Inspired by PuyaSharif's conundrum, I find myself continually faced with the opposite problem, which is identical to the original except in the bold-faced sentences:
You are given the following information:
Your task is to hide a coin in your house (or any familiar finite environment).
After you've hidden the coin your memory will be erased and restored to a state just before you receiving this information.
Then you will be told about the task (i.e that you have hidden a coin), and asked to try to find the coin.
If you find it you win. The faster you find it, the better you win.
Where do you leave the coin so that when you have no memory of where you put it, you can lay your hands on it at once?
For just one coin, you might think up some suitable Schelling point, but now multiply the task a thousandfold, for all of your possessions. (I am not a minimalist; of books alone I have 3500.) How do you arrange all your stuff, all your life, in such a way that everything is exactly where you would first think of looking for it?
Never, ever, let any other member of your family/living-group tidy your stuff up. That way a) you can remember where you put stuff and be right, and b) If you're wrong, you can only blame yourself, thus reducing group discord. :)
Unfortunately, if you live with people who don't think that the natural way to organise stuff is 'piled wherever I put it down' then this method can itself cause discord - you just can't win :(
My usual approach for finding something that wasn't where I looked for it is to trace back my path to the last place I clearly remember it being (for stuff you lost track of recently, which is most of the stuff I need to look for). The item is nearly always found somewhere in arm's reach of that path. I can't understand why the suggestion to use this method is not considered helpful by those I live with.
I don't think that you can organise everything so that it is always where you first look for it, short of an eidetic memory, but so long as nearly everything is where you remember putting it and most things that are not are found quickly, you're most of the way there.
I wouldn't be surprised if the technology to be able to google your stuff becomes available within the next decade or so, perhaps via databases created by object recognition, maybe of a life-log, or something? That'd be a good way to avoid doing a load of work forcing all your stuff into some systematic order.
Get a weird, vaguely table like piece of furniture, declare it some long name containing "storage" and "organization" with great formality, and remove all other convenient places to put stuff.