6 Tips for an Organised Office

posted in: Design
Office desk with communications hardware.

A well organised office environment and desk is part of being efficient with your time and performing to your potential.

  • Efficiency is important whether you are a corporate-office worker, home-based worker, teacher or online student.
  • Smart organisation saves time and helps with staying on top of essential tasks.
  • It improves work speed while reducing the potential for mistakes, such as missing deadlines or losing important documents.

Tips for a Clean Office Space

When setting up an office for the first time or remodeling your existing office, the goal is to create a clean, spacious environment.

Your office will be constantly under assault from mess and clutter. So it is important to establish an office that is clean and has plenty of space for work and storage. Whatever enters the work space should eventually find a home or be removed.

Here are 6 tips on how to set up your office for maximum efficiency—so you have more time for work and study.

Tip 1: Start from scratch

Office organiser tip 1 for online study: start completely from scratch and only add things to the office if and when you need them.

How far you take this approach is up to you, but it is a sure-fire way of creating a clean space. And only buy storage items after you’ve done this.

Take everything out of your office (if already have one) and put the items in storage. Then only add to the office environment things that you find yourself needing or wanting to use.

The start-from-scratch approach guarantees your office is de-cluttered. It also means you don’t have to remodel or set your office up all at once—it can be done gradually.

Tip 2: Left to right and up to down organisation

Organise your distance education paper documents so the most used ones are easy to reach.

After cutting down your office stuff to the essentials, you need to decide where to keep them. Where you put things is important—you want quick access to the things you reach for the most.

If you use a lot of paper, give your desk a left-to-right work flow. Work comes in on the left, gets processed in the middle and goes out on the right. That way, your desk is clear for whatever comes along next.

Organise your desk drawers by importance. The things you use most often go in the closest drawer, everything else goes  further away. For below-desk drawers, this means going from up to down.

Tip 3: Grow your space and storage

Get organised for a distance education course by adding bookcase storage to your student office.

If you really have too many useful things to fit on your desk, a solution is to enlarge your workspace (or at least add some extra storage).

There are a few tricks available beyond getting a new desk or moving to a bigger room. Think vertically to increase your storage space in a small room, such as by adding a tall bookcase. Make use of the space under your desk. Use every bit of space to your advantage—as long as it’s organised, you’ll be better off.

Tip 4: A place for everything and everything in its place

Studying online should be distraction free, with everything organised and course materials put away when not in use.

Everything in your office should have a “home”—the place where it resides when your workspace is clean.

If things don’t have a home, your desk becomes a home for everything. For some reason, bare counters, desks and tables just beg for things to be placed on them.

A handy rule-of-thumb for keeping things clean is known as the breadbox test. If it’s smaller than a breadbox, hide it away in a drawer or box. Each storage container should also have a theme so you know exactly where to find things.

Tip 5: Be fast and calculating

A good office organiser is fast and pragmatic. That is how you save time and put more effort into work or distance learning.

Good office organisation is about speed and efficiency. The goal is to maximise time spent on core work and study tasks.

Just as it is counter-productive to have a disorganised, messy office, it’s a waste of time to put hours and hours into office organisation. So you need to make quick, pragmatic decisions.

The best time to get really organised is when you have time off or early in the academic year. You can set things up well and develop good methods for staying organised. When things are busy, you’ll then be able to concentrate on priority tasks.

Tip 6: Shut down and clear off

When you finish studying, make clearing the desk part of your log off routine.

If you finish each day with a clean office or desk, it also means you start every day with a clean office.

A great habit is to do a little tidy up at the end of each session of work, study or managing a class. It avoids a situation where mess builds up and becomes something you start putting off.

For people working and/or studying from home, it also helps separate work and study life—there is a clearer division between work/study and personal time.

One way of making tidying up a habit is to include it in your computer power-down routine. Start clearing and tidying your desk straight after clicking for your computer to shut down.

  1. Freddie Edwards
    | Reply

    “Shut down and clear off.” This may be the most difficult thing to do because it requires discipline and extra energy. Who isn’t ready to go home after a long day? As you mention, it’s easy for things to pile up and the next thing you know, you have a big mess on your hands. It’s unprofessional looking and it’s not good mentally. I try and give myself 10 minutes to clean up and unwind. It helps me end my day, even if I’m tired.

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