Why one cabinet family is usually not enough
Different types of office records work in different ways. Active filing needs fast access to individual cases, binders and operational folders need shelving, and large-format or highly sensitive documents have their own organizational requirements.
That is why a strong administrative standard usually combines several product families. The goal is not merely to fill walls with furniture, but to divide records according to how they behave in the process.
How to build a standard across rooms and departments
It is best to start from operational roles: active records, shelf-based files, special documents and areas with tighter access control. That division makes it easier to match the right families and later repeat the standard across rooms, departments and locations.
From a procurement perspective, consistent model naming and a limited number of unnecessary exceptions matter as well. The more predictable the catalog, the easier it is to plan follow-up equipment and maintain order over time.
What should be included in an inquiry for administration
For public-office projects, it helps to state the record type, number of rooms, expected color standard, workflow of case files and any space constraints. If several locations are involved, that should be indicated from the start.
Such an inquiry allows the conversation to focus on the equipment standard rather than on a single cabinet selected in isolation from the wider workflow.





