3 Things that will help you go paperless

It has been a number of years that I have been attempting to rid my world of paper. It started by just scanning ‘important’ documents to a folder on my home PC. I then progressed to getting as much correspondence to happen via e-mail and scanning everything else received on paper in the mail.

Making an across country move back in 2012 really made me step up the work and implement a ‘system’ for how I handled correspondence and how it was to be filed electronically. I also got a lot more aggressive with the shredder after a couple of years of hedging my bets and keeping originals.

Here are the 3 things that made a difference for me

  1. Get someone else to do the work!
    I guess what I mean by this is that there are many opportunities to eliminate paper by seeking out opportunities to have regular correspondence and bills e-mailed instead of posted. The less items you have to physically scan then the more reliable your system becomes. This is also invaluable when travelling for work a lot.
    The more automated it can be… the better! When I first started using Google Apps for e-mail I used a a lot of filters to trap certain e-mails and file accordingly.
    The ability to further automate is even easier now with tools like IFTTT. If you are going to do a task more than once…then automate it if you can!
  2. Duplex / multi-feed scanning is king!
    When it comes to making things quick and easy….then duplex scanning is a must! The time taken messing around with multipage documents disappears when you have a scanner where you can feed multiple pages in and capture both sides automatically. These type of documents accounted for about 70% of what I was needing to scan, so I spent a lot of time in the early days wrestling with the old flatbed scanner on my MFD.
    If you don’t have a requirement for duplex and/or multi-feed then make sure you get the best scanner for what you need to do. I now use a Fujitsu ScanSnap S1300i. The other key things to look for in a scanner will be if you can automate how it handles scans and can it store direct to a specified folder or even better link direct to a cloud based service.
  3. Searching is superior to any filing or tagging system!
    When I progressed to Google Apps for storing scanned documents, in what is now Google Drive, I thought I had the best system possible. I could easily search by filename and later when it became available the search could even recognise text within the scanned document or uploaded pdf file. I found that I could stop trying to remember fancy naming conventions and what folders I scanned and saved files into as I learnt to trust that I could just search for what I needed.
    I have recently (Nov 2013) moved to using Evernote (EN) for storing almost my entire digital world. One of the primary reasons was one button scanning from the Fujitsu scanner direct to EN. The other key reason was the search capabilities and how intuitive it was to find things. That is also why the most recent update to EN in the past week is so exciting. They are calling it “Descriptive Search” and it is about making searching even easier.

At this point I should also declare that the reason I have become so confident with EN in such a short time is largely due to the wisdom of one of Evernote’s  Ambassadors for paperless living – Jamie Todd Rubin. There is a wealth of information available for anyone considering going paperless or wanting to get more done with EN. View Jamie’s blog about “Going Paperless” for a heap of tips & tricks.

The real numbers behind Western Australia’s shark cull

There is a lot of commentary around the Western Australian government’s “Shark Hazard Mitigation Strategy”. ImageBoth sides of the debate have a lot of numbers that they quote surrounding shark attacks, fatalities and other ways in which people are killed. These include numbers like 290; being number of people claimed to have drowned in Australia in 2013. In a quick look at officially published drowning numbers by the Royal Life Saving Society – Australia in their National Drowning Report 2013, it would appear this figure is fairly accurate. You can read the full report here. I haven’t checked the other figures that the protesters have quoted, the image I have included has the final figure as being 2. Representing number of people killed by sharks in 2013.

The Premier of Western Australia, Colin Barnett is quoted in an official media release as saying

“We have had 20 fatal shark attacks in WA in the past 100 years – seven of them in the past three years,” 

So the quoted number of two people killed as a result of shark attack in 2013 seems feasible. The other numbers that are often quoted are the financial costs. In official media statements from the office of the WA Premier they talk of $967,000 being provided for shark mitigation research, you can access the full statement here. There are of course no numbers mentioned on potential loss to tourism as a result of the negative world wide publicity.

The real numbers which I believe drive this issue are just as readily available.

  • 31 – the number of seats Colin Barnett’s Liberal Party won at the last WA state election in March 2013 (compared to Labour’s – 21 and the National’s – 7)
  • 1130 – the number of days until the next WA state election. Due to electoral reforms in 2011 WA now operates with fixed terms that will see the next election held on the second saturday of March 2017
  • 70.92 – the percentage of the two party preferred vote that Colin Barnett received for the seat of Cottesloe at the 2013 state election

ImageOn a quick look at where the baited drum lines, either have been or, are to be installed I was not overly surprised to see that they were all in conservative electorates. All metropolitan beaches nominated for “mitigation” strategies are in safely held Liberal seats (including Colin Barnett’s Cottesole electorate). The beaches in the south west of the state are all located in the safe Liberal seat of Vasse comfortably held by state Treasurer Troy Buswell.

A couple of more numbers to finish.

  • 23 – the number of years Colin Barnett has been a member of parliament
  • 5000 – about the number of people that live in Colin Barnett’s electorate that would have to contact him directly to get him to reverse this policy

Having lived in WA for 13 years including a few years in his Cottesloe electorate. I am confident in saying that without direct action from people in his own electorate, that would put his career in jeopardy, Colin Barnett will just ride out the storm until the numbers tick down toward the next state election.

As an economist and politician, Colin Barnett is ultimately just looking out for number one!