I've had some people comment on how I can keep so many things straight and accomplish so many shops, etc.
I'm just using tools I learned in High School and in time management courses through the years. I have some basic tools....
- one large pink binder for me and one large brown binder for Ron
- tabbed index dividers marked "today", "tomorrow", the various days of the week, and "pending" and any other category I might need. My binder holds important Client specific information that I think I might need to refer to to keep me straight on the road for all those gas stations. So I also have indexes for "Shell", "Marathon", "BP", 1 set of paperwork that might change monthly like Lowe's, MCD's order page, etc. I don't waste ink printing multiple jobs out over and over. I print one set or the pages that change and then the first page of the specific shop to have a "working copy".
-one zipper pouch of pens, highlighters, a "tot" stapler with a box of staples for it,
- my binder has a fold out section that has a place to file things. It came with the pouch attached but an extra one is there for things like store loyalty cards that get me an occasional free soda on my travels. I got my binder at Staples. It's not a vinyl one. It's cloth bond. You don't want your tools melting in 120 degree heat in the car. I think it cost me about $15 but it is worth it sometimes to have good quality things instead of constantly replacing cheap ones. I've used this binder for about a year and a half and it's still in excellent shape except for a stain where a kid spilled catsup on it. lol
I have a big striped beach bag that holds the binder, my netbook, a folder with letters of authorization inside, my safety vest, various badges for assignments, and any site guides that are punched for the binder. I keep my GPS in it so it doesn't fry in the car. It's big enough to hold it all. I think I got it for a dollar at Walmart last year at the end of the summer. lol Grandkids refer to it as "the bag".
- pre-punched 3-hole binder paper to make things easy
My tools include my binder, my netbook, my digital voice recorder, my digital camera, and a new wand scanner that I haven't had time to learn to use yet. lol
I print off weekly calendar sheets at a site I found on Google. The ones at the office supply cost too much. The web site lets me print off one at a time for free. If I need to reorganize my week, I just grab another sheet.
I also have fold out maps of the states I shop in and the city I live in. I can put them on my big scanner and print them out as I need them to put in my binder tracking my routes.
I usually work in town for the first couple of weeks of the month. If I leave town, everything will be gone by the time I get back so I do my "in town" stuff first. As I accept an assignment, I print off the first page of the instructions so I have an official job sheet. I go to my calendar and plot it on the day it needs to be done. Other shops then have to work around that shop for that side of town or the state as the case may be. My calander becomes my tracking sheet for what needs to be done on which area of town so that I don't run all over town on the same day. I go to where the shops are and stay there until I'm done. I was in Frankfort the other day and was finished working. I needed lunch so I called a scheduler and said, "I'm in Frankfort and ready to leave. What do you need done before I leave here?" I got lunch and then two more shops the next day back in Louisville. I had my binder with me and knew where I'd be the next day so it was easy to just write them in.
Obviously, the day ends with setting up my binder for the next day. The shops for the next day move to the "Today" tab. The ones for the next day go to the "Tomorrow" tab and so forth. If things are over a week away, they move to Pending. As jobs come in, they go immediately to the proper tab so they don't get lost.
As I do the shops, the receipt and any notes get stapled to the back of that one page printout for the shop. I write notes on the front of the page. That leaves the entire shop attached together. If there is collateral too big to staple on, those file partitions come in handy for things like brochures and stuff. If it's bigger than that, a Walmart canvas shopping bag in the car carries big things I might need to keep.
Everything stays nice and neat in my big pink binder on three-hole punched paper. It costs a little more but saves my sanity by helping me keep on top of everything. I have to say this is a BIG binder. It gets heavy. It might have up to 150 shops in it waiting to be done at any given time. Ron doesn't work as much as I do so his doesn't get as full.
At the end of the day, the "today" tab should be full of everything needed to write reports. I can often stop at WiFi locations and write a report or two before even getting home. When it's completed, it moves to the last tab in the binder. By the end of the night, the "today" tab is empty, and the binder is set up for the next day. When I get time, I check the job boards and fill in sketchy places.
The only glitches I've encountered are when I can't self-assign and some scheduler waits two weeks and then plops something into my wonderful plans that won't work at all. I either cancel that assignment explaining that they waited too long, or have them reschedule it. If I can't keep it in the same side of town, it's going to cost them more to get it done. I don't give away my gasoline.
I've had several people ask me what I do to be able to do this full time. This system has taken me from an occasional shop early in 2009 to working all day usually 6.5 days per week. I'm trying to get Sundays back to catch up at home and on rest. I have 7 more reports to write by days end and a DQ shop for dinner (grandkids are thrilled). That will take about 5 minutes to report on. Trying to take them for ice cream somewhere every week after Sunday night church.
My netbook includes a spreadsheet with all jobs listed by MSC and by date due. Once I'm paid for it, it just vanishes into a database program until tax time. I can look it up if I need to, but I don't have to save it on my spreadsheet anymore. Only active jobs are shown there. I print that list out once a week and into the binder it goes as a working file of shops due. I write new shops on it and add them to their proper section. Then I update the spreadsheet at night.
If all this sounds crazy, just remember it all takes practice. I've been using a time management system for many years and this just wraps itself around everything I do. My big binder has a section for coupons and a grocery list. I have a "kids" tab to keep track of any activities I need to get them to. I have a pouch for gas receipts, grocery receipts, and any other things that aren't shop specific. If I need a receipt to return something I bought at a shop, it's stapled to the back of the paper work for the next six months. lol I have several file storage boxes that you can get anywhere that holds all the paperwork in normal hanging files labeled by MSC and client and then filed by job ID number.
Not everything is perfect in my organization. My room is one big mess right now. But I can put my hand on any receipt or any report that I've done for the past two years with all notes and everything put together in one neat little package. And I know exactly what's on my plate job wise for the next four weeks and can easily add in anything else at a moment's notice.
I don't know what God has planned day by day, but I am able to roll with whatever life brings to me because I keep all this stuff put together in a way I can make rapid changes. I was in the hospital 8 times last year. I keep scheduler's phone numbers and email addresses handy so that Ron or I can call someone fast if I can't work or need to change something fast. Even healthy people need to be able to do that. Make sure you have a contact list and let a friend or family member know what to do "just in case". I have a great working relationship with several MSC's because someone communicates if I go out of commission for a time.
My car is also a tool. In the trunk is a bag that includes envelopes for shipping shops, snacks for kids and a cooler for longer trips. I learned that you can't put potato chips and 2 liter soft drinks in the trunk at the same time. lol The kids put sodas back there with about 20 bags of chips and it looked like I was making a cassarole with all those chip crumbs. lol I keep a basket in the front floorboard because things kept flying off the front seat into the floor when I'd hit the brakes. After my netbook hit the floor a few times, I bought the basket and it fits right down in there perfectly. My bag sits there too and my binder is usually open on the front seat. If my grandson is with me, he is adept at taking notes, stapling receipts and collateral to the working page and progrmming the GPS for the next shop. I also schedule days where kids can go with me. I can't take them on gas station days, but they are great for getting names and locating employees at Lowes and KMart. lol And they do love to eat out at shops.
I better get busy on those 7 shops! I want to end this day with a clean slate and a binder and bag that's ready for the week!
Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at 06/12/2011 09:05PM by iblessyah.
I'm just using tools I learned in High School and in time management courses through the years. I have some basic tools....
- one large pink binder for me and one large brown binder for Ron
- tabbed index dividers marked "today", "tomorrow", the various days of the week, and "pending" and any other category I might need. My binder holds important Client specific information that I think I might need to refer to to keep me straight on the road for all those gas stations. So I also have indexes for "Shell", "Marathon", "BP", 1 set of paperwork that might change monthly like Lowe's, MCD's order page, etc. I don't waste ink printing multiple jobs out over and over. I print one set or the pages that change and then the first page of the specific shop to have a "working copy".
-one zipper pouch of pens, highlighters, a "tot" stapler with a box of staples for it,
- my binder has a fold out section that has a place to file things. It came with the pouch attached but an extra one is there for things like store loyalty cards that get me an occasional free soda on my travels. I got my binder at Staples. It's not a vinyl one. It's cloth bond. You don't want your tools melting in 120 degree heat in the car. I think it cost me about $15 but it is worth it sometimes to have good quality things instead of constantly replacing cheap ones. I've used this binder for about a year and a half and it's still in excellent shape except for a stain where a kid spilled catsup on it. lol
I have a big striped beach bag that holds the binder, my netbook, a folder with letters of authorization inside, my safety vest, various badges for assignments, and any site guides that are punched for the binder. I keep my GPS in it so it doesn't fry in the car. It's big enough to hold it all. I think I got it for a dollar at Walmart last year at the end of the summer. lol Grandkids refer to it as "the bag".
- pre-punched 3-hole binder paper to make things easy
My tools include my binder, my netbook, my digital voice recorder, my digital camera, and a new wand scanner that I haven't had time to learn to use yet. lol
I print off weekly calendar sheets at a site I found on Google. The ones at the office supply cost too much. The web site lets me print off one at a time for free. If I need to reorganize my week, I just grab another sheet.
I also have fold out maps of the states I shop in and the city I live in. I can put them on my big scanner and print them out as I need them to put in my binder tracking my routes.
I usually work in town for the first couple of weeks of the month. If I leave town, everything will be gone by the time I get back so I do my "in town" stuff first. As I accept an assignment, I print off the first page of the instructions so I have an official job sheet. I go to my calendar and plot it on the day it needs to be done. Other shops then have to work around that shop for that side of town or the state as the case may be. My calander becomes my tracking sheet for what needs to be done on which area of town so that I don't run all over town on the same day. I go to where the shops are and stay there until I'm done. I was in Frankfort the other day and was finished working. I needed lunch so I called a scheduler and said, "I'm in Frankfort and ready to leave. What do you need done before I leave here?" I got lunch and then two more shops the next day back in Louisville. I had my binder with me and knew where I'd be the next day so it was easy to just write them in.
Obviously, the day ends with setting up my binder for the next day. The shops for the next day move to the "Today" tab. The ones for the next day go to the "Tomorrow" tab and so forth. If things are over a week away, they move to Pending. As jobs come in, they go immediately to the proper tab so they don't get lost.
As I do the shops, the receipt and any notes get stapled to the back of that one page printout for the shop. I write notes on the front of the page. That leaves the entire shop attached together. If there is collateral too big to staple on, those file partitions come in handy for things like brochures and stuff. If it's bigger than that, a Walmart canvas shopping bag in the car carries big things I might need to keep.
Everything stays nice and neat in my big pink binder on three-hole punched paper. It costs a little more but saves my sanity by helping me keep on top of everything. I have to say this is a BIG binder. It gets heavy. It might have up to 150 shops in it waiting to be done at any given time. Ron doesn't work as much as I do so his doesn't get as full.
At the end of the day, the "today" tab should be full of everything needed to write reports. I can often stop at WiFi locations and write a report or two before even getting home. When it's completed, it moves to the last tab in the binder. By the end of the night, the "today" tab is empty, and the binder is set up for the next day. When I get time, I check the job boards and fill in sketchy places.
The only glitches I've encountered are when I can't self-assign and some scheduler waits two weeks and then plops something into my wonderful plans that won't work at all. I either cancel that assignment explaining that they waited too long, or have them reschedule it. If I can't keep it in the same side of town, it's going to cost them more to get it done. I don't give away my gasoline.
I've had several people ask me what I do to be able to do this full time. This system has taken me from an occasional shop early in 2009 to working all day usually 6.5 days per week. I'm trying to get Sundays back to catch up at home and on rest. I have 7 more reports to write by days end and a DQ shop for dinner (grandkids are thrilled). That will take about 5 minutes to report on. Trying to take them for ice cream somewhere every week after Sunday night church.
My netbook includes a spreadsheet with all jobs listed by MSC and by date due. Once I'm paid for it, it just vanishes into a database program until tax time. I can look it up if I need to, but I don't have to save it on my spreadsheet anymore. Only active jobs are shown there. I print that list out once a week and into the binder it goes as a working file of shops due. I write new shops on it and add them to their proper section. Then I update the spreadsheet at night.
If all this sounds crazy, just remember it all takes practice. I've been using a time management system for many years and this just wraps itself around everything I do. My big binder has a section for coupons and a grocery list. I have a "kids" tab to keep track of any activities I need to get them to. I have a pouch for gas receipts, grocery receipts, and any other things that aren't shop specific. If I need a receipt to return something I bought at a shop, it's stapled to the back of the paper work for the next six months. lol I have several file storage boxes that you can get anywhere that holds all the paperwork in normal hanging files labeled by MSC and client and then filed by job ID number.
Not everything is perfect in my organization. My room is one big mess right now. But I can put my hand on any receipt or any report that I've done for the past two years with all notes and everything put together in one neat little package. And I know exactly what's on my plate job wise for the next four weeks and can easily add in anything else at a moment's notice.
I don't know what God has planned day by day, but I am able to roll with whatever life brings to me because I keep all this stuff put together in a way I can make rapid changes. I was in the hospital 8 times last year. I keep scheduler's phone numbers and email addresses handy so that Ron or I can call someone fast if I can't work or need to change something fast. Even healthy people need to be able to do that. Make sure you have a contact list and let a friend or family member know what to do "just in case". I have a great working relationship with several MSC's because someone communicates if I go out of commission for a time.
My car is also a tool. In the trunk is a bag that includes envelopes for shipping shops, snacks for kids and a cooler for longer trips. I learned that you can't put potato chips and 2 liter soft drinks in the trunk at the same time. lol The kids put sodas back there with about 20 bags of chips and it looked like I was making a cassarole with all those chip crumbs. lol I keep a basket in the front floorboard because things kept flying off the front seat into the floor when I'd hit the brakes. After my netbook hit the floor a few times, I bought the basket and it fits right down in there perfectly. My bag sits there too and my binder is usually open on the front seat. If my grandson is with me, he is adept at taking notes, stapling receipts and collateral to the working page and progrmming the GPS for the next shop. I also schedule days where kids can go with me. I can't take them on gas station days, but they are great for getting names and locating employees at Lowes and KMart. lol And they do love to eat out at shops.
I better get busy on those 7 shops! I want to end this day with a clean slate and a binder and bag that's ready for the week!
Today I Will Choose Joy!
"Finally, whatever things are good, true, noble, lovely, of good report...if there be any virtue, if there be any praise...think on these things." ....It's a command, not a suggestion!
"Finally, whatever things are good, true, noble, lovely, of good report...if there be any virtue, if there be any praise...think on these things." ....It's a command, not a suggestion!
Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at 06/12/2011 09:05PM by iblessyah.