Ask HN: working habits - minimalism or "organized" chaos?
A lot of people show-off their super tidy minimalist's workplace with nothing more than a monitor, keyboard and mouse.
But that doesn't seem to work in real life. At least for most of productive people that I know. When you really focus on work, everything around you fades out and the attention becomes too precious to be wasted on organizing environment.
So what works better for you?
12 comments
[ 0.20 ms ] story [ 68.5 ms ] threadWorks for me.
Doesn't matter if people have organized desks or chaotic desks. Doesn't matter if they have a minimalistic desk or a cluttered one. Just follow one rule: shut down everything before you leave for the day.
At the end of the day, everything should be in its proper place. You can't have 3 folders open on your desk - they have to be closed and put in its place on the shelf.
That one rule gave a tremendous boost to employee productivity.
Reference books on top drawer. At the end of the day cups go to sink, notebook and book go back to their respective places.
Most important for productivity separate machines(laptop for browsing/email/IM, desktop for work) for separate tasks and starting work at a proper(quiet) time.
I have always found that if i can get the above right i have a good day.
And I think that is where the biggest productivity boost comes from, not having to hunt around from files but to have stuff in its place.
If you messed up my desk it would take me 20 minutes to recover, if you messed up my directory structure I'd probably be in custody 24 hours later :)
(Or I'd restore from the svn).
There was a New Yorker or similar article on this, some years ago, that addressed the enduring nature of paper in the electronic age. If I can find it, I'll post the URL.