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Practical tips from our furniture specialists — the specs that matter, common buying mistakes, and what to look for before you order.
It takes five minutes to label drawers and shelves during setup and saves hours of searching later. Use consistent label categories across all storage units — especially if multiple people use the same storage system.
Any cabinet taller than 36" should be anchored to the wall with anti-tip hardware, especially if drawers can be fully extended. A fully loaded file cabinet can weigh 200+ lbs — a tip hazard that wall anchors prevent entirely.
Color-coding hanging folders or drawer labels dramatically reduces the time spent retrieving files. Most commercial file systems offer matching color accessories. Decide on your color scheme before filing begins.
Items accessed multiple times per day belong in open shelves or desktop organizers, not deep in a cabinet. Reserve closed-door cabinets for materials accessed weekly or less. Friction-free access to daily items reduces desk clutter.
HR files, financial documents, and any personally identifiable information should be stored in lockable cabinets. Most commercial file cabinets include a lock that secures all drawers simultaneously. Key the locks alike across your fleet for simpler key management.
Measure your existing file folders end-to-end (in inches) to determine how many linear filing inches you need. A standard letter-size file drawer provides approximately 25" of linear filing space. Divide your total by 25 to get the number of drawers needed.
Mobile pedestals on casters fit under most commercial desks and keep daily supplies and files within arm's reach without consuming additional floor area. They can be repositioned or removed when not needed.
Adjustable shelf pin systems allow you to reconfigure shelf heights as storage needs change. Fixed-shelf cabinets lock you into one configuration. In dynamic office environments, adjustable is almost always the right choice.
Store heavy binders, equipment, and dense materials on bottom shelves or lower drawers. Top-heavy storage units tip more easily and put more stress on upper shelf hardware. This is a basic but widely ignored organizational principle.
Steel cabinets can sweat condensation in high-humidity environments, potentially damaging paper files over time. In garages, warehouses, or humid basements, specify rust-resistant powder-coat finishes or consider stainless steel options.