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A Clutter-Free Desk = A More Effective
Workday
Anyone who has ever had to meet a deadline head-on knows the
feeling of dread that can creep in slowly but consistently. The
closer the deadline looms, the more focused you become on the
task at hand, and the more focused you are on this task, the
more the attention to other things goes out the window. Before
you know it, your desk is cluttered with a multitude of mail
(both read and unread), dirty dishes, files, post-it notes,
reminders, phone messages, and a rather large assortment of
other odds and ends. Yes, you have clutter! As easy as it is to
accumulate clutter, it is an almost Draconian task to get rid
of it, yet it is possible! A few simple steps will permit you
to work in a clutter-free environment with information at your
fingertips, not in a mess of other papers.
Movable Storage
While you might have bought into the notion that it would be
handy to have all the information on your desk ready to go,
before you know it, the sheer volume of paper and printouts is
threatening to drown you. It is next to impossible to find
anything on your desk at all. Is there a compromise? Well, yes
there is! Your local office supply store will have a wide array
of movable filing solutions. There are cardboard file boxes
that can be put together at a moment's notice. More durable
solutions are the plastic file containers that come in many
shapes and sizes. Another possibility is the roll-away file
caddy that will house all your project files while you need
them close by. Whatever you decide, it is imperative that you
resist the temptation of housing your projects files and
folders on your desk.
Beware the Trap of Over-scheduling!
While focus on one project may be to blame for the accumulation
of some clutter, other accumulations may be blamed on spreading
your self too thin for comfort. Granted, today's work
environment is fast-paced and demands that you multi-task and
go in many different directions at the same time. Nonetheless,
a cluttered desk is oftentimes a good indication that you have
too much going on at the same time. Perhaps you have not taken
full advantage of the possibilities of delegating some of your
responsibilities? Maybe you could reschedule some of the
projects you have taken on so you may finish up with
others?
Beef up on Communication, Delegation, and Management
Style
A cluttered desk is also a sign of poor management skills.
Believe it or not, the sign of a capable manager is one who
will entrust important tasks to others. This presupposes that
you have a team of workers who are capable of handling the
responsibilities you may wish to entrust to them, but in the
long run it will free your desk from much of the clutter that
is currently making it look somewhat unprofessional.
Don't shrug it off
Many an owner of a cluttered desk will eye it with frustration
and eventually resignation, adopting the false belief that the
clutter is just part of who you are, and there is not way out
of this mess. Nothing could be further from the truth! A
cluttered desk is nothing more than a symptom that will
disappear once the root cause has been identified and dealt
with. For example, once you become comfortable with your
coworkers and learn to delegate responsibilities to the extent
that your job description permits, you will find that big
chunks of clutter will be gone. Similarly, when you refuse to
keep every file on the top of your desk and instead use a
movable storage system, you will soon find that only materials
you are currently working on will actually take up your
valuable space.
It is obvious that clutter will not disappear by itself. The
biggest challenge in combating it lies not with the actual
moving of files from left to right and back again, but instead
with the changing of procedures. Again, clutter is merely a
symptom. You may have some short term success in eradicating
it, but unless you deal with the underlying issues, it will
come back.
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