Paper Doll
Secure Your ID Day — This Saturday, April 21, 2012
You’ve finished your taxes, mailed them off, filed away copies of your returns and supporting documents, and taken a breather. But what about all those scribbles of worksheets, non-essential receipts and other statements that you don’t need to maintain and store away? (You do know the difference, right?)
On Saturday, April 21, 2012, 72 Better Business Bureau locations are helping you observe Secure Your ID Day by sponsoring community shred-a-thons.
Will The Real Paper Doll Please Stand Up?
A Boy Named Sue May Hate His Name (but that doesn’t mean you can steal it!)
The Big OUCH!!! (Medical Identity Theft–Part 1)
Doctor, It Hurts When Total Strangers Do This! (Medical Identity Theft, part 2)
so you know that documents you choose not to maintain need to be safely destroyed.
We’ve also talked about picking a shredder in Shredding the Documents: Find Your Shredding Solution and even debated the merits of privacy stampers. (Remember Stamping Out the Evidence: Are Stampers a Viable Alternative to Shredders?) But if you’ve got a mountain of paperwork, you probably want to skip the constant buzzing of a shredder as you make your way to the bottom of the pile.
So, moms and dads, small business owners, volunteers and professional organizers, gather up any paper (and computer discs) with personally-identifying information (but which you no longer need), and transport it (securely!) to your nearest participating U.S. or Canadian Better Business Bureau location. BBB-partnered document destruction specialists in your area will shred your documents (for free) and help you preserve your good name.
Here’s your game plan:
1) File away your essential tax-supporting documents.
2) Gather all the papers you no longer need to keep — anything bearing your Social Security or Employer Identification number, account numbers or other personal or sensitive information.
3) Head to the nearest Secure Your ID Day event to get your documents shredded.
4) Review past Paper Doll posts on protecting yourself against identity theft and peruse some of these resources:
Everyday Habits To Safeguard Your Identity — The Better Business Bureau offers its words of wisdom on simple steps to take to protect your family’s data.
The Federal Trade Commission’s Identity Theft Microsite — Avail yourself of the latest information on identity scammers and hoaxes, resources for reporting identity theft, and materials for educating your community to protect against identity theft.
The Bureau of Consumer Protection’s Privacy and Security Business Center — Do you run a web site for your business? Review the actions you can take to protect children’s privacy and general consumer privacy, abide by rules regarding credit reporting documents and keep data secure.
Security Privacy Made Simpler — If you run a small business and are wondering what you need to be doing to protect your data and your customers’ information, this report is your one-stop shop. It details how to draft a privacy policy, secure data, and integrate data security policies into your company’s daily operations.
Remember, you are the only you you’ve got. Protect your identity!
NAPO Expo 2012 Recap (Part 2) — Dine Before Battle and Have a Little Candy for Dessert
An organized army travels on its stomach, and here at Paper Doll HQ, we like to set out a smrgasbord of organizing options to help readers do battle with paper clutter. Longtime readers know that the bread and butter of paper organizing tends to come from the two bigwigs of the industry, the butcher and baker, so to speak:
&

Today, we’ll start with some innovations that each brought to the dining table at NAPO Expo 2012, and then follow up with some candy for dessert.
DIVIDE AND CONQUER
Typically, file containment falls into two categories — solo or bulky. Folders, whether 1/3- or 1/5-cut file are designed to work on their own. Sure, you can group a series of file folders in a hanging folder, or plop them in your briefcase, but they’re still distinct entities that can get separated from the group.
Conversely, accordion files tend to be bulky, and they’re designed to gather individual sheets together, even if sorted by category. They work best for specific types of projects, like collecting tax documents, but they’re not particularly attractive or efficient for presentations.
Also, most paper solutions are arrayed horizontally. Sure, the minute you pluck a file from a cabinet or a paper from the accordion file, you’re likely to turn it to display vertically…but what if you didn’t have to?

Smead’s Stackit™ Organizers offer an intriguing approach for projects and presentations. This letter size (9 3/4″ x 11 1/2″) vertically-arrayed organizer has three 5″ pockets (each of which are able to hold up to 50 sheets). The top-tabbed back panels of the first two pockets serve as dividers and are suitable for labeling. Because of the pocket styling, papers are protected from shifting, wrinkling or other damage during transport.
As with accordion files, the Stackit™ Organizer has a flap to secure documents and protect them from the elements (like a rain of coffee), and it’s even lightly scored (like the bottom of a file folder) to allow expansion. However, instead of requiring an elastic band to hold the flap in place, the cover flap neatly tucks in to the front pocket, creating a streamlined little package.
The Stackit™ is made of durable linen stock (available in black, dark blue and grey), from 40% recycled content/10% post-consumer material, with a reinforced bottom. It’s so new that it’s not yet listed at most of the major office supply stores, so keep your eyes open.

A sister product is the Stackit™ Folder in linen and textured stocks. These folders, which hold up to 100 pages, are also arrayed vertically, making them backpack-friendly. As with the Stackit™ Organizer, the pockets are 5″, safely securing the papers on three sides, preventing “floppiness” — and the folders bear the same fold-over, tuck-in flap. The front of the pocket is die-cut to hold a business card.
The linen Stackit™ Folders come in packages of five, in the same black, dark blue and grey as the Stackit™ Organizer; the textured versions come in black, red, green and light blue. Paper Doll envisions using a rainbow of Stackit™ Folders for separate elements of a larger project or for providing personalized presentation folders to each member of a board or committee.
Another divide-and-conquer advancement comes from Pendaflex. Readers may recall that Paper Doll reviewed an innovation in the NAPO Expo 2011 recap, the Pendaflex Divide-It-Up Multi-Section File Folder.
As that review indicated, the Divide-It-Up did as described, using an origami-ed folder to create sub-sections, making it ideal for travel documents and other itinerary-based papers. At the time of my Expo recap, I was pleased with the general concept, but not entirely thrilled with the execution.

The prototype felt flimsy and was available only in a drab manila, which, while suitable for general office filing, lacked pizzazz. Happily (though Paper Doll takes no credit for it), Pendaflex has radically improved the Divide-It-Up, creating a sturdier product. Plus, making it available in bright blue, yellow and red means it’s easier to locate and quickly retrieve from a check-in counter.
Better yet, by using the brighter material, the pockets alternate light and dark coloring, making it easier to differentiate the individual sections. The other features remain the same — four divided sections, or pockets, of elevating height, with 2 1/2″ tabs for the first three folders. One 5 1/2″ tab covers half the folder’s height (or width, depending on your vertical or horizontal layout) at the back.
LOCK AND LOAD
Remember the PeeChee folder from last week? When I shared it with colleagues, it started a vibrant conversation about pocket folders. (Yes, we professional organizers really do get excited about such things!)
In office settings, the standard is generally horizontally-arrayed top-tab manila folders. But a pocket folder definitely has its place — in board rooms for presentations, and in school rooms, lockers and backpacks, for academic papers. This year, Smead introduced multiple new lines of pocket folders, with the lion’s share of the attention focused on the Lockit line of two-pocket folders.

A basic two-pocket folder is just that: basic. One large piece of heavy-duty paper with the bottom edge folded up and a crease down the middle creates two pockets. Every other embellishment is gravy. (See, we’re still sticking with that meal metaphor!)
The biggest problem with two-pocket folders has always been the inability of the rough-and-tumble user to keep contents tidy. Mead’s middle-school standard-bearer, the Trapper Keeper, organizes folders by keeping the two-pockets corralled in a three-ring binder, and the pressure of the binder and other folders is usually (but not always) enough to keep errant papers from wiggling loose.
Smead’s Lockit Two-Pocket Folder works on the same basic principles, but brings something new to the table — a little loop. When raised, it makes the folder look like a prop briefcase for a third-grade production of Death of a Salesman.

When lowered, it locks the papers down! Tight!
The Lockit comes in boxes of 25 letter-size, textured (pebbled) black, blue, red and assorted color folders, as well as black, dark blue and maroon linen. Each 4 1/2″ pocket holds up to 100 sheets of paper. The pockets are die-cut; a business card fits on the left pocket, a CD or DVD on the right.
An even niftier advance is the Lockit SuperTab Two-Pocket Folder. It combines all the features of the standard Lockit with Smead’s patented SuperTab, so that when you’re done with your folder (at the end of the semester or after a project has been completed) you can label the tab and file it with traditional file folders.

As with all SuperTab products, the tabbing space is 90% larger than on standard folders, offering abundant room to label your contents. The extra-wide 1/3-cut tab is also advantageous; however, the tab is only available in the first (i.e., left) tab position, and I’d like to see Smead revisit this with tabbing at the center position, as well. The Lockit SuperTab Two-Pocket Folder is made of 11-point laminated stock, and comes in 5-packs of shiny black, blue, green and red. The pockets can accommodate 50 sheets, each.
STAND AT ATTENTION
It’s hard to be too innovative with hanging folders. Sure, we’ve looked at strengthening the hooks and firming up the rods, but there’s rarely BREAKING NEWS about hanging folders. Pendaflex has been trying to rectify that.
First, Pendaflex came out with the Ready-Tab Reinforced Hanging Folders. With these, instead of plastic inserts, the folders came with little tabs, in five positions, awaiting being folded up into place.
Should you choose to change placement, just fold the tab down and lift another tab upward. The durable polylaminate strips reinforce the top edges and the bottom fold, making it extra-sturdy for repeated use, and the boxes of 20 or 25 (depending on color selection — available in standard green, assorted, blue, red, yellow, violet, bright green or pink), all include a printer-ready insert sheet for labeling.
This year, Pendaflex added a new variation: the breathlessly-titled Ready-Tab Extra-Capacity Hanging Folders with Lift Tab™ Technology! The 2″ capacity letter-sized folders, available in standard green and a narrow assortment of colors, makes use of the stuffed-crust pizza metaphor for positioning tabs. Sturdy plastic-coated write-on/erase-off tabs (yes, you can erase pen marks) are tucked away inside the wrapping of the hanging rods. Just select one of five positions and pull upward on the tab. Change your mind, press it back into the pizza crust (I mean, hanging folder) and select a new tab.

AT EASE — WITH DESSERT
Man cannot live by bread (or meat and potatoes) alone. Paper supplies, particularly for filing, are the functional main course of organizing products, but just because something is useful doesn’t mean it can’t be yummy. That’s the belief, at least, of the enterprising women who shared some gorgeous wares at this year’s NAPO Expo.

Office Candy, a distribution company started by professional organizers Laurie Noelle Meek and Beth Schlatter,

asks, Why not have a little fun in your home office? Why not, indeed?

Office Candy has gathered a delightful collection of colorful, appealing organizing tools, from file folders and notebooks to clipboards and gadget holders. It’s a one-stop shop for pretty. The theory is simple — if you’re working with attractive tools, you’ll be more inclined to use them to their greatest benefit.

Office Candy carries some favorite brands, including Knock, Knock and Gallison, and has introduced Paper Doll to some new charms, including folders from Lady Jayne (seen below) and Cavallini.
The gals at Office Candy stock the classy Jamie Raquel mobile file totes I reviewed last year, as well as a variety of other fun, new products, like these Lilly Pulitzer notebooks.

Win the paper clutter war. Taste the rainbow.
NAPO Expo 2012 Recap (Part 1) — Paper Lovers’ Dreams Come True
Readers, I ask you to imagine the coolest shopping mall or bazaar you’ve ever encountered, but every product or service sold focuses on the wonders of organizing, and shopping hours are severely limited. Now imagine throngs of friends you haven’t seen in at least a year, circling around you, mingling and hugging and talking at an ever-elevating pitch. Throw in some delicious (looking) appetizers, and you have Paper Doll‘s experience at the Expo portion of the NAPO 2012 Conference and Expo.
Torn between researching the magnificent products, visiting with friends and delighting in the delicacies, I feel I gave everything short shrift, but over the next couple of posts, I hope to share with you some of my favorites of this year’s Expo — the innovations, the updates and even a few novelties.
At a point in time when technology seems to be the Belle of the Ball, Paper Doll is pleased to note that a variety of paper organizing products shone as stars at NAPO 2012. Indeed, today, we can start with the Arc of the Expo!
ORGANIZERS OF THE FLEXIBLE ARC

In every NAPO 2012 attendee’s conference bag this year, in addition to the itineraries and documents, was a lovely surprise — a leather notebook with five sturdy, colorful, re-positionable poly tab dividers and a three-pad stack of 50 task pads.
M by Staples’ Arc customizable notebook system is visually appealing. To be honest, having merely looked at the packaged product, Paper Doll didn’t quite understand the hubbub at first. Apparently, Arc is designed as a more affordable version of Levenger’s Circa, a high-end customizable notebook system. But I must say, Arc is plenty luxurious, without need for comparison, at affordable prices.

The intriguing aspect is how it’s put together. At first, before the unwrapping, it seemed to be another take on a daily planner, like my Franklin Covey Classic — a leather cover for a ringed notebook that holds a variety of pre-punched paper elements. Ah, how naive I was. Arc is actually much more like a Chinese menu, columns A, B and C from which you can pick a dizzying array of tasty options. To get an overview, check out the different demo videos of Arc personalities (Arlo, Alex, Reyna, Katie, Izzie and Emily).

The “spine” of the system is not, as it first appeared, the traditional metal ring. Rather, Arc employs solid plastic discs (though they’re called rings) which fit into the grooves in the front and rear panels to form the exterior of the notebooks.

The paper pages and other inserts fit snugly around the unusually-shaped ring edges. The M by Staples Arc system rings come in two sizes, 1″ and 1 1/2″, both in a sturdy, shiny black, priced about $2 for a package of twelve, so you can expand the girth of your system like a tailor might let out a pair of trousers.
The Arc System covers come in two styles, leather (from $14.99) and poly (from $7.99). The leather versions come in velvety, traditional blacks and browns, as well as modern brights, like red, pink, blue and a chartreuse-ish green. Although the official web site lists the leather notebooks available in two sizes, 6 3/4″ x 8 3/4″ and 9 1/2″ x 11 1/2″, my own red notebook measures 8.5″ x 5.5″, so it seems the marketing is just slightly lagging the innovation.


The durable poly versions come in solids (black, blue and green) and black-and-white patterns (flower, hibiscus and a mysteriously unnamed pattern), in two sizes, 6 3/4″ x 8 3/4″ and 9 3/4″ x 11 31/4″.


The Arc system is not just affordable and highly functional. It’s also customizable, making it highly flexible for multiple professional, academic and personal uses. The system offers a wide array of options for re-positionable pop-in insert accessories for the letter and junior-sized platforms:
—Stacks of 50 premium heavyweight pages, including narrow ruled paper, graph-ruled paper, project planners (with space for titles and dates, project elements and summary comments) and To Do pages ($3), as well as an assortment of weekly/monthly page options
–Sturdy poly pocket dividers with pockets cut on the diagonal for easy access ($3)
—Poly tab dividers, in packs of five, in black or assorted colors (with labels) ($3)



–Sturdy sheets bearing 200 adhesive page flags in assorted colors ($3)
—Task pads ($4), similar to the sturdy Franklin Covey “Weekly Compass” pages.
Other accessories include rulers ($1), and business card holder pages ($9 for a package of five). Arc also manufactures special hole-punches ($40) for achieving that Arc-style punch, which looks to Paper Doll to be best described as a sideways umbrella or mushroom.
I would recommend checking out the Arc system (either online or at your local Staples) for anyone who prefers upscale appearances and flexibility without an upscale price.
EVERYTHING IS JUST PEE-CHEE!
Longtime readers of Paper Doll will recall that about a year and a half ago, we talked about mysteries in the office supply aisle and discussed some back-to-school items of note. At the time, I recalled the warring popularity of Trapper Keeper folders vs. the individual two-pocket types of my youth, and mentioned my fascination when colleagues Brandie Kajino and Krista Colvin informed me that folks in the Pacific Northwest (and elsewhere to my far left, geography-wise), referred to folders by a particular nickname: PeeChee.
Imagine my surprise when Krista Colvin greeted me at the NAPO Expo with the declaration that she had something for me, and she produced my very own, 100% official, PeeChee All Season Portfolio, manufactured by Mead…the very same people who created the Trapper Keeper!

My new PeeChee, seen here, for scale, with my Arc notebook.

PeeChees weren’t on display at the NAPO Expo, but I’m delighted to learn that PeeChees are still going strong. In fact, a quick perusal of Mead’s web site finds that the Wild West (well, Wild West to this native Buffalonian) back-to-school staple isn’t just peach-y, but is also blue-y, rose-y and green-y, now that Mead makes a Color-Talk line of PeeChee folders.

ALL YOU NEED IS (A FEW) DOLLARS AND AN ORGANIZING DREAM
Speaking of folders, I had to mention (even though we’re not nearly ready to talk about the big guns of the paper world) something nifty I saw at the Pendaflex booth. Below, Paper Doll‘s BFF — financial organizing maven and Professional Daily Money Manager Nanette Duffey — with Esselte/Pendaflex’s Rick Drish, are showing off a new kind of folder.

“New, Paper Doll? What’s new about it?” you might wonder.
“Oh, the color scheme?” you posit? Well, yes, I did think the idea of 1/3 cut file folders with a black exterior and white interior was nifty. Black and white is quite elegant, and for the fashionable set, turning the folder inside out provides double the artistry. Black with white interiors, or white with black interiors — you pick!
But no, that’s not what really got me going. You may (just barely) be able to see that the folder has a slight graininess, befitting recycled paper. And if you guessed that, you’d be getting warmer — it is a variation on Pendaflex’s multi-color 100% recycled file folders.
But what really gave me the giggles was the fact that these Black and White Recycled Folders aren’t just recycled — they’re recycled from used lottery ticket paper! This earth-friendly, snazzy-looking folder is made from 100% recycled fiber and 40% post-consumer fiber, and is acid-free. It can be purchased in boxes of 50 from office supply retailers, and is part of Esselte’s Pendaflex-Oxford-Ampad line of Earthwise products, of which we’ll be discussing more, closer to Earth Day.
Readers, that’s just a taste of what’s to come as we continue to recap the delicious fascinations of the NAPO 2012 Expo! (Which gives you more than I got in the Expo hall, as I never did get to taste any of the supposedly delicious hors d’oeuvres, busy as I was, playing intrepid reporter. Appreciative comments left below, and crab cakes packed in dry ice and sent to Paper Doll headquarters, will be acceptable recompense.) See you next time!
If It Quacks Like a Duck, Then It Might Be a Zebra – A Shoplet/Duck Tape Review
The nice people at Shoplet sent me a care package just as I was departing for the National Association of Professional Organizers 2012 Conference and Expo in Baltimore. Although duct tape and packaging tape weren’t foremost on my mind as I left for conference, by the end of the week, I was wishing for a Star Trek transporter to beam my care package to Baltimore.

Although I encourage my clients to pick up as little swag and advertising as possible when they attend conventions, the material I pick up at the NAPO Expo is essential for helping me analyze and review items in Paper Doll posts all year round. The problem? Attending this year’s conference required flying, and my suitcase (and shoulder strength for carry-on luggage) was at maximum capacity.
Having spent a few days after conference with a spectacularly organized friend, I called on her assistance (and supply of cardboard boxes) to pack and ship my newfound treasures. All I needed were scissors and some tape, and I’d be all set. I eyed my otherwise spectacular friend with dismay when she handed me a roll of mailing tape. You know the roll I mean – a gruesome color seen only in basements – a sort of shiny yet muddy brownish shade of flimsiness that sticks to itself (but not always to packages), wrinkles, and otherwise disappoints.
I admitted I was literally craving the Duck EZ Start Premium Packaging Tape that Shoplet had sent me, to organize my stash. Lovingly unperturbed by my tape snobbery, my friend disappeared and returned with an entirely satisfactory roll of packaging tape, and I set about to complete my task, made longer only by the repeatedly loss of the end of the roll. (My friend gamely offered up bread ties to use as end-markers.)
Back home, my luggage and shipped package having both arrived, I’ve been able to sit down and make some evaluations. First, I love that the Duck EZ Start Premium Packaging Tape is clear. Certainly my aesthetic preference has to be secondary to any functional issues. But I have greater confidence in the security of a package whose edges, creases and seams I can see through the packing tape.
A bigger plus is that the Duck EZ Start Premium Packaging tape is, indeed, easy to start. True to its word as I’ve been testing it, this brand is easy to start, each time. Never once, as I’ve experienced in the past, has the left side of the tape lifted while the right side remained stuck to the roll, creating a shaggy tectonic plate shift. Swift to start, sticking where it ought and nowhere else, and tearing only (and perfectly) when the dispenser’s teeth cut cleanly across it, Duck dispenses well and serves its purpose admirably.
Speaking of dispensers, Shoplet’s care package also included the Duck EZ Start Premium Packaging Tape with Dispenser with, as noted on the packaging, a “One-Handed Dispenser.” Dispensing (pun somewhat intended) for a moment with a funny naming convention that implies Duck includes an actual hand rather than enabling one-handed dispensing, the Duck dispenser’s white plastic roller and small plastic arm extensions makes it easier to use only one hand for taping while squeezing together box edges or otherwise holding to-be-taped parts in place. I’ve never been particularly adept at one-handed taping, but I imagine, with practice (were I helping a Santa-like organizing client package items in bulk), Duck would be very useful.
My one constructive criticism is that I would have preferred a heavier-duty packaging tape, something a little less flexible and with a little more thickness. Of course, some users might be particularly pleased by a slimmer tape footprint.

(Actual Paper Doll household pipe, Duck Zebra-fied!)
Finally, I can wholeheartedly recommend readers check out the third product line included in the care package, the Zebra Printed Duck Tape. As a not-particularly handy gal, I’ve always hoped that any problem could, as promised by folksy fellas, be solved with WD-40 or duct tape. And of course, one key to being organized is to eliminate all the nagging little distractions of under-performing (i.e., broken) parts.
However, while I always encourage readers to focus on function over form, traditional duct tape has never been what one might call fashionable.Well, tradition as been bucked, or shall we say, Ducked, because this duct tape is wackily fabulous. It works just like regular duct tape to fix ducts, pipes, ripped auto upholstery and anything else you might need to repair. It tears or cuts easily and holds firmly, but it does so with style. Duck is not your granddad’s duct tape.You know the expression used ad nauseam on medical dramas – “When you hear hoofbeats, think horses, not zebras?” Well, if you hear the hoofbeats of home repairs, thinking “zebra” and “Duck” is the way to go. Functionally, it satisfies, and if you’re tired of metallic grey, Duck also delights.
Niftily, Duck makes a Leopard Printed duct tape, too, as well as patterned tapes in Totally Tie Dye and Digital Camo. There are even colored Duck duct tapes in Purple Duchess (wouldn’t that be Duck-ess?), Sunburst Yellow, Cha Cha Cherry, Electric Blue and Deep Blue Ocean. Of course, Duck Colored and Printed Duck tape aren’t just useful for home and auto repairs, but crafting (if you’re the crafty type), or color-coding areas in the garage, kitchen or laundry room.You know I’ve got to say it. It’s just Ducky!So, stop procrastinating on your office and home supply tasks, and Duck them, instead!

By the way, I often peruse Shoplet’s blog to find intriguing or unusual products or line extensions to share with Paper Doll readers, which is how I learned that Shoplet was starting a product review program. While the regular Tuesday morning schedule will stay in place, I’m looking forward to providing occasional bonus Paper Doll posts in the coming months.
Disclosure: I received these products for review purposes only, and was given no monetary compensation. The opinions, as always, are my own. (Who else would claim them?)
NAPO Conference and Expo 2012 — An Introduction

Hello, patient readers! Although I’ve been back from the National Association of Professional Organizers 2012 Conference and Expo in Baltimore for a week, it’s taken some time to get re-acclimated. It’s a heady experience to be surrounded by about 830 of the smartest (and loudest) organizing experts in the nation, all sizzling with excitement to gain knowledge, explore new organizing products and services, catch up with their colleagues…and eat.
And it was definitely exciting to find that while we were off filling our heads, hearts and tummies, our national president, Angela Wallace, was spreading the word about the professional organizing world.
THE BIG CHEESE and EDUCATIONAL FEASTS
NAPO 2012 was overseen by a conference committee headed by fearless leader Scott Roewer (seen here with financial organizer (and my conference roommate) Nanette Duffey and technology maven Lauren Halagarda).

Scott’s intrepid team reviewed and winnowed a mountain of educational proposals to select the final 30 breakout sessions, panel presentations and courses on a wide variety of topics of exceptional benefit to clients, including titles like:
- Lifekeeping, Not Just Bookkeeping: Advanced Financial Organizing for Seniors
- Stand Up & Be Counted: Support a Hoarding Task Force
- Helping Your Client Eat a Frog…Understanding the Causes, Consequences and Cures for Procrastination
- It’s 10 PM: Have You Done Your Homework Yet? (Tips, Tools and Tricks for Teaching Time Management to Students)
- Organizing the ADHD Brain Using Executive Functions
- Cleaning Clutter the “Fun” Shui Way
- The Photo Organizing Dilemma: Meeting the Needs of Your Overwhelmed Clients
- Digital Disorganization and New Organizing Skills
and the most popular organizing-themed breakout session at conference, Krista Colvin and Allison Carter‘s Organizer’s Favorite Things — Tools of the Trade for the Modern Home and Home Office!
Of course, not all of the classes focused on the art and science of developing organizing expertise. Professional organizers also flocked to two courses taught by the exemplary Rich Brooks,
one on YouTube marketing and another on building business through blogging. Other popular classes included:
Speaking NAKED — Stripping Away the Barriers of Effective Public Speaking
In Good Company: Building Professional Collaborations and Organizer Teams
and Taking Your Organizing Products to the Market — What You Need to Know, taught by Clare Kumar, whose Pliio clothing-filing product 
I reviewed in the NAPO conference 2011 recap. Coincidentally, the sale of Pliio went national via HSN a mere 48 hours before Clare’s presentation at NAPO.
EDUCATION ON A GRAND SCALE
NAPO’s educational foundation isn’t just built on the smaller breakout sessions, which attract anywhere from 50 to about 200 attendees, each. The whole kit and kaboodle of organizers (tidily) crammed themselves into standing-room-only ballrooms to hear stirring keynotes from the original Apprentice, Bill Rancic, who shared his ideas on How To Think Like an Entrepreneur and Joanne Lichten, PhD, RD (Dr. Jo), who imparted wisdom on How to Stay Focused, Energized and More Productive.
NAPOites like Paper Doll, who had been lucky enough to attend the 2002 NAPO conference in Atlanta were especially delighted to experience the return of our closing keynote speaker, Dan Thurmon. His inspirational keynote on personal growth and expanding your opportunities was accompanied by his impressive

acrobatic flips, juggling lessons and performance atop a 6 foot unicycle! He taught us how to be Off Balance On Purpose!
It wouldn’t be a NAPO conference without Ask the Organizer panels, and like last year, we had two, one led by Monica Ricci, Ask the Organizer’s creator and decade-long moderator, and another made up of NAPO’s Golden Circle veterans, led once again by Lisa Montanaro. There was also a first-timer orientation and two Golden Circle goal-planning sessions. Paper Doll, along with colleagues Helene Segura and the Board of Certification for Professional Organizers‘ reigning queen, Audrey Levine, led a Jeopardy-inspired presentation on the ins-and-outs of certification and re-certification.
PEOPLE-WATCHING
Conference is almost as much about who you get to know as what you learn, and 2012 was no different. There were (NAPO) presidents:


TV stars and published authors:

and celebrities of the blogosphere:

HEARTWARMING
NAPO values the heart as much as the intellect. In 2011, NAPO members helped collect over 168,000 pairs of shoes for non-profit partner Soles4Souls — watch the video for the full story.
At our conference, NAPO gave Organizing Excellence Awards to two Baltimore-based organizations. The first went to the House of Ruth, one of the nation’s leading domestic violence centers. The second award, to United Network for Organ Sharing (UNOS), brought tears to the eyes of many as Ellen Palestine delivered a deeply personal story of the role UNOS has played in her life. Readers, I urge you to watch the video and hear just a bit of what NAPO members heard that Saturday afternoon.
YUMMY TIMES

Standing: Helene Segura, Paper Doll
NAPO members cannot live by words alone — not even blog posts. In large groups and small ones, we ventured out into Baltimore to explore the Inner Harbor, Federal Hill, Fell’s Point and elsewhere in Charm City, share convivial conversation, and at least once, dine on-the-go when a fire alarm interrupted the salad course.

What? Paper Doll was hungry! I thought it was quite organized of me to carry my Caesar salad, napkin and coat through the rain, to safety, especially my when dining companions, including Professional Organizers in Canada‘s President Jacki Hollywood Brown and Vice President Carolyn Caldwell, and NAPO’s own Jeri Dansky, all left their beverages at the table! (This might all have involved the “luck of the Canadians”, as POC’s leaders encountered three fire alarms on this conference trip.)
THE EXPO
Over the coming posts, we’ll be exploring the great new organizing products (paper and otherwise) NAPO conference attendees saw this year. I don’t want to spoil the experience, but to tantalize you, here are a few thematic hints:
- All You Need Is (About) a Dollar and an Organizing Dream
- Pretty (and as Organized) as a Princess
- A New Way to Do Long Division
- Stick’em Up!
Until next time, happy organizing!





Follow Me