What's your style for organizing your financial documents?
Are you a procrastinator, letting your financial statements pile up on your desk for that (always elusive) day when you'll finally have enough time to put them in order? Or are you organized but simply saving too much, to the point that your file cabinet is bulging with trade confirmations for accounts you no longer hold? Maybe you're a minimalist: You get rid of absolutely all of your financial documents, with the assumption that you'll be able to retrieve what you need when you need it.
To be sure, it's getting easier to take the last tack, relying exclusively on digital resources to manage and track your financial accounts and pay bills. Not only have most financial providers made it easy to pay bills and retrieve the documents you need on demand, but many mutual fund companies and brokerage firms will also calculate investors' adjusted cost base. As financial services firms are quick to remind us, going paperless is the green way to go, and, assuming you take some common-sense steps to protect against financial fraud, it can also be quite safe.
Before you go the minimalist route, however, you must first put some basic infrastructure in place. Take the following steps to do so.
Secure your home system
Transitioning your document storage from paper to digital is a key component of getting your financial house in order. An essential first step before you switch over is ensuring the security of your in-home computer network. That means making sure you have up-to-date antivirus and antispyware software as well as firewalls and a good spam filter. A good system for periodically backing up the data on your computer is also essential.
Additionally, because you'll be saving financially sensitive documents that could be manna for identity thieves, you'll need to take steps to password-protect your computer as well as those sensitive documents. (Passwords that combine numbers and letters are the most effective.) Finally, be careful about trying to access financial information when you're away from home, and never log in to any of your financial accounts when using a public or unsecured network.
Create a master directory
The next step is to create a password-protected digital directory of your various accounts, including user names and passwords, and URLs as well as information about where on your computer you're storing the related documents. Not only will such a document prove invaluable for your loved ones if something should happen to you, but it will also help you manage the plethora of information for each of your accounts. Note that this document can be the old-fashioned, pen-and-paper kind, but if that's the case, it's crucial to keep that document in a safe location--a locked, firesafe box, for example, or a safe deposit box. And no matter the format, it's important to inform a trusted loved one of your master directory and how to gain access to it.
Investigate your providers' information systems
The next step in organizing your financial life is to conduct a quick audit of the quality of the digital statements provided by your banks, brokerage and mutual fund companies, and any other companies with which you regularly do business. In most cases, you'll find that the digital statements provide you with exactly the same level of detail as the paper documents you received in the past. Here again, be savvy when creating passwords for your information on external providers' sites.
In addition to getting comfortable with the retrieval of your digital statements, see how long the institution will store past statements and other information on its website. Can you retrieve statements going back several years? If you expect to need supporting documentation longer than your provider will make it available, plan to save a copy of the statement on your own computer. (Be particularly attuned to this issue if a document relates to a previous year's tax return; the Canada Revenue Agency can technically audit tax returns for any previous year, though it rarely goes back more than four years.)
Also be aware of the rules regarding adjusted cost base. While financial providers will generally calculate investors' ACB if asked, it is ultimately the responsibility of investors to keep track of their ACBs in order to determine capital gains or losses at the time of sale.
Create a logical digital filing system
When creating a secure home-computing environment to safely manage your sensitive financial information, you'll also want to create an intuitive organization system for your digital files. If your filing system for your paper files worked well for you in the past, there's no reason you can't duplicate it for your digital documents, too. Consider broad topic folders--"Insurance," for example, combined with subfolders such as "Auto Insurance."
Get a plan for receipts
Receipts and travel-related clutter can be some of the worst desk detritus. Recycle receipts for small, everyday purchases, while scanning in receipts for items you might need to return or otherwise document the proof of purchase. Nearly all stores will honour a scanned receipt just as they would an original, and many retailers give you the option of receiving an electronic receipt in lieu of a paper one.
Stop it at the source
Signing up for digital document delivery is a key way to reduce the flow of paperwork coming into your house, but that won't head it off entirely. If you're receiving unwanted flyers, catalogs, or other solicitations, call the company's number and ask to be removed from the mailing list, or notify Canada Post to stop delivering unaddressed advertising. The Canadian Marketing Association also offers a do-not-mail service aimed at reducing the amount of targeted mail such as preapproved credit card offers, which are a frequent source of noisome junk mail.
Cull your existing files
The preceding steps will help you set up a system to stay organized in the future. But to get truly organized, you'll also need to sort through your existing files, because it's a good bet you're hanging on to far more financial documents than you actually need to. This article discusses financial documents that you can safely shred and those you should hang on to. And certain very hard-to-replace items--including certificates of marriage, birth, death and adoption; Social Insurance cards; deeds; and car titles should be stored in a safe-deposit box or an in-home fireproof box. It's also a good idea to keep a copy of estate-planning documents in your home; alert a close loved one of these documents' existence and location.