How to Organize Your Desk in a Few Easy Steps

by Elliott Kosmicki
organized

An un-organized desk can significantly impede your productivity. If you can’t find an important file or even find a space for your laptop, you will waste valuable time looking for the file or just clearing off space. Worse still, not being organized can be demoralizing and foster procrastination. Fortunately, organizing your desk is possible – in just a few simple steps. Here’s how:

1) Manage your time. First and foremost, if the task seems overwhelming, set a timer and limit yourself to just 15 minutes of organizing at a time. You’ll be amazed at how much you can get done in just 15-20 minutes. If you haven’t tried the The Pomodoro Technique, I highly recommend looking into it.

2) Put up or give up. Clear your desk and put back only what you use every day. Store everything else in drawers, on shelves, or in your supply closet. If you never or seldom use something, get rid of it. Give it away to someone who could make good use of it. Put anything that doesn’t belong on your desk in a pile. When the timer goes off, put all of those things away in their proper places.

3) No more “misc.” Don’t keep a “miscellaneous” file. Sort papers into files labeled specifically for the action needed. For example, keep a file for bills to pay, receipts to enter, papers to shred, etc. Anything that cannot be filed this way is not important enough to keep. Maintain virtual folders (and subfolders) the same way.

4) Organize your drawers. Arrange like items in each drawer. For example, put all of your office supplies in one drawer, stationery and notepads in another. That way, you won’t waste a lot of time searching for a pen when on the phone or looking for printer paper just before a deadline.

5) Clean out your virtual inbox. Declutter your virtual desk by deleting old emails that require no further action on your part. To store email you need to save, create a folder for it on your hard drive. Do not print emails unless you absolutely have to.

I also recommend keeping your inbox completely empty at the end of each day. It sounds daunting, and is a topic for another day, but I promise you that it can work wonders keeping you and your mind organized.

6) Use simple organizational tools. Bundle related papers together with clips, use trays for current papers or files (labeled “next week,” “this week,” etc.), and keep pens in a cup.

7) Take a moment. Whenever you have a lull in the day, take a moment to trash or shred old paperwork you don’t need anymore.

8) Conclude cleanly. At the end of each day, before you step away from your desk, clear it off and put everything away in its proper place. Wipe off your desk with a cleaner or just plain water.

Now that your desk is organized, you can get down to business! An organized desk makes for an organized mind.


Filed under: Tips and Tricks and tagged with: , , , .

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  • Anonymous

    I do realize that some of us find it difficult to sort out their documents because of their busy schedule but if we make time to sort and organize them, then it would not take too long to look for information in the future.
    http://www.shreddingdallas.com
    One thing that we should also consider is the proper organization of files because similar to paper documents, they may cause clutter and you need to shred them properly.
    Among the things that people find it difficult to organize is paper documents. They tend to pile up on desks – which include receipts, credit card billings, medical records and other personal files – and people tend to be overwhelemed that they get tired by simply looking at the paper clutter.