
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Send us a text
The file you need is somewhere on the shared drive, but every folder looks like a trap and every “final” is a lie. We’ve all lived that moment before a meeting when confidence turns into a scavenger hunt through New, Old, Use This One and a graveyard of final_v3_real_this_time.xlsx. Today we lean into the chaos, then carve a clear path out with simple rules that make teams faster and calmer.
We start with the version hunt and why shared drives fail us: no standards, duplicate “reports” folders, and names that hide meaning. From there, we share five habits that fix most of the pain. Keep naming consistent and human-readable so anyone can scan a list and guess right. Add dates to every file to make the latest version obvious without opening it. Build a single, predictable structure per project so reports don’t scatter. Back up before you tidy, and test recovery so your first restore isn’t during a crisis. Finally, ask before deleting; two minutes of context beats two hundred missing files.
Midway, we tell the Great Folder Cleanup Catastrophe. A brave admin reorganised over a weekend, broke shared links, skipped solid backups, and accidentally erased more than two hundred files. The lesson isn’t to fear change; it’s to pair change with governance. Announce the plan, freeze edits, snapshot the drive, move in batches, and keep a quarantine folder before permanent deletion. When the stakes include finance sheets, campaign archives, and board decks, safe process matters as much as neat folders.
We wrap with practical culture shifts: replace “final” with clear states like Draft, Review, and Approved; keep a one-page standard where people actually save files; and set an auto-backup that outlives staff changes. The goal is simple: fewer wrong versions, fewer frantic searches, and a shared drive that works under pressure. If your team has a cursed file name or a cleanup story that aged like milk, we want to hear it. Subscribe, share this with your most chaotic group chat at work, and leave a review with your best folder horror story—what naming rule would fix your team first?
Email: [email protected]
Instagram: @theadminlifepodcast
TikTok: @theadminlifepodcast
By Justin LawrenceSend us a text
The file you need is somewhere on the shared drive, but every folder looks like a trap and every “final” is a lie. We’ve all lived that moment before a meeting when confidence turns into a scavenger hunt through New, Old, Use This One and a graveyard of final_v3_real_this_time.xlsx. Today we lean into the chaos, then carve a clear path out with simple rules that make teams faster and calmer.
We start with the version hunt and why shared drives fail us: no standards, duplicate “reports” folders, and names that hide meaning. From there, we share five habits that fix most of the pain. Keep naming consistent and human-readable so anyone can scan a list and guess right. Add dates to every file to make the latest version obvious without opening it. Build a single, predictable structure per project so reports don’t scatter. Back up before you tidy, and test recovery so your first restore isn’t during a crisis. Finally, ask before deleting; two minutes of context beats two hundred missing files.
Midway, we tell the Great Folder Cleanup Catastrophe. A brave admin reorganised over a weekend, broke shared links, skipped solid backups, and accidentally erased more than two hundred files. The lesson isn’t to fear change; it’s to pair change with governance. Announce the plan, freeze edits, snapshot the drive, move in batches, and keep a quarantine folder before permanent deletion. When the stakes include finance sheets, campaign archives, and board decks, safe process matters as much as neat folders.
We wrap with practical culture shifts: replace “final” with clear states like Draft, Review, and Approved; keep a one-page standard where people actually save files; and set an auto-backup that outlives staff changes. The goal is simple: fewer wrong versions, fewer frantic searches, and a shared drive that works under pressure. If your team has a cursed file name or a cleanup story that aged like milk, we want to hear it. Subscribe, share this with your most chaotic group chat at work, and leave a review with your best folder horror story—what naming rule would fix your team first?
Email: [email protected]
Instagram: @theadminlifepodcast
TikTok: @theadminlifepodcast