I tried the 'ski slope' organizing method – and my rooms were perfectly tidy in under an hour

I thought I was already efficient at organizing, but this method proved me wrong

Two wire baskets willed with folded clothes on a bed
(Image credit: Getty Images)

No matter how much time I spend organizing my home, there are certain spaces that always become a dumping ground for household clutter – especially as my home wasn't built with any handy storage nooks.  

Although I think myself pretty clued up on all the decluttering tips you could think of, my bedroom and home office were spaces I could simply never muster the motivation to get truly tidy. Enter, the overwhelmed organizers' new savior – the 'ski slope' organizing method – pioneered by therapist-turned-designer, Anita Yokota.

Here, I go into detail about what the ski slope organizing method is, and how it helped me tackle my most tedious spaces.

What is the 'ski slope' organizing method?  

The ski slope organizing method is perfect for decluttering a home when you feel overwhelmed. The process involves breaking down a room into separate zones which you can glide between one after the other, crisscrossing across the room to reach your end goal. 

The idea, Yokota writes, is to avoid diving head first down the slippery slope of clutter and becoming overwhelmed and crashing before you reach the end. Moving from corner to corner, rather than from front to back, ‘lessens the angle.’ 

anita yokota
Anita Yokota

Anita is a therapist-turned-interior-designer whose background lends itself to a holistic approach to design. She creates spaces that lean into both aesthetic principles as well as functionality, designed to make clients' homes both beautiful and intentional. 

How I got on with the ski slope organizing method  

I tried the method in two rooms in my house, my bedroom and my home office, both in varying states of disarray, and was far from disappointed with the results.   

The bedroom

A green bedroom with upholstered headboard bed

(Image credit: Albion Nord)

First, I used it to help organize the bedroom, which was suffering from the usual piles of unfolded laundry, dumped clothes that were not quite ready for the washing machine yet, and small piles of things on the floor next to my bed waiting to go into my under-bed storage boxes.

I started by putting two large laundry baskets in the center of the room (on my bed) to collect items that belonged either downstairs or in other rooms on my top floor like my office or bathroom. I then began in the furthest corner from my bedroom door.

Focusing only on this area, I put anything that needed to go in my nightstand away, everything on the floor piled back into my under-bed storage crate, and picked anything up off the floor that needed to go elsewhere – for example, I put my laptop charger in the basket to be moved to my home office, my empty drinking glass in the basket to go downstairs, and some stranded socks in a small pile on the bed to be moved into my dresser storage when I got to that section of the room.

Foldable bamboo hamper | $25.99 at Wayfair (opens in new tab)

Foldable bamboo hamper | $25.99 at Wayfair (opens in new tab)
I use these sleek laundry baskets to help declutter my home and sort my laundry. Their foldable design means they are easy to hide out of sight when not in use, too. 

The trick, I found, was to not move to another area without completing the first. 

This helped me to avoid moving on and becoming distracted organizing a dresser, for example, before my nightstand corner was completely clear. I continued to do this process back and forth across the room, moving to the opposite corner, organizing, and then moving back again until I was back at my bedroom door and my room was tidy. In the end, nothing was left on the bed except the two baskets.

In total, the room took me only 30 minutes, and with any un-housed clutter contained in the laundry baskets, I had the opportunity to delay sorting those items to another time if I felt worn out.  

The office 

A white boucle chair in the corner of a home library

(Image credit: Albion Nord)

After completing my bedroom, I moved on to organizing my home office, applying the same logic and working from the corner furthest from the door. This space had become my household dumping ground for anything that was bulky or didn't have a home, so it was in desperate need of a complete refresh. 

For this room, I once again employed my laundry baskets in the middle of the floor within reach of each corner and also carried a trash bag with me to quickly dispose of old paperwork or packaging. This room had previously been incredibly overwhelming, with gym bags mixed with cables in one corner, and my hobby materials like sewing sets and paints in the other. My home office seating had also become overrun with coats I was phasing out with the warming weather and paperwork from the living room that I hadn’t filed away in my office desk organizers.

This room took me a little longer, at 50 minutes to complete the space, but having stuck a TV show on in the background it didn't feel like a chore. Completing individual zones continued to provide me with a satisfying serotonin boost that powered me through the entire space in one go – leaving me only with the two laundry baskets that I could carry around my house and put things away as I went. 

My verdict

Since decluttering and home organizing using this method, I have not only found it easier to keep on top of the clutter each day but also simpler to employ different cleaning tips as surfaces and floors were left unobstructed. What’s more, working in smaller areas allows me to leave decluttering at a moment's notice without having created a bigger mess.   

I don't think I will ever go back to organizing any other way. Will you be giving it a go?

Home Therapy | $26.78 at Amazon (opens in new tab)

Home Therapy | $26.78 at Amazon (opens in new tab)
Whether you’re looking for better work/life balance or design solutions for your family, interior designer and licensed therapist Anita Yokota walks you through Home Therapy: her signature system for setting up your spaces to nurture your mind, body, and spirit.

Chiana Dickson
Junior Writer

Chiana is a junior writer for Homes & Gardens having joined Future plc as a new graduate in 2022 after achieving a 1st class degree in Literature at university. She first became interested in design as a child after spending her summers helping her parents redecorate her childhood home. As a long-time reader of Future’s homes titles, Chiana is constantly finding new inspiration at work as she focuses on emerging trends, how-to’s, and news pieces.