Project File Organization
- At October 24, 2011
- By ken
- In productivity
It is essential for creatives to maintain discipline when working on projects. First, it allows you to be more productive and use your resource of time more effectively. Second, if there is any sort of collaboration it’s essential to organize something logically to save copious amounts of time.
“Where is (file x, or project y)?”
“It’s in the logical place, of course.”
I’ve heard that conversation more than once, which is why we try to organize all of our media projects similarly. It makes it easy to pick up after someone with less fuss and time wasted. Each team member may have a slight variation and that’s OK, it just needs to be close and have a logical structure. How to I personally organize my media? (click for larger image)
In general, most projects are structured like this. Under the Project name are five folders.
Assets
This is where the “stuff goes,” and depending on the complexity of the project, may include subfolders. The “stuff” includes video footage, stock artwork, textures, fonts (if the project is to be shared or archived), and music or audio. Purchase a voice over? Put it in Assets. Buy images from iStockPhoto? Put it in Assets.
Finals
The final rendered videos go here.
Inspiration
This folder isn’t always necessary, but if there are some specific inspiration pieces that need to accompany the project (clips of video, some still images, whatever) there’s a place for it to live.
Projects
This is our master working folder. Every major project file lives here including After Effects files, Final Cut Pro files, potentially a Photoshop document (if it’s a major part of the work).
Renders
A folder for all rendered elements. Render a piece of video from After Effects that is headed to Final Cut? This is the place for that. If I’m working in Cinema 4D I’ll create subfolders under this render folder for each TIFF sequence.
So that’s it. Nothing fancy, just practical project organization. I follow this 90% of the time. Don’t let the system rule you, but let it help you.


Aaron Beaver
also I found a very useful app. called “post haste”
for free that recreates folder in any arrangement also with projects files included. It has been a life saver http://www.digitalrebellion.com/posthaste/index.html
ken
wow, that is handy. I normally just create a folder with the templates laid out, then copy/paste into the new project folder. But I may give this a try and see if it streamlines things.
Tim Lemons
Hey Ken, have you tried postehaste yet? I just saw it and gonna try to play with it this week and curious if you’ve time with it.