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By Kimberly Powell, About.com


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4. Don't Put Off Until Tomorrow...
Sometimes it seems as if everything else gets in the way of quality genealogy research time. You use a calendar to schedule other important activities, why not genealogy? Whether you use a standard paper calendar or an online version, make it a point to set aside time for personal genealogy research or schedule special events such as genealogy conferences or research trips. Setting aside time for genealogy is only the first step, however. To really make the most of your precious genealogy time, you also need to take time to plan ahead and prioritize your research.

Related Resources:
How to Keep Your Research On Track
Planning a Genealogy Vacation
Genealogy Conferences & Events
Free Online Calendars & Organizers

5. Label & Store Your Family Photos
Most of us have piles of precious family photographs sitting in piles or boxes waiting to be labeled, organized, put into scrapbooks, digitized, etc. Don't let another year go by with those photos fading both from light and from people's memories. Get together with relatives and identify as many people as you can and label those pictures. Be sure to use a photo-safe marking pencil or pen! If you have access to a scanner then consider digitizing the photos onto CD-ROM to preserve them indefinitely. Even if you don't have time to create scrapbooks and really get the photos organized right now, make sure you get them out of old envelopes and shoeboxes and into archival quality plastic sleeves or acid-free photo boxes before they are lost forever. Make copies of important photographs and other important documents and share them with another family member. The recipient will no doubt enjoy the gift, and a second copy will help to ensure that these precious photos will not be lost forever in the event of an unforeseen disaster.

Related Resources:
5 Steps for Identifying People in Old Photographs
How to Care for Old Photographs
How to Create a Heritage Scrapbook
Tips for Organizing Your Family Photos
Convert Your Old Family Photos to Digital Format
Digitizing Family Movies - How to Transfer Videotapes to DVD

6. Two Heads are Better Than One
One of the best ways to further your research is to join forces with other people researching the same surname or in the same area. Join a genealogical or historical society in an area in which you are researching a primary family line and then get involved in some way. You will meet fellow researchers, benefit from members with years of experience with the records and history of the area and have many opportunities to help others by working to preserve historical and genealogical documents, recording cemetery transcriptions and more. If you spend a lot of time online, then join a mailing list for your surname or area or participate in chats and/or forums with other genealogists with similar interests. I belong to several informal groups of researchers who work closely to piece together information on a particular family - all groups of people whom I have met online.

Related Resources:
Making Genealogical Connections - 5 Ways to Encourage People to Share
Genealogical & Historical Societies
Making the Most of Mailing Lists
Organizing a DNA Surname Study

7. Keep Track of Correspondence
How many times have you left a question in a genealogy forum and then forgot to go back and check for an answer? How do you find the person you corresponded with last year about your Smith family again now that you have new information to share? Most of us have address books to keep important phone numbers and contact info for family and friends, so why not use it for genealogy contacts? Make sure to add a note to yourself about the person's surnames and research locations! There are also a wide variety of free correspondence records and forms available online which can provide you with a framework for logging your correspondence. Then at a glance you can determine whether you have written to a specific person or place, whether you received a response, whether you need to follow up and the results of your inquiry.

Related Resources:
How to Correspond Effectively
Keeping Track of Message Board Posts
Free Genealogy Charts & Forms


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