Get All Access for $5/mo

Messy Office? 7 Ways to Spruce Up Your Startup When it comes to plowing as much time into your startup as possible, keeping your desk clean and organized can do wonders.

By Matthew Toren

All Things Anderson Cooper

How much time do you spend looking for something every day? It could be as simple as a stapler or as important as a client contract. No matter what, you're wasting time and effort that could go to growing your startup.

What's more, if your office is mess, consider what that says about you: Would you rather be giving off the impression of someone in control or overwhelmed? You may feel that you just don't have time to stop and organize your space, but the cost of not organizing is high and increases as your business gets more complex.

Here are seven steps to turn your office into a functional and efficient space in just one afternoon:

1. Free up at least four hours. This means no phone calls, no email and no meetings. Shut your office door and make sure everyone knows to leave you alone unless blood or money in the six-figure range is involved. You need to stay focused and multitasking is the enemy of organization.

Related: 5 Simple Ways to Be Healthier and More Productive Without Leaving Your Desk

2. Remove everything that doesn't belong in your office. Oh, there's plenty of stuff if you really look. Copies of Sports Illustrated -- unless you publish a magazine or sell sports equipment -- snacks, aspirin, last week's take-out boxes, and personal bills or other correspondence do not belong in your place of business. If you must have these things close by, assign a file or desk drawer for them and get them out of sight. These things are a distraction and will get in the way of your productivity.

3. Make a pile. Gather up all of the projects, letters or other materials that you have to deal with soon.

4. Gather supplies. Determine the office supplies and file categories that you use at least once a day. Place them all in one spot in your office.

5. Divide and conquer. Separate out those things you only use once or twice a week. Find another location to collect them.

Related: 8 Tips for Finding Focus and Nixing Distractions

6. Start relocating. Corral those items you need once a month or less. Open your office door and place them on the floor outside. If you need something once a month or less, it shouldn't be taking up space in your office. Set up a spot in a nearby storage room or file cabinet and put them there.

7. Leftovers? You can be pretty sure that there will still be things left after you finish this sorting. Take the time to determine if the leftovers fit into any of these categories. If not, create a miscellaneous pile -- but it had better be small!

Once you've gathered and sorted, here's what to do: Time and space efficiency experts recommend that anything you use daily should be in easy reach without getting up from behind your desk. Place any everyday office items on or in your desk. This also means that active files should be at hand. If you don't have file drawers in your desk, how about picking up one of those rolling file carts? They're handy, inexpensive and hold quite a bit.

Related: 5 Ways Start-up Founders Can Eat Healthy on the Cheap

Now here's the key to making files really work for you: Only have active files in reach. When you finish with a project, complete a client contract or meet a deadline, pull everything together and move the file to a less active location. This way the only files on hand will be the ones you're dealing with at the moment, which makes it much easier to find and file current papers.

Files or supplies you need a few times a week should be in your office but not immediately at hand or they get in the way every day. Less-used tools and files should be out of sight and reach most of the time.

Want to avoid having to spruce up again in the future? Build an uninterrupted half hour into every day or, at the least, an hour a week to handle those tasks. With effort and a little luck, you can get them off your desk and onto someone else's. After all a desk -- and office -- that's under control leads to a more efficient you.

What other office-efficiency tips would you suggest? Leave a comment and let us know.

Matthew Toren

Serial Entrepreneur, Mentor and co-founder of YoungEntrepreneur.com

Matthew Toren is a serial entrepreneur, mentor, investor and co-founder of YoungEntrepreneur.com. He is co-author, with his brother Adam, of Kidpreneurs and Small Business, BIG Vision: Lessons on How to Dominate Your Market from Self-Made Entrepreneurs Who Did it Right (Wiley). He's based in Vancouver, B.C.

Want to be an Entrepreneur Leadership Network contributor? Apply now to join.

Editor's Pick

Branding

ChatGPT is Becoming More Human-Like. Here's How The Tool is Getting Smarter at Replicating Your Voice, Brand and Personality.

AI can be instrumental in building your brand and boosting awareness, but the right approach is critical. A custom GPT delivers tailored collateral based on your ethos, personality and unique positioning factors.

Business News

Apple Reportedly Isn't Paying OpenAI to Use ChatGPT in iPhones

The next big iPhone update brings ChatGPT directly to Apple devices.

Business News

Is the AI Industry Consolidating? Hugging Face CEO Says More AI Entrepreneurs Are Looking to Be Acquired

Clément Delangue, the CEO of Hugging Face, a $4.5 billion startup, says he gets at least 10 acquisition requests a week and it's "increased quite a lot."

Business News

You Can Now Apply to Renew Your U.S. Passport Online — But There's a Catch

The U.S. State Department officially launched the beta program this week.

Business News

Sony Pictures Entertainment Purchases Struggling, Cult-Favorite Movie Theater Chain

Alamo Drafthouse originally emerged from bankruptcy in June 2021.

Growing a Business

He Immigrated to the U.S. and Got a Job at McDonald's — Then His Aversion to Being 'Too Comfortable' Led to a Fast-Growing Company That's Hard to Miss

Voyo Popovic launched his moving and storage company in 2018 — and he's been innovating in the industry ever since.