organise
Clean Your Workspace--And Keep It That Way
Posted by Kevin Purdy at 9:00 PM on October 9, 2008
Whether your workspace is miles from your home or right there amongst your books and Battlestar Galactica figurines, it probably has something in common with at least a few other Lifehackers' (and mine)—the ability to attract clutter, make important documents and objects hard to find, and, over time, become time an actual impediment to getting things done. Some of us are able to work in a way that doesn't leave things a mess and clean as you go, but for those of us who can't trust our instincts, a system that corrects itself is needed. Today I've rounded up a few of our best tips for getting your workspace in order and keeping it that way without a cerebral transplant. Take one last look at your paper piles and empty coffee cups and read on for inspiration. Photo by frischmilch.
Banish (or resurrect) your junk drawer
Having an extra, hidden-away place to stash things is just a giant fix for a clutter junkie. Take a look inside, and you'll likely find the remainders of a whole bunch of organisational equations you refused to perform—extra parts, novelty schwag, hardly-used tools, and similarly hard-to-file gear.
Inspired by Peter Walsh's It's All Too Much, our own Jason Fitzpatrick trashed or put away the gear in his kitchen's junk drawer, then put it to better use (as an easy-to-select tea drawer) and, through a little space-shuffling, found a way to speed up cooking with easy-to-grab pots and pans. The same principle—sort, return, re-purpose—applies to a workspace, but you don't have to give up on a junk drawer or shelf entirely. The Apartment Therapy blog recommends adding order to your junk space with dividers:
We like bamboo drawer organizers from the Container Store or Bed Bath and Beyond but you can use silverware trays, small jars, gift boxes, muffin tins, food storage containers or a combination to create order.
Dividing the space removes the feeling of "anything goes," and makes it more likely you'll think about where a plastic fork can actually be found and used before pitching it in your former catch-all. Photo by littledan77.
Make your desk actually usable
My co-editor Adam knows a good deal about repetitive stress and workspace discomfort, and his guide to setting up a healthy workspace is a great place to start. Just adjusting my office chair to line up better with my laptop screen was worth the read for me, but learning how to mouse goofy—or switch to my left hand when the right feels stiff—will find a place in my schedule. Once I actually felt better while working, applying some basic principles of Getting Things Done to my stuff—keeping things I regularly need close, things I hardly ever use (stacks of business cards, blank CDs, checkbook) farther out—I was less tempted to grab things and clutter my desktop. As sad as it sounds, sometimes just putting something out of reach can be the tipping point for your motivation to mess with it. Still, I had to deal with ...
The perennial problems
Some stuff seems like it's work-related, yet it doesn't actually do much other than creep onto your desk—a problem that can hurt your image at work, and leave you feeling overwhelmed, rather than creative and ready for anything. Paper is the most perennial clutter culprit of them all—if you're not using at least some of Productivity 501's tips on desk organizing, you're missing out. Cables are another seemingly inescapable desk-messer, but there are many creative solutions for them, too. Assuming your normal workflow and gadget set-up is under control, let's tackle the rest.
For everything that's not daily work, try a modified version of the six-month "maybe" box. Get a shoebox (or larger, if necessary) and put nearly every non-essential item from your work area into it, and put it somewhere you'll actually have to get up and walk to. Stick to a plan to review its contents in, say, two weeks. Did you manage to get by without these goods? Did you find a better way when faced with the idea of getting up? Than it really wasn't necessary. Properly put away all the stuff in your box, but consider chucking or donating anything you didn't know you didn't need.
Finally, the filing cabinet
As our commenters have noted, the filing cabinet is like the hard drive that can keep your short-term memory—your brain and your desktop—from having to hold onto stuff that's not necessary at the moment. A good filing system is partially a personal preference, but setting up all those tabs and remembering to put your stuff back ain't easy. Luckily, we've run down the science of sliding folders more than once. Here's some tips on how to:
- Stage an Extreme Makeover, Filing Cabinet Edition: For tips on why a filing cabinet should only be 75% full, and why you should bite the nerd bullet and get a label maker.
- Make a table of contents for your files: Because actually seeing that there's a folder for that receipt you're holding is a lot more effective than hoping you don't toss it in a frenzied clean-up.
- Hack your bill archives with letterhead: Use all that money corporates have spent on embedding their logos in your head to good quick-filing use.
- Fight sliding folders with binder clips: Because feeling like you might tip out a mountain of paper on every pull is a good way to keep your desk cluttered.
Your system
This is just one of a number of decluttering projects I plan to undertake, so I'll be testing what works and what doesn't, and posting picture proof, soon enough. But let's hear from our veteran readers and clean-deskers: What's your system for keeping yourself from letting things go? What do you do differently that your more messy-minded colleagues obviously don't? Tell us your take in the comments.

Comments (AU Comments · US Comments)
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SonicJ
Posted 10:29 PM 9/10/08
I like that file cabi idea. Perhaps I might check my walmart later on today to see if I can findan affordable option.
SonicJ
Cripesonfriday
Posted 10:18 PM 9/10/08
I use some of these tips and my desk is always clear by 5 before I go but at about 11 the next morning my desk always looks as though the Mongol hordes have swept through.
I then clear the desk into a couple of piles of papers, file what's been done and keep the rest for dealing with through the rest of the day.
I see different people throughout the day and some have never seen my desk surface for all the crap and others have never seen a scrap of paper on it.I am a neat freak to the afternoon shift and a slob in the morning
Cripesonfriday
MightyJoe36
Posted 10:58 PM 9/10/08
Keeping your desk free of clutter is very simple - when you are finished with something, put it back where you got it from. Yeah, I know everybody is too busy, working on multiple projects, multi-tasking, etc., but really, who can honestly say that they are too busy to put a file folder back in a drawer, or a binder back on a shelf, or throw a fast food wrapper in a trash can that's literally right at your feet?
Okay, I admit I tend to be a little bit anal when it comes to clutter (I'm borderline OCD). Before I started working from home, I used to get kidded all the time about how neat my cube was. Some people actually joked that I musn't be doing any work because my cube was so neat. I know it was a joke, but I really do think that there was some truth in it. I think some people keep their work areas cluttered on purpose so they can project an image of a hard-working, multi-tasking employee.
Anyway, now that I have a home office, that's how I keep it neat. When I'm finished with something, I put it back where it belongs. Before I finish work at the end of the day, I put everything away, and set up my work for the next day.
MightyJoe36
SigmundTheSeaMonster
Posted 10:38 PM 9/10/08
If you have a laserprinter, get some Avery File Folder labels and use those for folder labels. I save a file and just update the year for each category.
You should save paperwork for seven years. Best to purge to a storage/filing box and label it (Contents/Year). Ofcourse, you can determine what to keep, but if you consult or have your own business, seven years is what the accountant recommends. Shred after that (and use the shredding for packing material on ebay!).
But yes, I am victim to the Junk Drawer (more like drawers). cables, zip disks, floppies, numerous little adaptors, booklets, ... stuff I think I might need yet...never have. I have too much junk!
SigmundTheSeaMonster
battra92
Posted 11:00 PM 9/10/08
Well for one, I have banished paper bills at home. At work we have a Xerox machine that allows me to scan them to PDF quite quickly so instead of having a few bills and two paystubs a month, I just have some files on my PC (and backup drive) which are very easy to delete when their time is up.
My eventual goal is to have almost no printed paper whatsoever (save for really important things like tax info) but mostly I just "print to PDF" like was shown here on Lifehacker. :)
At work I have suggested a document retention system to eliminate the storage of years and years of paper documents which have to be incinerated every seven years.
battra92
getgreg
Posted 11:49 PM 9/10/08
I clear off a shelf on a nearby bookcase for a few magazine butlers to stash all the papers and junk that accumulates on my desk. It makes a huge difference.
Here's another tip that can really help people who accumulate a lot of paper/mail clutter: get a BIG trashcan. Most of the clutter and mess that accumulates is really garbage but without a proper place to put it, it just lingers...
getgreg
cgarduc
Posted 12:24 AM 10/10/08
"Just Shred It!"
cgarduc
RompeRatones
Posted 12:47 AM 10/10/08
A clean desktop is the sign of a cluttered mind!
RompeRatones
grgzfla
Posted 12:45 AM 10/10/08
I put an extra "inbox" container on my desk. As printed documents for my active projects get updated and revised, I remove the staples, paper clips and binder clips from the old ones (discard the staples, reuse the paper & binder clips), and place the old documents (which were printed single sided of course) face down in the container. This provides a plethora of scrap paper for notes-to-self, spontainious phone call notes, and other transitory information. When the container fills, the whole pile goes to the company shred & recycle bin (ironincally placed directly next to the large multifunction printer output trays).
grgzfla
Asian Angel
Posted 1:08 AM 10/10/08
I like to have a bookshelf nearby. This gives me a place to put any items I use or need:
1. Books
2. Magazines
3. Three ring binders with polyview inserts to hold all the various loose pages of printouts, articles, etc... that I want/need to keep (very easy to organize to keep "like items" together)
4. Small plastic storage boxes with lids for extra computer accessories that I am not using at the moment (great for keeping these items dust free)
I agree with keeping files in a file box/cabinet and having a decent sized trash can near. ^__^
Asian Angel
MuglyTheWorm
Posted 2:35 AM 10/10/08
i have glass and steel. i attached clear tubing along the back frame and painted the bottom side of the glass. my shelves are the same way. very few wires can be seen and the only thing that gets on my desk is dust
MuglyTheWorm
mac-phisto
Posted 2:58 AM 10/10/08
ugh. this aggravates the crap out of me. the worst offender at my "home office" is computer crap. i finally devoted the empty drawer in my nightstand to "computer-related stuff" - software, gadgets, power supplies for gadgets, usb cables, parallel cables, network cables, etc., etc. now that drawer has become almost unmanageable (i have to tear thru it to find anything remotely computer-related), but at least it's off my desk & centrally located.
now, if only i could find a solution to the colony of empty coffee mugs. perhaps we could get a feature article on under-desk dishwasher installation?
mac-phisto
Rick Lobrecht
Posted 5:01 AM 10/10/08
@SigmundTheSeaMonster:
Do not use your business shredding for packing materials. I saw a post recently about a guy who was able to pull entire account numbers from shredded paper which was used as packing materials.
I put my shredding in the compost pile. I've also heard the recommendation that it should be dumped in with the used kitty litter.
Rick Lobrecht
orky56
Posted 5:33 AM 10/10/08
@grgzfla: that's a very efficient, sustainable system!
orky56
emren
Posted 5:15 AM 10/10/08
This post prompted me to clean my office, finally get out some boxes that have been sitting around waiting to be mailed and generally get more organized.
It also put me behind since I spent the day organizing...
Oh well.
emren
reverendskinner
Posted 5:05 AM 10/10/08
I like the idea of a "maybe box," kind of like putting an expiration date on the stuff I know I don't need but can't seem to get rid of.
The best thing I ever did for my home office was build my own desk. I made it out of pine from Menards, but you could just as easily modify an Ikea.
The idea was, I was going to build a desk that had a storage space for everything I needed to do my freelance work and hobbies. So, I built the desk with storage, cubbies, drawers, and little lift-up semi-secret areas. Then I emptied out all of my boxes, drawers, and one very stuffed closet of crap onto the living room floor.
Once everything I needed was in it's place in the new desk, there was only one thing to do with everything left on the floor: Have A Sale!
I've still got a cluttered desk at my cube-farm, because clutter makes you look busy, important, and necessary where I work, and clean freaks tend to get laid off.
But, my home office is a sanctuary of cleanliness and order where things can finally get done in an efficient manner.
reverendskinner
qrius
Posted 2:57 PM 10/10/08
the stuff I hate the most is the pending, to do stuff. I want it around so that I can be reminded to get around to it, but man, stuff piles up!
qrius
kyle1852
Posted 4:37 PM 10/10/08
Great ideas! For me, a cleaner, simpler workspace means I can focus on the project better.
kyle1852
SirPwn4g3
Posted 11:00 PM 10/10/08
Actually instead of a workspace I have a gaming space. Bust most of these tips are exactly what we need... just have to dig the filing cabinet out of storage... and figure out how to get my wife to put stuff in it instead of just dropping it on the counter.
SirPwn4g3
grgzfla
Posted 3:42 AM 11/10/08
@RompeRatones: Hey! I resemble that remark. ;)
grgzfla