A cluttered Drive is just a cluttered desk that lives in the cloud. K12 Montana works with school staff across Montana on Google Drive setup, and the most common issue we see isn't a technical one - it's that nobody set up any structure to begin with. The good news: a few simple habits can keep your Google Drive organized all year long without a lot of maintenance.
Before uploading anything, create a top-level folder for each major area of your work. For a teacher, this might be: Curriculum, Student Work, Parent Communications, Professional Development, and Administrative. For office staff: Finance, HR, Correspondence, and Policies.
You don't need to be exhaustive - start simple and add folders as you actually need them.
Consistent file names make searching dramatically easier. Something like "2025-26 Budget Proposal DRAFT" is much more findable than "budget final FINAL v3." Leading with the year is especially helpful for school documents that repeat annually.
Right-click any folder in Drive and choose Change color. Use color strategically - maybe red for urgent or active projects, green for completed and archived, blue for reference materials. It makes visual scanning much faster.
Right-click on any file or folder and select Add to Starred. Starred items appear in the left sidebar under Starred. Use this for the three to five things you're actively working on and need to get to quickly.
Don't rely entirely on folder structure. Google Drive's search is excellent. Type a keyword, a person's name, or a document type, and it'll find what you need fast. You can also use the dropdown in the search bar to filter by file type, owner, or date.
At the end of each school year, create an "Archive" folder with the year in the name and move completed year's folders into it. This keeps your active Drive clean without losing anything.
Need help getting your school's Google Drive organized at the district level? K12 Montana Inc. can help build Drive structures that work for your whole team. Contact us to get started.