Best Of: What's Your Problem?... Systems
Description
This week we’re diving into one of my favourite topics: systems.
If quantity is the outer layer of the onion, systems are the next layer in. Maybe you’ve decluttered and reduced your possessions, but something still isn’t working. You look around and think, I’ve kept the right things… so why does my home still feel hard?
That’s a classic systems problem.
A systems problem shows up when items don’t have clear homes, when tidying feels complicated, or when things you genuinely need end up in piles on every flat surface. It’s not about too much stuff anymore — it’s about giving what you do have a simple, logical place to live.
The good news? Systems problems are fun to solve.
This is where organising comes in — not the Pinterest-perfect, colour-coded kind (unless that brings you joy), but the functional, sustainable kind that’s easy for your whole household to follow. When a system works, tidying stops feeling like a battle and starts feeling like… well, life just flowing.
I always come back to three organising foundations:
1. Like with like. Keep similar items together. It saves you time, brainpower, and frustration. No more chargers in eight different rooms.
2. Set limits. Containers — drawers, baskets, shelves — help you define “how much is enough.” Limits create boundaries that keep systems working over time.
3. A home for everything. If you can answer “Where does this belong?” you’ve solved 80% of your systems problem.
Once these are in place, your home becomes easier to use, easier to tidy, and easier to enjoy.
So if you’ve decluttered and you’re still feeling stuck, you’re likely in the systems stage. And that’s a beautiful place to be — because from here, everything starts to click.
Next week, we’ll talk about maintenance and how habits keep your space working long-term.
You may also like to listen to these episodes:
What's Your Problem?... Quantity
What's Your Problem?... Systems
What's Your Problem?... Habits
Join my community
- Leave a 5 Star Google Review
- Follow me on Instagram
- Follow me on Facebook
- Join my Facebook group
Thank you to my sound engineer, Jarred from Four4ty Studio
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.




