Lord Jason Scott - View from number one Leicester Square

Lord Jason Scott, president of Corporate Events Management provides an insight into the industry from the heart of the West End

Summer is here, Look Busy!   

 

Summer has sprung, but don’t expect a lot of poetic blather about how happy it makes me and all of those I meet. I don’t recognize any signs of summer from my windowless office on the 6th floor in the dark recesses of the Penthouse many mazes while listening to the sneezes and sniffles from my co-workers as the corporate air conditioner filters out the fresh air, while pumping our workplace full of dirt and grime.

 

 

Still, I would be lying if I said that the change in seasons had no effect. As if by magic I find myself moving into total summer-cleaning mode. Unfortunately, for many of us, the stimulation available is not sufficient, and despite our best attempt to tantalize and energize our brain cells with repeated viewings of the “Big Brother.” and “Holly Oaks,” the need to hibernate wins out.

 

[If someone can tell me what happened in our office between November 22 and February 22, please immediately email to the address below.]

 

 

 When winter ends and the sun returns, our neural receptors red line and we launch into the annual and familiar spring frenzy of mating, or, if we’re married, cleaning. But how exactly do you tackle the mountains of paper that have piled up on your desk since you last attempted to organize your work life, which probably occurred during the time of Tony Blair? And how will your manager react when you explain that you have entered a new realm of efficiency by getting rid of useless time-wasters, like your telephone and your computer?

 

 

 These are exactly the subjects covered here:

 http://www.lifeclever.com/10-tips-for-keeping-your-desk-clean-and-tidy/

10 tips for keeping your desk clean and tidy:

 

 

 I believe this study and a few more I found, while trawling the internet for a new screensaver to remind me of the world outside of events, are all targeted at “pilers” (those who pile their paperwork rather than file it) Many companies it seemed surveyed the administrative assistants of important executives at big named companies to learn their secrets for success—assuming you define success as being an underpaid lackey for a Corporate Big Cheese. So what could you learn from these highly organized individuals? Pull up a file folder and let’s get started.

 

 

1. Tackle a tickle:

 

 

 Fill a file draw with 31 file folders, one for each day of the month. This will not only help sales at Rymans, Stationery Suppliers, but will help you know when specific projects should be tackled. Unfortunately, it doesn’t work for months which don’t have 31 days, like February, which has about six days, I believe, and August, when other people get vacations, and which lasts for 93 days. On the positive side, these systems will help you determine exactly how late you are with your assignments, and that should be good for a laugh.

 

 

 2. Reference this :

 

 

According to the assistants, “reference books are a great way to stay organized and a unique scrapbook of your career.” Items to keep in your reference book are phone logs, memos and contact info. Nice idea, and in later years, if it doesn’t make your heart sing with emotional memories of your time with your boss, it will be invaluable when you blackmail the creep.

 

 

3. No pop-ins

 

 

Rather than constantly popping in on your boss, the executive assistants suggest you “keep a running list of the questions and comments as they occur to you.” You would use this list for an end-of-the-day meeting to tidy up trifling issues too unimportant to interrupt your lord and master, like “Your fly is unzipped,” “You’re wearing one white sock and one brown sock,” or “Your new French assistant is on fire.”

 

 

4. KISS

 

 

Truer words were never surveyed: “When it comes to working with your boss, make things as simple as humanly possible.” The surveys suggest using colors to help simplify the process, like red for urgent, and yellow for medium-priority tasks, and blue for “cold” files. Clearly, this is far too complicated for the average event person, who, when seeing a red file, would likely implode with fear and trepidation. I suggest you simply burn all your files. That’s the kind of forward-looking employee every executive wants, and wouldn’t all that empty file space make a wonderful location for hibernation when winter rolls around again?

 

 

 

The Leaning tower of Paper

The Leaning tower of Paper

Published Aug 13 2009, 11:03 AM by Lord Jason Scott

All Comments

Sarah Bell August 14, 2009

Brilliant – thanks for this.  Its great to know someone other than me has OCD too.    

Victoria Beecher August 14, 2009

Very funny blog........If you threw your phone and computer away on a Friday afternoon in August would anybody know? I doubt it as they've all gone home!

Annie Mitchell August 20, 2009

Highly amusing as always Lord Scott, is thia by any chance a subtle hint to clean your desk?

 

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Lord Jason Scott - View from number one Leicester Square
Lord Jason Scott, president of Corporate Events Management provides an insight into the industry from the heart of the West End
 

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Lord Jason Scott

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Lord Jason Scott - View from number one Leicester Square

Member since: 04-27-2009

Last login: 07-30-2010

Total Posts: 86

 

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