Is your desk swamped with piles of paper that you are currently working on but don’t want to file in case they are forgotten it? Problem is – the piles get bigger and bigger and you’re liable to forget things anyway. There are a number of options to beat this desk-top chaos – let’s look at the two most common ones.
Option One is to house your current work in the hanging file drawer in your desk. If you name it ‘Action – Current’ it keeps the system alphabetical and easy to find for anyone else managing your work when you’re on leave or sick. Position this file at the front of your file drawer or on the side closest to you, depending on the configuration of your drawer. If you have a number of long term items which don’t need daily focus but you need to keep close at hand, make a second file called ‘Action – Pending’.
Option Two caters to the visual folk, and there are many. They truly know that anything put away in a drawer, no matter how well labeled, will not see the light of day again – at least when they’re looking for it. If this describes you, try using a desk top upright step file. The value is that it’s out in view on the top of your desk or near your desk, it’s easily seen and things placed there can be retrieved in a milli-second. Everything is at your fingertips and you’ve applied one of the key principles of paper management – storing things upright instead of flat.
The exception, obviously, is bulky projects that don’t fit. You’ve got several options.
- Place them in their own named files in the file drawer or Quefile. (If they’re bulky and not something you’re working on constantly, they’re better out of the Quefile and placed in either the file drawer or your regular filing cabinet.)
- Use an upright periodical box with the sides cut away so you can see the contents (readily available in all stationers).
- Place them on a nearby shelf, but NOT on your desk. It’s visual graffiti and a distraction.
Now what’s left?
Most of the rest of your ‘stuff’ can go in a suspension file called the ‘1/2 way to the Rubbish Bin‘ file (and I do tag it with that name!). The future contents of this file are probably sitting on your desk because ‘you might need them still’. Benefits of pulling this ‘almost clutter’ together into one file? The paper is off your desk but still within easy reach. You haven’t wasted time filing paper you’re probably not going to need again (and about 85% of what we file is never looked at again). If you do need to check it, it’s not far away. Occasionally you’ll need something from the file. As you touch each piece of paper decide whether you still need it. Throw out anything no longer needed. You’ll never have a very fat file.
Since I learnt this technique, many years ago now, I’ve never had an overflow. Think of it as weeding a garden – unwanted weeds settle into a garden just as easily as into our workspace. We have to be just as rigorous at weeding paper as we do plants, in order to keep order.
If you have more drawers they can be used for a week’s supply of regularly used stationery, things like often-used computer discs and one drawer for personal things.
You’ve got an old 3-drawer desk and no suspension file? Either get a mobile one and place it under or beside your desk or use drawer two to store your current action and drawer three to hold your ‘1/2 way to the rubbish bin’ material.
Don’t use your desk file drawer for longer-term projects to which you’re not constantly referring – they should be in your main filing cabinet (if your work justifies having another cabinet). Remember the basic rule – use the space closest to you for the things you constantly need.
And now – have fun clearing out those drawers. You’ll feel great when you’re done!
I will be running a 3-part webinar series this month that will change the way you handle paper and clutter in your office. Get in quick if you want to win the paper war in your life! Contact Sanchia at [email protected] for further info.