Something about my brain helps me stay organized. I like things to have an assigned spot because I know where to look for them when I need them. A cluttered room turns my brain to mush and weighs me down. I can’t focus in a messy area, so it’s a good thing I have a private home office space where I spend most of my day and kids’ stuff aren’t welcome. (Kids and spouse, however, are always welcome.) My house isn’t cluttered, but it doesn’t take much to make me squirm.
I’m the same way about my computer, its folders, its screen space. My filing system hasn’t changed much from the first time I settled on one.
Desktop
While modern versions of Windows do a better job of using a similar system and helping you save files to the Documents-type folders, some apps continue to post files wherever they like or in its own folders under Application Data. Some web browsers send downloads to the Desktop, which eventually clutters it.
My Desktop currently has two columns of icons and I make sure it stays that way as the Desktop has only frequently used apps that don’t start without my help. For example, I don’t need the anti-virus app on the desktop because it always runs. I also don’t need Adobe Acrobat on the Desktop because I rarely start the program. When I do, accessing it from the Start menu is fine. Usually, I click on a PDF file and that loads Acrobat. I use shortcut keys to run Word, Excel and other frequently accessed apps. Those don’t appear on the Desktop.
Yes, I use all methods for opening apps and files. Start, Desktop, Quick Launch, shortcuts. Everything has its place and I try to avoid having duplicates such as Word on the Desktop, Start and Quick Launch. It appears in none because I use a keyboard shortcut.
Three Rules for Writing Work Documents
Folder System
The folder system looks like this:
Documents
Some people opt to do it the following way and it works. I had already created my system before this setup came about.
Library
I rarely use the search feature to find files. Yes, it takes a few clicks through folders and subfolders to get to the document I need, but I find them quickly. Without those subfolders, I’d be looking at a long list of hundreds of files.
How do you organize your many files?
Copyright secured by Digiprove © 2011 Meryl Evans
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2 comments
You probably know, but you can also “Right Click” on a file, and click “Summary”, and add title, subject, author categories and keywords to a document. Then when you search, you can click “search anywhere in the file” and it will grab those properties too.
http://www.jegsworks.com/Lessons/words/report/step-fileproperties.htm
Bill, thanks for an important note so others know about it! I rarely use this as I could easily get sucked in trying to do this for all files. That’s why I work hard with file naming, folder naming and organization.
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