite tool for keeping cables, chargers, pens, ear pods, and other fiddly items in check is Cocoon’s Grid-It!

As much as I’ve always been a fan of the Grid-It in various sizes, and as often as I’d used it for work and conferences, I wasn’t prepared for how much it could simplify my traveling life until I used it in Italy in 2018 and the UK in 2019. I never had to search for a pen, a charger, or the right cable, and I never left anything behind in the hotel.

From little 7″ x 5″ Grid-Its to medium and large sizes, some with pockets designed to also accommodate tablets or laptops, to the extra-large 11″ x 15″ luggage accessory versions to the Grid-Its built into backpacks, you should be able to find something to lock down your essentials.

Expert tip: Pretend-pack for an imaginary “trip,” either a for a day on campus or a week on the road, and lay out your resources on a flat surface with just a little space around each item. Measure the real estate to help you figure out the size(s) of the Grid-It(s) you might want. 

ORGANIZE YOUR TIME

You need a place to keep track of your appointments, tasks, and goals. Those of us who prefer paper planners to map out our lives need to consider the features we need. I was recently a guest on Penny Zenker’s Take Back Time podcast. You can listen to Boosting Productivity with Paper Planners (Part 1) now, and I’ll be back here to put up the link to the second part once it goes live. [Editor’s note: Part 2 went live in February 2021.]

While these interviews won’t tell you which planner to pick, it will give you some ideas to guide you toward the elements that will help you overcome your time-planning challenges. Part 2 will help you narrow down which specific planners are more your style.

Speaking of planning your time, I can’t talk enough about Time Timer. (But you’ve probably noticed that!) Last month, in Organize Your Health: Parental Wisdom, Innovation, and the New Time Timer® Wash, we talked about their nifty new device, perfect for guiding any tiny humans (or adults who have trouble perceiving the passage of time) with healthy hand-washing habits.

At this point, Time Timer has so many new products, it can be hard to keep them straight. But if you’d like to brighten up your winter while visualizing the passage of time, the colorful, new Time Timer MOD – Home Edition collection might be up your alley. (Oh, and 1% of the proceeds from this product go toward supporting inclusive education initiatives.) 

The MODs are the first of the non-electronic versions to stray from the original “red disk” concept, but it’s not merely a stylistic decision. Research shows that color can have a big impact on our moods; you can select more calming or energizing color schemes, depending on your needs. (This can be especially beneficial for those with attention differences or anxiety.) Available colors include Lake Day Blue, Dreamsicle Orange, Cotton Ball White, Pale Shale, and you can mix and match the removable silicone cases (sold separately in neutral or color value packs).

ORGANIZE YOUR COMPUTER

Are you a Mac or a PC? (Yes, I’m sure there’s even one Linux user among you.) Do you use your computer to Zoom with friends and colleagues or to keep your business running? Maybe you (or your kids) are focused on homework, or perhaps you’re an author trying to write a masterpiece. Your computer may be for bookkeeping, or photos, emailing, or gaming. There are thousands of apps and software to help you organize your information, your tasks, and your thoughts, and experts to guide you.

But no matter why you use your computer, there are two resources that you should consider for keeping everything safe and secure: a password manager and a back-up program. I’m product-agnostic, for the most part, but for both, I have a belt-and-suspenders approach, using at least two methods to protect my tech.

For generating strong passwords and keeping them organized, I use both Mac’s built-in Keychain system and LastPass. Other popular alternatives are 1-Password, Dashlane, and RoboForm. Wikipedia has a great chart comparing the features of about twenty password managers.

Whatever you pick should allow you to maintain all the passwords from all of your devices with minimal strain and maximum confidence. The kinds of features you want include strong data encryption, two-factor authentication (2FA), the ability to sync across multiple devices, secure sharing of passwords, and auto-filing of your passwords.

The key to backing up is automation; if you have to remember to back up, someday you’ll forget.

The key to backing up is automation; if you have to remember to back up, someday you'll forget. Share on X

To back up my hard drive, I use Mac’s Time Machine (backed up to a local hard drive) and Backblaze (to back up all my data in the cloud).

A few years ago, I wrote 9 Ways To Keep Your Writing Safe for Alexa Bigwarfe’s Write Publish Sell website. Although it’s focused on helping authors develop a digital back-up plan, it’ll get you thinking about what kind of back-up solutions you need.

ORGANIZE YOUR THOUGHTS

After a year like 2020, it seems like we’ve all spent a little too much time at home with our thoughts. However, some of you may be surrounded by children and/or life partners who may act like children – and for you, it might be hard to get a moment alone with your thoughts. Going into a new year, we could all use a place to write down our ideas and dreams so we can organize them into an action plan.

Whether you open up a blank note in Evernote, Google Docs, or Word, or send emails to yourself, or keep a diary like the one you had in sixth grade (though perhaps without the lock and the “Keep Out: This Means You!” on the cover), give yourself a place to write.

Next, schedule writing and planning time in your calendar, like artist Julia Cameron’s famed morning pages, or block off time as a day-closing ritual, but make sure to honor your need for a “brain dump.” Add tasks to your To Do list, map out when and how you’re going to accomplish various goals, and log “big ideas,” whether in a blog post draft screen or in a journal. Speaking of which…

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You may remember friend-of-the-blog Kara Cutruzzella, a kindred productivity spirit and an expert on creativity. (She interviewed me last year for Now Is the Right Time to Declare Bankruptcy on Your Projects.)

Well, this year, Kara published Do It For Yourself: A Motivational Journal with Abrams Books. It’s filled with 75 thought-provoking prompts; as Kara tells it – choose any goal and work through the five stages of the journal—getting going, building momentum, overcoming setbacks, following through, and seeking closure—or just open it to the phase you’re in now. Each exercise is designed to help reorient your outlook, overcome roadblocks, and encourage mindfulness, with powerful typographic quotes to inspire you along the way.

(Oh, and hey, if you enjoy a little free prompting to be both creative and productive, and especially if you like Broadway, The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel, or The Gilmore Girls, or you’ll love Kara’s newsletter, the Brass Ring Daily.)

PEOPLE TO HELP YOU ORGANIZE YOUR LIFE

Finally, I can attest that one clutter-free category – support from an organizing or productivity professional professional – can be the best gift you give yourself (or those seeking to make improvements in those areas). When you work with a professional organizer or productivity specialist who is a member of one or more of the following associations, you are putting yourself in the hands of a non-judgmental, trained, ethical expert ready to teach you how to achieve your goals.

To find a professional organizer near you (or your recipient), use the free referral services of the National Association of Productivity and Organizing Professionals (NAPO); for those with chronic or challenging disorganization or anyone working to overcome hoarding disorders, the Institute for Challenging Disorganization is a wonderful resource. If you’re reading  from Canada, call on the Professional Organizers In Canada; in the UK, it’s the Association of Professional Declutterers & Organisers (APDO). We also have colleagues in Japan, The Netherlands, various locales in South America, and around the world. Help is available in person and virtually.

There are specialists in dozens of categories of organizing and productivity, for spaces (e.g., kitchens, garages, closets), client types (e.g., students, office workers, attorneys), and needs (like help with senior move management). If you’ve spent the past few months wishing you could get your photos in order, The Photo Managers (previously the Association of Personal Photo Organizers) can help. There are even professionals who can help you organize your genealogy, and yes, I’ve got a blog post coming up soon to tell you all about them! 

Not sure what a professional organizer can do for you? I encourage you to read:

What Professional Organizers Really Do and How They Can Help – It’s an older post from Lifehacker for which I was interviewed, but I think it explains a lot. 

In Checkbooks And Underwear Drawers: What Certified Professional Organizers Offer Our Clients

A HOLIDAY MESSAGE

As I write this, Thanksgiving and Hanukkah have already passed; Christmas, Kwanzaa, and New Year’s Eve are still on the horizon. I hope you are enjoying, and will continue to enjoy a healthy, safe,  joyous, and organized holiday season. Whatever you give or receive, whether they are cluttery delights or clutter-free, please know that your readership is always a gift to me. Thank you!

 

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18 Responses

  1. Julie, these are truly thoughtful gifts for anyone – organized or not. I love the way you outline the benefits of different things to help you get organized and the benefits of working with a professional organizer.

    • Julie Bestry says:

      Thanks, Diane. I think knowing how and why is what makes something valuable; you can’t properly make use of something until you fully appreciate the value. (Case in point, all that cool software we may have but not use because we don’t recognize how much easier our lives would be or we don’t know how to make it happen!)

  2. I love your list of organizing-related gifts. And as we’re down to the wire, the eve of gift-giving, these are especially welcome. The best gift is one that the recipient wants. I always appreciate it when a family member chooses my services to gift their loved one. I make sure to ask if it’s a gift they’ve discussed and one that their “person” will appreciate. Because it’s no fun to receive a gift certificate for organizing services to a person that isn’t open to that. In most cases, the recipient has requested the gift, so it’s been great. But I do make sure to ask the gifter, just in case.

    • Julie Bestry says:

      I couldn’t agree with you more, Linda. I do the same with prospects who contact me, because a client who doesn’t really want to participate in the process isn’t going to get as much out of it! (And, of course, the whole process is dependent upon the client’s goals, not the gift-er’s goals!)

  3. Very practical ideas for organizing all parts of life. Just doing a couple of these would like set you up to be more organized in 2021.

  4. Great list of clutter-free stuff! I’m a practical gift giver so giving someone a label maker is not unusual for me to do. Thanks for sharing. =)

    • Julie Bestry says:

      I get it, Sabrina. Funnily enough, not knowing I had decided to become a professional organizer, my best friend once gave me a label maker as a birthday gift. I took it as a sign!

  5. Seana Turner says:

    Well, I can’t think of any organizing need you didn’t thoroughly cover – outstanding! I have to say that I have spent COVID shredding accumulated paper from my attic. My husband has wanted to keep everything, but it was my New Year’s resolution to work on this. I feel great about what I’ve accomplished. Plus, it just looks so much better:)

    • Julie Bestry says:

      Wow, Seana, that’s high praise coming from you. Thank you!

      And good for you for attacking the shredding. Sometimes, I wish I had one of those super-powered shredders some of my clients have at their (medical/dental) offices. They’re quiet and fast! Someday…

  6. Hi Julie,
    These are my kinds of gifts – anything to help stay organized is the best kind of gift there is! One fun crossover item you mention is the Tile. It’s both an organizational tool and something for people that like getting gadgets for gifts. Have a nice holiday!

  7. Julie,

    I love your collection of clutter free gifts. They’re different and useful and there are plenty here that I’m sure lots of people never thought of, like the firesafe box. I bought one years ago and I’m so glad I did.
    The LabelMaker is a good idea because it seems like few people own one, unless you’re a professional organizer. I love to journal and I suggest it to so many people. That’s a great gift that people end up loving or at least use it to take notes in.
    I also love that you actually tell people what professional organizers do and how to reach them. I remember years ago when I started my business, everyone thought I worked for a union. They just didn’t get the concept.

    • Julie Bestry says:

      Thanks, Ronni! I think a lot of gift guides focus on the gift, rather than the “use case” and I hope people will recognize how these items (and people) can contribute to helping them achieve their goals.

  8. At first I thought this post wasn’t for *me* because I already have a shredder, tickler file, etc. but then I got to the section “Organize Your Thoughts.” Just last night I added something to the Google doc I’ve created to outline my planning ideas for 2021, and it was to learn to use OneNote more effectively. I’ve been using it for a long time, but I know I could be using it better. Thanks for the reminder and encouragement!

  9. Lucy Kelly says:

    So many cool things here, Julie. I need to back up my PC and check out that motivational journal, thanks for the inspiration!

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