L5 Part 1 - File Structure in EDM (EDM101)
L5 Part 1 - File Structure in EDM (EDM101)
collection of operations for accessing the data. It enables applications to read, write, and modify
data. File structures may also help to find the data that matches certain criteria
With disorganized files, finding anything specific can be like finding a needle in
a haystack. A haystack that you have to keep coming back to day after day.
The most effective folders structures are easy to use, so everyone can
intuitively find the files they’re looking for. If it’s too complicated, it will become
a chore to organize, and no one will want to do it.
Keep in mind that a good file structure should work for everyone in your
organization, not just you. Other people may not search for a file the way you
do, and you don’t want to frustrate everyone else in your company.
Your ultimate goal is to create a logical hierarchy that gives every file a home,
making things easy to find and impossible to lose.
Here are a few tips and best practices to help you do this:
Second, your IT people back up servers and network drives; they DON’T
typically back up everyone’s personal computer. So if you save that critical
proposal on your hard drive and your computer crashes, you’ll be out of luck.
3. Group by category
One of the most effective ways to organize your files is by category. Again,
think of the grocery store. Foods are organized into sections like produce,
dairy, packaged foods, etc. The trick is figuring out exactly what categories to
use that make sense for your business’s size, industry or how it’s organized.
Subfolders help create logical groups within your larger categories. For
example, within a client folder, you might have separate subfolder for each
project. Then within the project, you may have further subfolders for
correspondence and contracts.
Of course, you don’t want to go overboard, but most people tend to suffer
from too few subfolders, not too many. If you find yourself dumping 50+ files in
a single folder, you might want to add a subfolder. If you only have a handful
of files, you probably don’t need one.
Save work in progress or any revisions along the way in the Draft folder.
Then use the Archive folder to store old materials for reference, like notes,
research, scrapped ideas, etc.
Be concise; some software doesn’t work well with long file names
Use descriptive information
For dates, use a YYYYMMDD or YYMMDD format, so dates stay in
chronological order
Use sequential numbering (01, 02, etc instead of 1, 2, etc)
Avoid special characters (like ~ ! @ # $ %, etc)
Use underscores (file_name) or dashes (file-name) instead of spaces (file
name)
8. Create folder templates
Once you’ve designed your folder structure, create empty folders as a
template so you can keep it consistent.
For example, if you organize your files based on client name, you’ll probably
want to use the same file structure over and over again for each client.
Create template folders that you can copy and
paste to keep your structure consistent.
9. Use shortcuts
Ideally, your folder structure should create a single “home” for each file. But
sometimes there’s overlap and it’s hard to figure out where a file should go.
Rather than duplicating the file, create a shortcut. You can then move that
shortcut to another location, but your original file stays in the same place. That
way, you avoid the danger of having different versions of the same file.
11. Stick to it
No folder structure or file organization system is going to be perfect. But in
order to be effective, you have to use it all the time, every time. Don’t save
everything to your desktop or My Documents and tell yourself “I’ll move it
later.” Otherwise, the only thing you’ll end up with is a half-finished
organizational system.