Skip to content
Ever Works

Work Clean (Mise en Place)

Productivity system based on professional kitchen organization principles where chefs 'put everything in place' before cooking, adapted by Dan Charnas into 10 principles for organizing work and life efficiently.

Last updated: 2026-03-15 03:13

Overview

In Work Clean, author Dan Charnas uncovers the key to chef efficiency: mise-en-place. Mise-en-place is a French culinary term that means "putting in place" and signifies an entire lifestyle of readiness and engagement.

What is Mise en Place?

Mise-en-place (pronounced meez-ahn-plahs) is the culinary concept of gathering and arranging the ingredients and tools needed for cooking. The first organizational book inspired by the culinary world takes mise-en-place outside the kitchen, showing how chefs across the globe churn out enormous amounts of high-quality work with efficiency using this system.

The 10 Principles

Dan Charnas spells out the 10 major principles of mise-en-place for chefs and non-chefs alike:

1. Planning is Prime

2. Arranging Spaces and Perfecting Movements

3. Cleaning as You Go

4. Making First Moves

5. Finishing Actions

6. Slowing Down to Speed Up

7. Call and Callback

8. Open Ears and Eyes

9. Inspect and Correct

10. Total Utilization

Core Philosophy

There is a difference between working hard and working clean. The secret to excellence lies not in doing more but in preparing better - chefs have honed this art over centuries, demonstrating that success is the result of thoughtful preparation, deliberate action, and consistent refinement.

Key Insights from Dan Charnas

Based on dozens of interviews with culinary professionals and executives, including world-renowned chefs like Thomas Keller and Alfred Portale, Charnas reveals how to apply mise-en-place outside the kitchen, in any kind of work.

Benefits of Working Clean

Increased Efficiency

Improved Quality

Reduced Stress

Better Time Management

Application to Different Fields

Office Work

Creative Work

Knowledge Work

Comparison to Other Systems

Getting Started

Immediate Actions

  1. Assess Current State: Observe your current workflow and workspace
  2. Choose One Principle: Start with the principle most relevant to you
  3. Implement Small: Make one change at a time
  4. Practice Daily: Consistency builds habits
  5. Expand Gradually: Add more principles over time

Who Can Benefit

The Book

Work Clean: The life-changing power of mise-en-place to organize your life, work, and mind by Dan Charnas provides the complete framework with detailed examples from professional kitchens and applications to various fields of work.

Related Items