We all run into people from time to time who work with a messy desk and
messy work environment. They have stuff piled up here and there, on the floor,
on the shelves, and even on a table behind their desk. (They have to buy
furniture to put this stuff on!)
And whenever you try to encourage that person to clean up their messy
work area, do they get defensive! They have snappy retorts like, “A messy desk
is the sign of an organized mind.” Or, “This is my external filing system.” And
if you really push them they will almost always tell you, “But I know where
everything is!”
“Out of sight; out of mind,” the
old saying goes and the reverse of that is just as powerful. When it’s in
sight; it’s in mind and most cannot help but be distracted by what is before
them. “I know I should be working on this report, but let me just go through
this junk mail real quick.” A messy desk can easily lead to lost items and
missed deadlines. It is time consuming too, going through the same pile of
stuff day after day.
Some studies suggest that as much
as 15% of your workweek can be consumed with a messy desk either by being
distracted by things that are in sight or by having to look for things.
I recommend you work with a clean
desk, a clean work environment. You don’t have to take me literally on this. I
typically work with two or three files before me, but as best as I can, I keep
the number of items before me to a minimum to keep my focus sharply on what
truly needs to be done.
If you have a bunch of stuff on
your desk it will be easy, just time consuming, to get your desk cleaned up.
Take each item, one at a time,
decide when you will likely get to it, put it on your to do list for that day
and then put that item away. For example, the first item on my desk is a
research project. I will be able to get to that next Tuesday. I will open up my
Day-Timer to next Tuesday and on Tuesday’s to do list I will add, “Do research
project.” I then file that item in a file for retrieval next Tuesday.
The next item in my pile is the
budget for the next quarter. I will get to work on that next Wednesday. I open
my Day-Timer to next Wednesday and on Wednesday’s to do list I add, “Work on
budget,” and then I file that item away for retrieval next Wednesday. I
continue this procedure until all the items have been scheduled on my to do
lists for the day I will tackle them and my desk is clean.
If you have a lot of items, it
may take you all day to clean up your messy desk but your investment will
provide you a clean desk that will permit you to have a better focus on what
you need to do.
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