Is running your home running you into the ground? This is the handbook for you, and for anyone who wants to have a happy organised home. Family management applies good business principles to the work of making the home the best it can possibly be. Being in charge of a house and family means being an accountant, building manager, housekeeper, cleaner, chauffeur, cook, personal shopper and more. Like any good CEO, the family manager needs to know their goals, determine their strategies and manage their human resources. This book will show you how to manage from parties to pensions, dusting to decorating and childproofing to credit cards. Kathy Peel's lively and energetic text is packed with information and tips, based on her experiences as a busy mother of three. She's also included all the best hints she's heard from family and friends over the years. The home is the most important organisation in the world, and this is the ultimate guide to making it work.
See yourself as a manager (you oversee an economic institution): set up a base of operation (Control Center where you organize and schedule everyday tasks, and keep lists and important papers), build a team and delegate; manage by departments (filing system can be based on this list). Departments:
1) Home and Property - CEO: Home / Family Manager - Maid: Cleaning, Laundry, Sewing / Mending: keep three chore lists, one for weekly chores, one for monthly, one for 3-4 times a year. Use potpourri and sachets to naturally provide fragrance. - Home Organizer: Decluttering and Organizing - Building Manager: Maintenance, Building and Remodeling, Pest Control - Interior Decorator: -Arranging room: find the focal point and plan seating from there -Selecting furniture: Let the space breathe around the corners; Strike a balance in furniture between wood pieces and upholstered; Every chair and sofa requires a table or flat surface; Place coffee table 18" in front of sofa & allow another 18" between ends of sofa and other pieces -Window treatments: Extend curtains about 8" beyond windows - Lighting: 3 types are general (replace sunlight), task (no shadows), accent (visual interest, spotlight plant and art, highlight texture of wall or ceiling); each seating area should be bright enough for reading - Mirrors and wall hangings: suspend mirror between two windows to add light and space, at end of hallway; hang pictures at eye level, about 60" from floor to center of picture - Floor coverings: Use a colorful rug as entrance mat with medium background color - Extra touches: use natural items: flowers, fruit, personal treasures and rotate them; when displaying collections, group objects by color or type - Painting: one gallon covers 400 square feet; sunny room often needs neutral, softening hues and north/east facing rooms need warmer tones to brighten natural light; usually warm hues best in spaces where there's activity; light, cool colors makes space look bigger; if you purchase paint using color chip, buy one shade lighter; buy small quantities of 2 or 3 shades and paint patches on different locations of room, like spot with direct sun and one in a dark corner and look at over a few days - Gardener - Safety Officer: twice a year, make sure fire extinguisher works; make inventory of all possessions and keep copy in safe place (178); make sure everyone knows how to turn off water, gas, and electricity at main switches; Make an emergency preparation plan, a disaster supplies kit, and an evacuation supplies kit - Chauffeur: Driving, Car Care
2) Food - Menu Planner: Meals, Nutrition - Head Chef: Cooking, Food Safety - Event Planner: Entertaining, Parties and Birthdays
3) Finances - Accountant: You need a financial philosophy, financial priorities, and financial strategies: - Spending Plan (budget): determine monthly earnings after taxes, calculate monthly expenses, subtract expenses from income; with spending money, create short-term & long-term savings plan, put aside at least 3-6 months' income for emergencies, put aside at least 5 percent of each paycheck in an IRA, pension fund, or 401(k) plan, and figure out how much you can save each month for big purchases; track spending plan with spreadsheet - Banks (savings) - Credit - Downsizing - Money Management - Financial Planner: - Insurance - auto (revisit coverage and costs at least every other year) - life (types are term, permanent, and variable; review occasionally to see if coverage is appropriate; get equal to between 5 and 10 years of annual salary) - home) - Investments - Stocks (2 types: common ('equity'; vote, get dividends), preferred (don't vote, dividends) - Bonds (issued by corp., gov't, state, city and pays interest and value of bond when matures) - Mutual Funds (pool of combined monies used to purchase stocks, bonds, combination) - Taxes: make separate folders for each category of deductions, then toss in receipts, bank statements and other documentation during the year: charitable contributions, business- and job-related expenses, dependent care, income sources, investment expenses, medical expenses for each dependent, mortgage expenses - Wills and Estate Planning, Power of Attorney documents: - Will: organ donation, burial and funeral instructions, names executor (often spouse or child), ... - Durable Power of Attorney: allows for someone to act on your behalf while alive, to write checks, make decision about your home... - Healthcare Directive (living will): states your wishes about medical treatments if you can't communicate - Medical Power of Attorney: allows for someone to make medical decisions on your behalf - Legal Trust: a legal entity that contains all the assets of your propery and states specifically what to do with assets - Real Estate Agent: Selling / Buying House, Home Protection, Moving - Personal Shopper (get best products at best prices): Savings, Buying Big-Ticket Items - keep manual for appliances, write date and store of purchase and staple receipt to it
4) Family and Friends: Family life, relationships, child-rearing, education, marriage, friends, neighbors, aging parents
5) Special Events (coordinating projects): birthdays, holidays, vacations, garage sales, family reunions
Despite the dated references (CD-ROMs anyone??) and the heteronormativity/gender roles, this is nevertheless a hugely valuable reference book. I would LOVE to see a version updated for 2020.
It's as if your grandmothers, aunts, mother and best friend's mother sat down and compiled all the bits and pieces of advice they'd ever heard, used, or given into a book.
I didn't actually "read" this book as I just couldn't get through even the first chapter, for an organizing book I felt it was far to wordy. She talks about running your home like you would run a business, which in theory is a great idea, but I don't know many businesses that have kids as part of the workers :) and we all know how that works!
"meh"...I liked it in theory, although it didn't exactly grip me. Some of her specific advice--about calendaring, for instance--was a little antiquated, from what I remember. Would be nice to have an updated version for the 21st century. I do love a good fast-track. And a good happy-organized-home.
This book had a TON of good ideas for disorganized moms like me. But the book is really big and it really does have so many ideas that it's almost overwhelming. I ended up just focusing on a few of the sections at a time.
This had a few helpful hints that I hadn't heard before - I was hoping to be really inspired. I think I just need someone to come in and organize for me, weekly.
I read this book at work during breaks. The reason it took so long. Lots of good tips, ways to save money and budget. This is a book you need to own and use over and over again
Just too dated and not as useful as other books in the Family Manager series. I'd recommend the original book first, even though it's even more dated than this.