
The 15-Minute Check-Up (Annual digital Review Made Simple)
You organize your taxes once a year. You get an annual physical. You review your insurance policies. But most people never schedule an annual digital
Practical guidance for families navigating digital organization, password management, and technology conversations. Whether you’re helping aging parents with their accounts, organizing your own digital life, or planning for your family’s future, find the support and step-by-step help you need to move from digital chaos to digital peace.

You organize your taxes once a year. You get an annual physical. You review your insurance policies. But most people never schedule an annual digital

Your spouse is in the hospital. Your elderly mother had a stroke. Your teenager lost their phone with two-factor authentication codes for their college applications.

Your parent forgot their banking password again. Their email is locked. The streaming service wants verification they can’t provide. If this sounds familiar, you’re watching

Sibling relationships are complicated under the best circumstances. Add aging parents, digital passwords, and financial account access to the mix, and even the closest families

Jessica spent 40 minutes looking for her daughter’s birth certificate before a doctor’s appointment. Tom missed a $500 early-bird conference discount because the email got

Sarah’s dad passed away suddenly, leaving behind 12 years of Facebook memories: family photos, birthday messages from grandchildren, and connections with old friends. When she

Lisa spent three months trying to sort out her father’s finances after he passed away. Despite being named executor, she couldn’t access his online account

Your mom has 47 passwords written on sticky notes around her computer. Your dad can’t remember his Apple ID. You know you need to help

When Rebecca’s father died suddenly, the family discovered 20 years of irreplaceable photos locked in his iCloud account. His iPhone was password-protected, his MacBook required

“Mom has 73 different passwords written on sticky notes around her computer. Some are outdated, some are illegible, and we found three different passwords for

Your phone storage is full, but you can’t bring yourself to delete photos. Your email has 47,000 messages because “what if I need that someday?”

“I’m not ready to think about this.” “I can handle my own business.” If you’ve tried to help family members organize their digital accounts, you’ve

Your spouse wants your Netflix password. Your adult daughter asks for your Amazon login “just for this one order.” Your elderly father insists you need

Your grandmother’s photo albums survived 70 years in an attic. Your digital photos from 10 years ago? Half of them are already gone – lost

Your phone buzzes with notifications from 17 different apps. Your email has 12,847 unread messages. You can’t remember which streaming service has the show you

There are real reasons why digital organization procrastination is so common, and understanding them is the first step to actually doing something about it.

This information is not legal, financial, or tax advice. This article is for informational and educational purposes only. Digital asset laws and company policies are

Your parent’s Google account holds 15 years of Gmail conversations, thousands of family photos in Google Photos, important documents in Google Drive, and serves as

Sarah drives 45 minutes to her mom’s house every time the WiFi stops working. She’s the one who gets called when Dad forgets his banking

Picture this: You’re at your parent’s home after they’ve passed, trying to cancel appointments and pay bills, but you can’t even access their email. Sound