Skip to main content

How to Organize Files and Projects as a Designer (Folders, Versions, and Deliverables)

How to Organize Files and Projects as a Designer (Folders, Versions, and Deliverables)

If you want to look professional as a designer—especially when freelancing—your file organization matters as much as your visuals. A clean system saves hours, prevents mistakes, makes handoffs smoother, and builds client trust.

Below is a practical, beginner-friendly system for organizing folders, handling versions, and delivering final files like a pro.

The core rule: one project = one home

Create one main folder per client, and inside it one folder per project.

Example:

  • ClientName/
    • 2025-ProjectName/

This keeps everything grouped and easy to find later.

Step 1: Use a consistent naming convention (this fixes 50% of the mess)

Pick a simple naming formula and use it for everything:

Recommended format:
YYYY-MM-DD_Client_Project_Asset_V#

Examples:

  • 2025-12-04_Acme_LandingPage_Home_V01.fig
  • 2025-12-04_Acme_LogoConcepts_V02.pdf
  • 2025-12-04_Acme_SocialTemplates_V03.fig

Why dates help

Dates sort naturally and let you find the latest version instantly.

Why V# matters

It prevents “final_final_REALfinal_v7” disasters.

Step 2: Use a folder structure that matches your workflow

Here’s a clean folder system that works for most design projects:

ClientName/
  2025-ProjectName/
    00_Admin/
    01_Brief/
    02_Research_Inspo/
    03_Working_Files/
    04_Reviews_Feedback/
    05_Exports/
    06_Final_Delivery/
    07_Archive/

What goes in each folder

00_Admin/

  • Proposal, contract, invoices, receipts, payment screenshots

01_Brief/

  • Client intake form, notes, meeting summaries, requirements

02_Research_Inspo/

  • Moodboards, competitor screenshots, references (with sources if needed)

03_Working_Files/

  • Your editable files: Figma, Illustrator, Photoshop, After Effects
  • Keep subfolders if you want:
    • Figma/
    • Illustrator/
    • Photoshop/

04_Reviews_Feedback/

  • PDFs sent for review
  • Client feedback screenshots
  • Meeting recordings or notes (if relevant)

05_Exports/

  • JPG/PNG exports for previews and approvals (not the final pack)

06_Final_Delivery/

  • Only final approved deliverables
  • Nothing messy here—this should be client-ready

07_Archive/

  • Old versions, rejected concepts, unused assets you may need later

Step 3: Manage versions without losing your mind

Option A (simple): V01, V02, V03

  • Every time you share a deliverable externally: bump the version.
  • Every time major changes happen: bump the version.

Example:

  • Acme_BrandKit_V01.pdf (first client review)
  • Acme_BrandKit_V02.pdf (after feedback)
  • Acme_BrandKit_V03_FINAL.pdf (approved)

Option B (client-friendly): V + “Round”

This is great for revision-based projects:

  • Round01
  • Round02

Example:

  • Acme_LandingPage_Round01.pdf
  • Acme_LandingPage_Round02.pdf

The “FINAL” rule

Only add FINAL when:

  • The client approved in writing
  • You’re packaging deliverables for handoff

Avoid:

  • final_v2
  • final_final
  • FINAL(1)
    These are the gateway to chaos.

Step 4: Keep your working files clean (so you don’t hate your past self)

Inside Figma/Adobe files, use a consistent structure too.

Figma page structure (recommended)

  • 00_Cover
  • 01_Brief & Notes
  • 02_Exploration
  • 03_Approved Design
  • 04_Components
  • 05_Handoff

Frame naming tips

Use names that tell a story:

  • Home – Desktop
  • Home – Mobile
  • Pricing – Desktop
  • Checkout – Mobile

Avoid:

  • Frame 12
  • New thing
  • Try this

Step 5: Always separate “working” vs “delivery” exports

A common beginner mistake is mixing drafts and finals.

Use this workflow:

  • Exports for review go in: 05_Exports/
  • Final exports go in: 06_Final_Delivery/

This way, when the client asks “send me the final files,” you don’t accidentally send an outdated JPG.

Step 6: Build a delivery folder that feels premium

Inside 06_Final_Delivery/, create a clean structure based on what you’re delivering.

For visual identity / branding

06_Final_Delivery/
  01_Logos/
    PNG/
    SVG/
    PDF/
  02_Colors/
  03_Typography/
  04_Brand_Guidelines/
  05_Templates/
  06_Social_Exports/

Include:

  • PNG (transparent)
  • SVG (best for scalability)
  • PDF (print-friendly)
  • A short “Read Me” file (more below)

For web/UI projects

06_Final_Delivery/
  01_Design_Files/
  02_Exports/
    Desktop/
    Mobile/
  03_Assets/
    Icons/
    Images/
  04_Handoff_Notes/

Include:

  • Final Figma link (if applicable)
  • Exported assets at correct sizes
  • Basic specs (spacing, type sizes, colors)

Step 7: Add a “Read Me” file (this makes you look expensive)

Create a simple text or PDF doc:
README_Acme_ProjectName.pdf

Include:

  • What’s inside the folder (quick map)
  • Which files are final
  • Font names + where to get them
  • Logo usage tips (1–2 lines)
  • Contact info for questions

Even 1 page makes a huge difference.

Step 8: Decide your delivery method (and avoid mess)

Best options

  • Google Drive / Dropbox folder link
  • WeTransfer for one-time delivery
  • Notion page + folder link
  • Figma link + export pack folder

Pro tip

Never deliver via a long email with 18 attachments.

Deliver via one link and keep it organized.

Step 9: Backup and archiving (simple but essential)

A safe system:

  • Cloud folder (Google Drive/Dropbox)
  • Local copy (external SSD, if possible)

When the project is done:

  • Move old drafts to 07_Archive/
  • Keep only approved files in 06_Final_Delivery/

Step 10: Quick checklist (save this)

Before you send anything:

  • Files named consistently (no “final_final”)
  • Versions are clear (V03, Round02, etc.)
  • Final delivery folder contains only finals
  • Exports are correct size and format
  • README included (even short)
  • One delivery link, not 20 attachments

Conclusion: Organization is part of your design quality

Clients may not know kerning, but they do notice professionalism. A clean folder structure, predictable versions, and polished delivery make you easier to work with—and more likely to get repeat clients.

If you want, I can also:

  • customize this structure for your specific workflow (branding vs UI vs social),
  • write a ready-to-copy README template,
  • or create a “client handoff checklist” you can reuse on every project.