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The Noguchi Filing System is for keeping track of physical paper. I keep paper in envelopes on a shelf and new envelope go on the right (or on the left if you live in Japan) and if I use an envelope, it goes on the right as if it were new. Linux nerds can think of this as sorting the envelopes by atime. Envelopes always must have a date along the spine and a word or sentence describing whatâs in âem. Optionally they can have a color, using markers or stickers. Noguchi even cut them off one inch so that the a4 documents in there stick up a bit.
I use the Noguchi filing system and have for decades and tonight I needed to find a contract from 11 years ago and I managed to find it pretty quickly, next to break-upâletters and roller derby team rosters and tickets and old gadget manuals. đ¤ˇđťââď¸
Iâve got to say, I did flinch when putting it at the top of the stack instead of putting it back with the other December 2011 era papers. But I trust the system, itâs been good so far, soâŚ
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I personally do use one envelope per document rather than the buckets variant (each envelope represents a topic, like a folder) that Forster briefly promoted. This is much better for me, since I donât have to dig up something old just to file something new. Some documents are many pages, itâs not one envelope per page, but separate (although related) documents go in separate envelopes. For example, back in the day before publishers allowed digital submissions, one draft of a novel would be like hundreds of sheets, all crammed into one envelope. Separate drafts of the same novel went into separate envelopes even though theyâre rhe same âtopicâ.
Iâve got to add, please donât let me convince you to use the Noguchi filing system if you have doubts. Iâve loved it for years and itâs worked exactly as intended and itâs a perfect fit for me and for how my brain works (Iâm more likely to remember temporal context than a name, I wouldâve been like âis it C for contracts, H for housing, A for apartment, B for broker, S for the sellerâs signature, F for the floor, X for the spot I live inâ etc.
Similarly, I keep folders in the computer sorted by mtime, not by name.
I just have a huge and clear preference for that way of working but if youâre on the fence, I donât wanna be responsible for if five years down the line youâre looking for a file and cursing because you feel I talked you into a filing system that wasnât your bag.
One problem with the NFS is that itâs difficult to apply it to an existing collection of paper. For the first year getting organized, I used an aâz filling system and when I wanted to switch to Noguchiâs method, I had one yearâs worth of paper that I didnât know how to sort. I was like: I wish I had used Noguchiâs system from the start and if I then wouldâve wanted to move that into alpha, I could. But now itâs been fifteen years of NFS and I donât have a lot of the junk from that one first yearđ¤ˇđťââď¸
But in your case you might have several months of paper, are they all gonna get the same date?
Small might be why it works for me. Mine is only one foot wide (that currently is enough for a decade and a half). When it gets full, I grab the rarely-used end which by then is crystal clear to sort between junk and long-term-storage. (A decision which isnât as easy to make on the front end.)
I also never put actionable, âTODOâ type stuff in there. Only âthis might come in handyâ stuff.
I also have another hack that helps keep papers few.
Outside of my NFS, on the other side of the apt actually, I have two trays (well, I have two more but theyâre for other stuff). Stuff only goes in them if Iâm OK with throwing it directly into the trash. Paid bills are a good example.
Once the top tray is full (which usually takes about a year), I take the bottom tray and throw it in the trash, then I rotate the trays so the bottom is full and the top is empty. This way, I always have access to at least one yearâs worth of paper trash. In case a bill is disputed. It takes zero time (unless I need to find something, which almost never happens, and even then itâs time-sorted for me), itâs just literally a flat trash basket.
It makes me less prone to over-filing and hoarding.
The other two trays are one for stuff I know is on my calendar, like upcoming tickets (i.e. not really reference material), and the topmost of the four trays is an inbox, used as per GTD. Iâm bad at keeping it clear, unlike my digital inbox which is squeaky clean.
Over the years, Iâve seen many people compare the Noguchi filing system to a stack, a pile on a messy desk or even papers in a huge barrel.
I first saw this comparison in the book A Perfect Mess by Abrahamson and Freedman, where they write:
If something seems vaguely familiar about the [NFS] arrangement, perhaps itâs this: Turn the row of envelopes so that the envelopes are stacked vertically instead of horizontally, place the stack on your desktop, and get rid of the envelopes. Now youâve got an ordinary pile of papers of the sort that youâd find on any messy desk, where the most recent and most used items tend to end up at the top. So the next time someone tells you your pile-covered desk is messy, you can point out that itâs just hyper-organized.
This made me chuckle, as it reminded me of a professor at my old university. He was a clever chap, naturally, but I never approved of his sense of organization. He had a huge stack of papers on his desk. It led me to joke that he didnât file things alphabetically, but by centimeters from the bottom.
OK, so, in all seriousness, I believe there is some merit to this jokey comparison.
Stacks might work for some people, the same way the NFS has worked for me since 2007.
My two-tray âwastebasket cacheâ as outlined above is essentially a stack, too.
And if people are using stacks and piles, thatâs a good thing. Itâs not that Iâd benefit from people rushing out and getting envelopes and folders if they donât wanna. Save the Earth!
But so often when we hear these stories about a messy, absent-minded genius who has stacks and piles and barrels and clothespins and racks and cans, but still manages to be brilliant and get work done, itâs from the outside. Scoffingly and admiringly at the same time. Itâs rare we get to hear how their âsystemâ actually works.
So in that spirit, here are three ways to make your stack better (i.e. turn it into an NFS). Best (most impact) advice first, but you can mix and match.
Part of what makes this work is that I know that itâs in there. When I had to find that contract, I was sighing and groaning because I didnât wanna go delving in there, but I wasnât scared. I knew it was in there (and I did manage to find it pretty quickly). Itâs optimized for putting things in there without thinking (youâre talking to Miss Decision Fatigue over here) so do it. A stack where you know there are treasures is a precious thing.
Even with a vertical stack, you can do the NFS sifting thing of putting stuff on top, and then when you replace something from further down below, put it on the top instead of where it was. This has the con of breaking your temporal association, but these pros:
(Also youâre gonna feel better because you Have A Consistent System and not just a mess. This pro is kind of illusory but itâs a nice bonus.)
The envelopes, which have a date and a name (and sometimes a color dot) arenât just for show (although they do look a liâl neater). Itâs metadata and sometimes itâs easier to find something by seeing the date and/or name than to leaf through a huge pile of paper. I remembered the year of the contract which made it easier to find, and, I only had to read through one sentence per envelope, not stare at page after page of small print text trying to figure out what each one was. Itâs like looking at filenames as opposed to lessing through a whole cat of files. (This is also sometimes bad, though, because sometimes you do give it a dumb name and you donât remember when itâs from.)
Also, sometimes documents come in all kinds of shapes and colors, or are multipage folders or printouts or leaflets. That can make ordering difficult.
The envelopes are great to leaf through compared to a bunch of cut-inducing paper.
This liâl section has defended stacks, but Iâm actually happy that my NFS is in a horizontal shelf and not in a stack in a barrel or box or drawer. I can flip through it from the side as opposed to lifting every item one by one. A kinda minor benefit but nice none-the-less.
I always say that the Noguchi Filing System has a tradeoff of making files slightly harder to retrieve but a lot easier to file, and for someone who hardly ever retrieves files but keep resisting filing because of the friction and boredom, itâs worth it, and it becomes a thousand times more worth it since itâs easier to cull old dead useless files which is very difficult and cumbersome to do in an A-Z system but trivial in a Noguchi system.
I might wanna revise that âtradeoffâ philosophy because today I needed to find a file that in an A-Z I would have no idea where to even begin to look because I had no idea what I wouldâve named it. It was just so odd and weird. I wouldâve have to look through every folder. But with the Noguchi filing system I found it instantly because I knew when it had to be from.
I guess Iâm more of a temporal thinker than a verbal one (as yâall can see how I struggle with the English language).
Also on Unix when I have no idea what a file is named or what its greppable contents are, I can be âbut I worked on this other, known file at around the same timeâ and sort by time stamps (ls -rt |less) and search for the known file and look near there and that way find the weirdly-named file. Works great.