How can I stop being overwhelmed by paperwork?
If left unchecked paperwork can have a nasty habit of accumulating. Bills and letters arrive to be opened and then chucked on top of the desk. Before long you are left with an unruly pile. Not only does this cost you valuable time when you need to get your hands on an important document, but it adds unneccessary stress to your day. Spending some time in planning and putting a system for filing your paperwork in place will reap dividends in the long run.
Organising your work area
Here are three simple steps to manage your paperwork and ensure your workspace stays clutter-free.
Getting prepared
Before you start it will help to have the following to hand: sticky notes/labels, files, bin bags and a paper shredder. Clear some space and decide how much time you are prepared to spend on this per day. Depending on how much paperwork you have to go through, sorting through it all could take up a few hours of your time.
Firstly you’ll need to understand what you need to keep.
This can be broken down into two categories: paperwork that requires action (bills that require settling, forms to be completed, etc) and paperwork you need to keep (tax returns, insurance paperwork, bank statements, receipts, payroll, etc).
Sort your paperwork into named piles, for example: Read, Action, File, Bin.
As you start to work through the pile, remove the obvious items that can be discarded – i.e junk mail – and set this aside in your Bin pile for shredding.
Now you are ready to work through what’s left.
Sorting, labelling and filing
Work through the paperwork – it may help to label each piece as you go through, eg file/tax, action/invoice etc – and group each piece into its relevant pile. Once you have worked through your paperwork, you may decide to break your piles down further, by year for example.
The next step is to start creating folders or wallets to store your paperwork. If you don’t have a filing cabinet, an archive box or expanding file will work just as well – the main thing here is to ensure your files are labelled clearly and paperwork can be filed and accessed easily.
Whatever filing method you choose (filing by document type or date/month etc) it’s worth getting into the habit of using clear, consistent labelling from the start and to create separate sections in your filing cabinet. For example, your bank and HMRC letters would be filed in separate sections.
Staying on top of your paperwork
Depending on how much you have to file, avoid overstuffing (and causing further annoyance in filing and retrieving documents) by only storing paperwork relevant to the current year in your cabinet. Paperwork from previous years can then be placed in a storage box, clearly labelled by month and/or year.
Alternatively, scan and store paperwork on your PC, or make use of cloud storage or a file hosting service like Dropbox. This will cut down on what you need to physically archive and can be easily located if needed.
With your filing system in place, set aside time each week to deal with your paperwork.
Try handling paper only once by reading, actioning, filing or shredding.
Once you start to stay on top of your paperwork, this process will become part of your weekly routine and will seem like less of a chore to work through.