A.J. Miller
Free
Organizing and Productivity Expert

A.J. Miller Quick Facts
- Main Areas
- Organizing at Home or Work, Simplifying Your Llife, Time Management, Space Design, Clutter Control, Storage Design, Paper/Information Management
- Career Focus
- Professional Organizer, Writer, Business Owner, Simplicity Advocate
- Affiliation
- MillerOrganizing.com, MillerOrganizing.com/blog/, National Association of Professional Organizers
A. J. Miller is an organizing expert, sought after motivational speak, author and the founder and Chief Executive Organizer of MILLER ORGANIZING, a residential and business organizing company based in NYC. Over the course of her career, she has helped hundreds of busy New Yorkers to get – and stay! – organized.
She is a member of the National Association of Professional Organizers (NAPO), the premier authority in the field of organizing. She is a past member of the Board of Directors and past Newsletter Editor of the NAPO New York chapter and the proud recipient of the 2008 NAPO New York President's Award which is given for outstanding contributions to the chapter.
She writes a column on getting organized, clutter control, time management, living more simply, increasing productivity, how being organized reduces stress and other related topics called "Getting Organized" which is featured regularly in Town & Village, a community newspaper that has been serving the Stuyvesant Town, Peter Cooper Village, East Midtown Plaza, Gramercy Park, Kips Bay, Union Square and Waterside areas of Manhattan for over 60 years. She also writes a blog called Don't Agonize. Organize!, which is filled with lots of additional information, advice, tips and tid-bits.
She was fortunate to have been one of 500 woman chosen from a field of 20,000 for entry to Yale University the first year that its undergraduate school admitted female applicants and graduated with honors. She also feels fortunate to be part of a profession that allows her to make a difference and to do something meaningful every day. The most fulfilling part of what she does is seeing the joy and sense of relief clients experience from being organized.
You can follow her on Twitter at http://twitter.com/millerorganizin and connect with her on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/MillerOrganizing. A.J. can be contacted by email at AJ@MillerOrganizing.com or by phone at (212) 228-8375. You can also visit her on the web at MillerOrganizing.com.
Free Articles & Book Excerpts
Articles by this expert
SelfGrowth articles and saved writing connected to this expert.
Article
The Hidden Costs of Owning Too Much "Stuff"
Every day we're relentlessly bombarded by advertising that tells us to buy this, that or the other thing. It's all too easy to succumb to the temptations and no surprise that many of us end up owning as much "stuff" as we do. Sometimes though, our "stuff" seems to end up owning us instead of the other way around. First of all, spending to get "stuff" is a major source of personal, financial trouble for many of us. And then there are the hidden costs. For example, having to move to a bigger space because your "stuff" doesn't fit into the space you currently occupy.
Recently added
Article
Avoiding the "Maybe Someday" Clutter Trap
If any of the following sounds familiar, the odds are that you're a victim of the "maybe someday" clutter trap: * Do you have clothes in your closet you haven't worn in five years because they no longer fit?
Recently added
Article
Why Is It So Hard to Get Organized?
Getting organized is one of the most popular New Year's resolutions made by people every year. But what does it actually mean to get or be "organized"? Here's my definition: Being organized is about being able to get everything done when it is due and finding everything you need when you need it. Every day, in the hope of getting organized, people buy books and cut out magazine articles on the subject. They pour over organizing catalogs and attend organizing workshops and lectures.
Recently added
Article
Tips to Make Organizing a Family Affair
If your family doesn't share your enthusiasm for maintaining organization at home, here are some tips to help you deal with the situation. TIP #1 - EXPLAIN WHAT'S IN IT FOR THEM: Let them know that you'll be more pleasant to be around if they pitch in and help and you don't feel you have to do everything yourself. If they help, there will be more time to spend together as a family doing fun things! TIP #2 - SHOW THEM WHERE YOU WANT THINGS: It's easy to feel that the other people you live with are purposely sabotaging your efforts, thinking that you will just clean up after them.
Recently added
Article
Get organized and protect yourself from identity theft
The Federal Trade Commission estimates that as many as 9 millio Americans have their identities stolen each year, making identity theft one of the fasting growing crimes in this country. Identity theft occurs when someone uses your personally identifying information, like your name, Social Security number, credit card numbers or other financial account information, without your permission, to commit fraud or other crimes. Identity theft takes many different forms and can ruin your good name and destroy your credit.
Recently added
Article
Getting Organized is an Attainable Goal
You've finally decided that you can't stand the clutter and chaos any more. So, what do you do now? If you're like most people in this situation, you probably just dive in hoping to get control of the problem without giving any real thought to what you're doing.
Recently added
Article
Dispelling One of The Big Myths About Being Organized
Recently, a woman called to ask whether I could help organize her husband's home office. My first question to her was whether or not her husband had requested help organizing his office. She sheepishly confessed that it was her idea because his messy office was driving her crazy. Next, I asked her if she knew whether or not her husband had trouble finding things in his office when he needed them. She said that he never complained about it and did not seem to have trouble finding what he needed when he needed it (though she couldn't understand how he did it!).
Recently added
Article
Tips for Finding Time to Get Organized
Get up; go to work; shop; cook; clean, spend time with your family, go to sleep; wake up again the next day and do it all over again.
Recently added
Article
Small steps add up to big changes
For some people, achieving organization seems like an impossible task. If you think it would be easier to win a gold medal at the Olympics than to get organized, let me assure you that nothing is further from the truth. Although some people just seem to be naturally organized, being organized is not a talent. It's an acquired skill like reading or playing tennis and anyone can have a well-ordered, peaceful environment.
Recently added
Article
The Good News About Clutter
Hard times provide an opportunity to ask hard questions and several times in the last year I have heard clients overwhelmed by their clutter wonder out loud, “Why did I buy all this stuff?” The answer is that our economy is driven by material consumption so it constantly needs and encourages us to spend money on “stuff”.
Recently added
Article
The Dos and Don'ts of Regifting
As someone who helps people deal with too much "stuff" and not enough space for it all (FYI: it doesn't matter how much space you have, you never have enough!), I think that regifting is a great way to be green, get the right item to the right person and declutter at the same time. In case you don’t know what regifting is, it’s giving an unwanted gift to someone else. The comedia Jerry Seinfeld first coined the term in 1995 on an episode of his sitcom, Seinfeld.
Recently added
Article
Control What You Buy Or It Will Control You!
Recently, I returned to a client’s home to help her tune-up the clothes closet in her bedroom. When she opened the door, the first thing I noticed were the boxes of cereal and paper towels that had taken up residency on the shelf. Like many New Yorkers, my client has limited closet space for her clothes, none of which she could afford to share with food and paper goods. When I asked her why they were in her closet, she said she didn’t have anywhere else to put them.
Recently added
Websites & resources
SelfGrowth-published websites, downloads, and contributor profile websites connected to this expert.
Website
MILLER ORGANIZING.COM
If disorganization is robbing you of time, money, energy, productivity, peace of mind or the use and enjoyment of your space and you're committed to making positive changes in your life, MILLER ORGANIZING can help you get - and stay - organized.
Recently added
Website
MILLER ORGANIZING
MILLER ORGANIZING is a residential and business organizing company serving the greater NYC metropolitan area. We provide organizing & design solutions to help you live your best life!
November 3, 2009
Website
Don't Agonize. Organize!
Information, tips, products & services to help you get - and stay - organized.
September 22, 2009
Favorite Quotes & Thoughts from A.J. Miller
Organizing is a lifelong, ongoing process, not a one-time event.
Organization is the key to really getting the most that you can out of your space, your time, your life.
Have a place for everything and return it there when you're done using it. If you do, you'll know just where to find it the next time you need it.
Organizing is not a talent; it's a skill that can learned. It comes more naturally to some people than others, but everyone can learn to do it. It just takes willingness and determination, the right tools and a little time and practice.
Getting organized is about living in a way that helps create your best possible life - happy, stress-free, creative, motivated and enriching.
Simple, intuitive, highly customized organizing systems and solutions reflecting your wants/needs, comfort/convenience and dovetailing with the way your mind works are key. These kinds of organizational systems and solutions work best and are the easiest to successfully maintain over the long run.
There is an element of pleasure in using an organizational system or solution that fits harmoniously with your personality and reflects your style.
You are not your "stuff".
It's not about the "stuff"; it's about what you want from your life and how you will make that dream a reality.
If your "stuff" isn't helping you to create the life you want, it shouldn't be in your life.
You should own your "stuff"; your "stuff" should not own you.
Happiness isn't found in the quantity of "stuff" we own, it's found in the quality of relationships that we form. What we own should support and enhance that life not be a barrier to it.
Establish the vision you want for your life/space. How do you want your life and living and working spaces to look, feel and function? Decide what will help you achieve your vision and get rid of anything and everything that doesn't help you reach that goal.
Keep only those things that are useful, beautiful or you treasure for reasons of your own. Let the rest of it go.
There is no one right way to get or be organized.
Store things as close to their point of use as possible. The more steps it takes to do something the less likely it is to get done.
When you take off an item, put it away. If it's dirty, clean it. If you open it, close it. If you start something, finish it.
Be "intentional". Look at one item at a time and make a deliberate decision about it. Do you really want to keep it? And, if so, where is it going to go and how is it going to be stored.
When contemplating whether or not to keep something, ask yourself if you would pay to move it all the way across the country or take it with you on your way out the door if your house were on fire. If the answer is, "No", let it go.
Respect the limits that your physical space places on you. Once those limits are reached, practice the "one in, one out" rule by removing one item from your space before adding another item.
Successful people know that to get ahead they must set priorities, plan and always follow through. They make certain their systems work well for them, minimizing the amount of time and energy they must spend on a given task. They are always looking for ways to do things smarter, faster and better.
Organize it right the first time so you don't have to organize it over.
Change is possible.
Contacting A.J. Miller
A.J. can be contacted by email at info@MillerOrganizing.com or by phone at (212) 228-8375. You can also visit her on the web at MillerOrganizing.com, follow her on Twitter and connect with her on Facebook.