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The Paper Tiger Blog contains great ideas on better ways to stay organized, clear your desk, reduce stress and spend less time managing information.

10 Tips for Encouraging Recycling in the Office

The article below is a great start to declutter your home or office and a plan for beginning and maintaining a recycling program for unwanted items.

For the paper files that you need to keep in hard copy format and other items, such as instruction booklets, or CDs, DVDs, Books, home or office inventory and many other physical items, use Paper Tiger Filing System Software for document management to get organized!

For the paper files that you plan to scan for a more paperless (or less paper) environment, use Google Docs as your digital file storage location. Google Docs is the lowest cost digital file storage system available through a Google or Gmail account. And Google Docs would be more convenient than storing your digital files on your hard drive which would take up valuable memory, or keeping up with CDs or Flashdrives.

In addition, Paper Tiger Online Basic and Pro plans have Digital Tiger functionality, which allows customers to connect their Paper Tiger Online account to their Google Docs account. Then they will be able to search from one place to find both their paper/physical items that they’ve indexed into Paper Tiger and their digital files that they’ve uploaded or created into Google Docs format.

Encourage Recycling in the Office

Recycling is the most important part of waste management for a home or office to prevent landfills from getting bigger and bigger. Reducing the collective carbon footprint is possible if each individual participates. Offices tend to be impersonal places where employees may not think about what they throw away. Recycling needs to be as easy as leaves to a tree, so that everyone will do it. Here are 10 tips for encouraging employees to recycle waste in an office.

  1. Make it a group effort: A group of employees can join together to make a team that helps educate other employees about recycling, and introduces ways to make it easy. Some people are more environmentally savvy than others, and there will be two or three in an office who take recycling seriously and would probably love to encourage others to recycle.
  2. Audit waste production: The team can first perform a waste audit to determine what kind of waste a particular office generates. Most offices have paper in the form of office paper, newspaper, magazines and cardboard. Also, aluminum cans, plastic bottles and containers and printer cartridges. Depending on the industry and type of business, there will be unique items. The team can set goals for the office to recycle 100% of their waste in a month or a year.
  3. Provide waste-specific recycling bins: The first thing an office needs is waste bins for different kinds of waste. Plastic, paper, metal and glass should be separated. This can be all-in-one units with each compartment clearly marked or separate bins clearly marked. There are even small desk size bins for paper and plastic. It doesn’t need to be complicated.
  4. Locate bins strategically: Separate bins can be placed close to where the waste is generated. Paper receptacles should be near copiers, fax machines and printers. Bins for food containers such as glass, plastic and metal should be in break rooms or cafeterias. Bins for cardboard should be in shipping rooms.
  5. Create a cohesive policy on paper usage: Paper is approximately 40% of waste in most offices. The company should also buy recycled paper for printing. Always use both sides of a sheet of paper. Either print on both sides or use one side for handwritten notes. When the piece of paper is used up, put it in a receptacle only for paper. One ton of recycled paper saves 17 trees, 7,000 gallons of water, 3 cubic yards of landfill space and 380 gallons of oil.
  6. Recycle old computer hardware: Find a certified place in the locality where used or broken computers and computer parts can be given for recycling. Companies that recycle electronic parts are certified by the EPA to meet standards for responsible recycling. Also, contact the Rechargeable Battery Recycling Corporation to properly dispose of batteries and cell phones. Many states have mandatory collection and recycling programs for electronics.
  7. Employ a specialist to pick up waste: There are recycling companies that will pickup waste that has been separated for a fee. They will give rebates on some of the collected materials. They will have the information on recycling computer parts and batteries. The team can arrange this. It takes 450 years to break down one plastic bottle. Recycled, 25 bottles can make one fleece jacket.
  8. Incite employee participation: If the office recycles regularly, the expenses will reduce. A percentage of this savings could be passed on to the employees in a gift or office party. Custom printed golf shirts, tote bags or baseball caps, made from recycled material, make great gifts. They can have the company logo and a tag line that says, Zero Carbon Footprint.
  9. Point out the social benefit of an environmentally correct office: An office culture of recycling will produce a sense of pride in the responsible actions of the employees. It is an easy way to feel that they are participating in something worthwhile that will sustain the environment for the future.
  10. It’s going to take time: Recycling is easy to do, but it may take getting used to for some. Old habits are hard to break, but education can help. Give the facts to the employees via email every week to convince them that recycling is in their best interest. It conserves natural resources such as water, timber and minerals. It reduces the amount of energy needed in product production. Since it reduces the use of wood and metal, it prevents loss of soil erosion due to logging and mining.

A well organised office will lend itself to a program of recycling. With knowledge and encouragement, employees will soon become accustomed to recycling; and not recycling will become unacceptable. Inform the entire office of the plan. Let the recycling team give tours of the new waste bins and how to use them. Employees need not feel forced into recycling, but they should see for themselves the benefit and want to participate.

About the Author:

John Brook writes reviews of stationery online as well as other business supplies and equipment at the Office Kitten.


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2 Responses to “10 Tips for Encouraging Recycling in the Office”

  1. Jareth Smith says:

    This is a great article, thank you very much! I am a Green fiend myself and I’m always trying to promote environmentalism in our office to no avail. It sickens me that some people don’t recycle stuff. This article shows that’s it’s both easy and important. Great piece! Thanks!

    Jareth Smith

  2. Janet Baker says:

    Jareth,
    Thanks for your comment! Getting organized is a process, and making a plan that you can stick to will help you think through the process of starting and maintaining a recycling system that works for you. Thanks again!

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