I heart Evernote. I’ve mentioned that more than once, and because of my unnatural affection for an application, I presume that everyone has discovered its wonderful-ness. But not so, it seems, because a tweet last week uncovered lots of folks who either don’t know about it, or have kicked the tires a bit and never quite figured out why it’s helpful.
I think of Evernote as one comprehensive virtual organizer, idea bank, and file system for pretty much everything I do. Yeah, you can take notes with it, that’s easy. But you can also snap and upload photos of stuff, tag and sort your notes, take voice notes and dictation, even take a picture of your handwritten notes to save for later. It’s not just about remembering stuff, but it’s about having the stuff I want to remember organized in a way that makes sense to me, and searchable so I can find it easily later without fuss.
So I certainly can’t dictate to you what you should do, but I can run down some of the ways I use Evernote in hopes that it gives you a bit of an idea of your own.
(Note: I’ve no affiliation with Evernote and they didn’t bribe me with ponies or anything to write this. I’m just a fan.)
The Advantages
There are two major things that make Evernote so indispensable for me: it’s syncing abilities, and how easy it is to search and find stuff.
Evernote has apps for my iPhone (and for many other mobile platforms, check your app store), iPad, MacBook, and a web version. Once you have an account (free), ALL of them sync between one another, seamlessly and automatically. So having all my notes in one place, whether I’m static or on the fly, is a critical piece for me. It’s what keeps me using the application consistently, and having it be a central repository for stuff. I keep personal AND professional stuff in Evernote, because if it’s all centralized, I never have to wonder where I stashed something.
The web application is the one I use least, but it’s cool in that it allows shared notebooks, so you can use it to collaborate or coordinate information with others.
It’s also got a great tagging feature to help you sort your notes and information, and it’s utterly searchable. Even cooler? You can snap pictures of your handwritten notes and upload them, and you can even search *those*. Nifty, huh?
What I Use It For
As I mentioned, Evernote is somewhat of a central hub for me, alongside Google Docs for the big stuff (like the book I’m writing with Jay). Just a few places I use it heavily:
Blogging
I have a separate notebook for blog post drafts, and one for blog post ideas. I draft my posts in Evernote so I don’t run the risk of losing them in a WordPress glitch. For post ideas, I’ll either start a new note with just a title or add a few blurbs in the text field to remind myself of the context. This is awesome for grabbing those fleeting ideas when I’m on the fly, because I can throw them in my phone and when I get back to my laptop later, they’re already synced. I also use the voice notes feature to dictate ideas and thoughts to myself when I’m driving or otherwise can’t be typing.
Meeting Notes & Project Plans
Because I work remotely, I have a lot of meetings by phone or Skype, so Evernote is where I take my notes. I keep conference notes there, and even snap photos of whiteboards or other physical notes. At events, I can even take pictures of business cards and upload them for later so I don’t lose the cards themselves during travel.
I also keep outlines for big project plans in Evernote, because I prefer a very stripped-down, simple to-do system, and Evernote lets me add to-do items right in the notes, complete with little check boxes. It helps me keep my entire project map in one place and easy to reference. I’m a pen and paper person, too, so I do a lot of the messy brainstorming on paper, then either take a picture of the notes I want to keep handy for easy reference, or move the good bits to an Evernote notebook and then do the rest of the structured planning in there.
Save Documents
Hate email attachments and keeping track of them on your hard drive? Yeah, me too. So for the stuff I know I’m going to need later, I often use the unique email address Evernote gives you when you sign up to email attachments to myself and save them in Evernote instead. Central repository, remember? If it’s all in one place, I know where to go to look for it.
The Book
I’m using Evernote to capture ideas for the book, take notes for interviews we do, links to reference later, snip bits of research and stuff from the web (I’m also using Delicious for bookmarking and Google Docs for the heavy writing). Because I have all the notes in a single notebook, I know I can always find what I need and keep myself organized.
Reading Stuff Later
Evernote makes a nifty bookmarklet that allows you to easily clip snippets of text or full pages from the web to find and reference later (even offline). Whether it’s a site I want to come back to, a quote or reference I want to save, or an article I want to read, I can plunk it all in Evernote in it’s respective notebook and have it handy for next time instead of sifting through bookmark lists.
Personal stuff
Again because I can use it on the fly on my phone AND have the advantage to all of my stuff being in a single spot, I use Evernote for lots of one-off and incidental personal stuff. I have a file in there for “house wish list” where I snap photos of design and renovation ideas I’d like to tackle someday at home, or a spectacular piece of furniture that I can’t yet afford, but want to remember for inspiration someday.
I keep the grocery list on there, books I want to read, new bands and music to check out, and I’ve got a notebook for recipes, too. Why is that awesome? Cart my iPad into the kitchen, stick it on it’s stand, and read the recipe from the counter while I’m cooking. I take pictures of wine labels at restaurants that I love and want to find later.
I have locked files in there with prescription information (man I hate realizing I need a refill and not having the information with me, so this solves that).
How About You?
I know there are more of you out there using Evernote because you tell me how much you heart it, too. Tell us about your tips, clever uses, and ideas for making the most of Evernote and let’s see if we can’t convince some of those folks who haven’t quite found the magic in it yet.
Oh, and if you’re an enthusiast and want to find other Evernote nerds? They’re even doing meetups now.
I’m looking forward to hearing from you. Was this helpful at all? Did it give you an idea or two? Let me know in the comments.
This app sounds amazing…. and no, I had not heard of it. What instantly comes to mind is taking snapshots of the chicken scratches I have been known to take in my Moleskine and then frantically search for later. Perfect. I will get into Evernote and dig around. Thank you
I use Evernote to sync ideas and notes between my netbook and iMac, but I've been known to make shopping lists and compose quick ideas on my iPhone for viewing when I'm out and about.
My greatest moment was stumbling into the dark to a friends Girlfriends apartment, not having ANY idea where in town we were (we took a 'shortcut' through neighbourhoods) and taking a photo of the building in the dark (so I would have the GPS coordinates)
Later when they asked where his Girlfriend lived, I couldn't give a building name or a street number, but I had it on a map and could get back to it (without all the 'shortcuts')
thank you! I've had evernote for months and “keep meaning to” learn more ways to use it.
I <3 Evernote! Using it since early 2008 and have 3000+ notes stored there, from eBooks to Grocery lists. I use Evernote folders arranged in GTD order – 'Inbox', 'Read & Review', 'Reference'. One nifty way to use Evernote – if you read blogs mainly through RSS – integration with Google Reader. You can send directly from Google reader to Evernote and read later (http://bit.ly/QO7Wo).
Thanks for the nice tip!
You will probably like this “My Simple GTD Evernote System” (presentation by Darren Crawford)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MVU3eGIAiqw
Also by Crawford, the explanation of Simple GTD EN System:
his http://darrencrawford.com/my-simple-gtd-evernote-combo/
Bonus: Google Search Results for : gtd evernote : http://x2t.com/1/gtdevernote
Cheers!
Love Evernote! I have tried many variations of note/task/concept/message/list collection tools but this is the best I have found. Evernote is part of my basic recipe that I give to all new clients. Client interaction with shared notebooks is slick.
Evernote also has a great blog full of tips, case studies and contest too! http://blog.evernote.com/
Nice post!
Great post Amber, looking for just such a piece. I will have to check it out.
I've always wanted to give this a try but for some reason never had. Thanks for breaking it down, Amber. I need to suck it up and see what I've been missing. Cheers!
I've always wanted to give this a try but for some reason never had. Thanks for breaking it down, Amber. I need to suck it up and see what I've been missing. Cheers!
My son loves evernote. I think dropbox is also in his favs list. I've not used evernote up until now, but he's always telling me I should. I feel like I need to catch up on so many other things and there's never enough time. lol
My son loves evernote. I think dropbox is also in his favs list. I've not used evernote up until now, but he's always telling me I should. I feel like I need to catch up on so many other things and there's never enough time. lol
I've used Evernote off and on and have really enjoyed it when I have used it. Your post just reminded me that I needed to use it more.
I also enjoy that if you're offline on your smart phone (say stuck in a plane), you can still save drafts & notes, which will then synch up with your account when you're reconnected to the internet.
I looked at EverNote and almost jumped on board until MS OneNote came out with office 2010. I am completely hooked on it because of its integration with outlook and Internet Explorer. One downside is, it does not help me when I am on my mac which is about 40% of the time. However, they do have a sync option for the desktop or the cloud (your choice) and it syncs with my iPad/iphone so I am sold on it. The synching can be done manually or scheduled which is also helpful.
I think both apps are great, and if you do not intend on using OneNote then EverNote is an awesome solution – but if you use OneNote or are considering it, I highly recommend at least checking out MobileNoter and their ipad/iphone connector.
Interesting…I had no idea. Been using Write Room forever – the clean interface allows me not to get distracted when writing but the syncing and searchability factors are huge!
I heart Evernote too! I use it for saving text, any kind of text. To-do lists, blog post drafts, twitter people to follow, anything. For files, though, I use DropBox. Another great app!
Thanks for the tip Amber. Upon reading your post, I thought to myself, “I have heard of this program before”. Sure enough, I did a quick search of my GMail account and found that someone recommended EverNote to me when I asked a question about it on Aardvark ( http://vark.com/ask ) I recall trying to get it to work on my phone and giving up.
Well this time I got it to work. It looks great. I am sure I will have to adjust my procedures somewhat until I find a productive way to use the program. Thanks again for the tip and a renewed incentive to try the program on my phone.
Tim R.
Thanks for the great coverage on Evernote and how it can get you organized. I work for a company called Shoeboxed.com, and we actually integrate with Evernote. Using the two services together can help organize the piles of receipts and business cards everyone has. All you do is send the documents to Shoeboxed, and we scan and data enter them into your Shoeboxed account. Then you can export all of the digitized receipts and business cards to Evernote for easy searching. Check us out at http://www.shoeboxed.com/ or call us at 888-369-4269 for more information.
Thanks!
Mike Tooley
Shoeboxed.com
mike@team.shoeboxed.com
Very helpful! Thank you very much! I love it too, but use only a small part of what you recommend, and it gave me many ideas 🙂
Thanks for all the great ideas, Amber. I fall into that category of kicking the tires, but never used the full functionality. But, I have the same organizational challenges you have, so this makes a lot of sense to me. Giving it another try soon!
Amber, thank you so much for this article! I downloaded Evernote, briefly ran through the features and said “yeah, so what”? I haven't touched it since because I had no idea what to do with it! Now I can't wait to try out all the bells and whistles.
I'd seen lists of features — but you're one of the first to showcase the actual BENEFITS of Evernote in someone's typical busy day.
And mucho thanks to Beth Harte for Tweeting this!
Evernote is a godsend. I use it every day.
I use it for a lot of the reasons that you do, and there are a few uses I need to try now. I love the idea of saving meeting notes to evernote.
I also use it to organize a lot of usernames as passwords. True, it may not be smart…but it sure as hell makes my life easy when I have 100 different usernames and passwords for 100 different applications that the Scribnia team shares.
It's been amazing for blog ideas. Also, if there's a template that I'd like to use in an email, I'll just paste it into evernote and plug it in when I need to.
David, Scribnia
Evernote is a godsend. I use it every day.
I use it for a lot of the reasons that you do, and there are a few uses I need to try now. I love the idea of saving meeting notes to evernote.
I also use it to organize a lot of usernames as passwords. True, it may not be smart…but it sure as hell makes my life easy when I have 100 different usernames and passwords for 100 different applications that the Scribnia team shares.
It's been amazing for blog ideas. Also, if there's a template that I'd like to use in an email, I'll just paste it into evernote and plug it in when I need to.
David, Scribnia
Evernote is a godsend. I use it every day.
I use it for a lot of the reasons that you do, and there are a few uses I need to try now. I love the idea of saving meeting notes to evernote.
I also use it to organize a lot of usernames as passwords. True, it may not be smart…but it sure as hell makes my life easy when I have 100 different usernames and passwords for 100 different applications that the Scribnia team shares.
It's been amazing for blog ideas. Also, if there's a template that I'd like to use in an email, I'll just paste it into evernote and plug it in when I need to.
David, Scribnia
Thanks for a great post- been a fan of Evernote for like ever..:-) It is my most recommended to co-workers or anyone. Love finding out what others use it for. Love the wine label pictures use.
Just started using the audio notes.. Like Emily below I have been a Moleskin user and still am but Evernote is moving me away quickly. Still like pencil, pen and paper….
Agree with what you say, and yes, I'm a user, but have a couple of issues:
1. Sluggish performance. If you think you can just whisk something you come across into Evernote, that won't happen.
2. Desktop app crashed my computer. Not much of a syncing experience.
EverNote on the iPhone is free. This MobileNoter thing is $1.25 per MONTH. I vote for free.
The “nifty bookmarklet”, what Evernote call a Web Clipper is my biggest tool. I use to email weblinks to myself for recall, but the links had little meaning weeks later. Now I copy the webpage into Evernote and file it under one or more tags. Much of the latest information about social media is found on the web and now I can find it in my Evernote file.
I will clip this post and explore you other uses later.
I love the syncing feature with my ipad and laptop. I think that few people use all the full potential of this great free app!
I love the syncing features between my ipad and laptop. I think few people use this great app to its full potential!!
I have become a total “Evernut” since I started using it about six months ago. I am shoveling whole file cabinets of stuff into it and can still find everything quickly and easily. It is clearly the most valuable productivity tool that I use. BTW, Evernote has a podcast – (Just search for “Evernote” in iTunes.) Also, C|NET tech reporter Rafe Needleman is a huge fan who recently did a whole episode of his “The Real Deal” podcast, (#209), on Evernote with CEO Phil Libin as his guest. Very informative.
Thanks to you Amber, since reading your post: “8 Apps I Use and Love” — http://www.brasstackthinking.com/2010/02/8-apps… I have been using Evernote in similar ways, and wouldn't know what I would do without it, a very nice underrated application,
Cheers
Michele Smorgon @maxOz
Actually some of the things mentioned can be achieved using Outlook. The thing is that not all people knows that.
Great post — thank you! I'm a huge fan of Evernote and love the visual journal aspect… And how it syncs with my phone, Mac and iPad. Didn't know there were Evernote meet ups — might have to check one out!
hi there, thanks for the post. I have been using Evernote for some time now. I love it. But have you ever feel guilty tagging something in Evernote as “to read” but never get around doing it. I have tons of material there but never got around reading them all. In the end some of my folders in it is like a big drawer that I keep on filling. Thankfully, the awesome search function…is always effective.
I have it, but don't use it! 🙁 ok, i'll try it again!
I'm also a huge fan of Evernote. I use it for many of the same purposes you outlined above. On a personal level, I also keep a note for each of my friends and jot down quotables from them while we're out. It's a great way to keep those memories and it's fun to revisit them, especially with the time and GPS location stamp.
I heart Evernote, too! You described some ways to use it that I haven't tried yet, so thanks. I like to divide up to-do lists in Evernote – like work/client projects, tasks I'm in charge of for organizations I work with, personal to-dos, etc. It's such a handy app. Hope more people start to use it!
I use Evernote for things like keeping client lists and info, tracking quotes and projects and other work related stuff, but also for keeping track of passwords, taking photos of things I want to remember, having a single place to keep all of my son's college related paperwork – in short, tons of things.
I am working towards using it as a primary word processor as well, so that everything I am working on is automatically there, and doesn't need to be imported.
It's the most useful online application I have ever used.
Love Evernote! My two favorite uses? Snapping pics of receipts when traveling (so much easier to organize when I get back home) and of wine labels in restaurants. Easy way to remember a great bottle.
I love evernote for taking notes at events/conferences. I hadn't ever really thought about other uses for some reason. I'm still an old school notebook guy for daily notes and use doit.im for to-do lists. I never noticed the ability to put check-boxes into notes- very cool! Thanks for sharing the ways you use Evernote.
I've been thinking about looking for a very simple overview of Evernote for the last 3 months. I appreciate the high level overview which is what I was really looking for.
Now that I see the value off I go to give it a try. I'm looking forward to take photos of my post it notes and file folders for work.
Evernote simply rocks and I rarely say that about productivity software. Usually I drop 'em after a week of frustration. You've got some great uses here and I wrote a few in a blog post a while back you might find useful. My personal fav is taking pictures at conferences that include name badges and faces. I suck at remembering names. Then you just tag 'em and they're right thereon your phone when you see them again.
Here's a link to my post http://janetfouts.com/evernote-change-the-way-y… with other ideers.
I love Evernote, and I don't even think I'm using it to its full potential yet.
I do exactly the same with evernote!
I wrote an article some years ago and switched completely form onenote to Evernote.
I've played around with this app. This blog post certainly pushes me to use it more however. My one qualm though, is it doesn't really do a great job of taking pictures of notes, and making those notes searchable, at least in my experience. Perhaps you can offer a few tips on the mechanics to taking pictures of text Amber. I haven't had great luck with it.
I also want to point out that I like Diigo much more than Delicious, mainly because there are more ways to search and use Diigo notes, and you can highlight material on an individual page for saving later, which is a great feature Delicious to my knowledge doesn't have.
Its really a good point about Diigo. Note that we can integrate Diigo to Evernote (I’d really like a better Integration): saving a Diigo Note and sending it to Evernote using the evernote personal email for that: username.xxxxxxxx@m.evernote.com
It is indeed incredible but don't forget about location based notes. It saves all of your notes with GPS so you can quickly see a map of everywhere you have been and see all of the notes you have saved… Pretty awesome!
Nice post and thanks!
-Shane Mac
This was so helpful. Thank you. I am going to check to see if they have BlackBerry app. I have been wanting to move my GTD system off of paper, but I have never found a digital solution that has worked for me. Evernote just might.
OMG Amber I love Evernote. I fiddled with it before but didn't realize the potential until reading your article. I have been pretty retarded with my note taking in the past.
OMG Amber I love Evernote. I fiddled with it before but didn't realize the potential until reading your article. I have been pretty retarded with my note taking in the past. I have lost notes I took on my iPhone for no good reason. If I had used Evernote they would have been synced on the server and if my iPhone takes a wrong turn (lands in a drink) I won't lose my notes.
There are far better applications for remembering passwords. But you said it; it's dumb and lazy to use evernote for passwords.
I am one of those who left Evernote, only to come back later. I originally used it as a note taker on my iPhone, but got a little frustrated with the lack of local storage and formatting options. This was a while back, granted (the iPhone app has local storage now) I ended up coming back to it recently while doing genealogical research. It is the world's best tool for that, because you can take typed noted, photos and scans of written and historical documents, and clips from the web and sort, tag, and search them later. I used to just bookmark sites and go back later, but it is difficult to find that little tidbit that you remember again. Evernote makes that easy.
Another app that pairs very well with Evernote is Instapaper. Instapaper duplicates the web clipping function of Evernote, but in a different way. It strips all ads and web formatting out of the page and delivers it back with white background, large crisp text, and any included photos. Instapaper integrates directly with my iPad newsreader, Reeder, and Twitter client, Twitteriffic. It is a great way to dump a link to read later and keep going down your list of headlines or tweets. Unfortunately, Instapaper only stores 250 articles. It is meant as a short term tool, not long term storage. This makes Instapaper and Evernote perfect partners. For the majority of my articles, I just read them and delete them. For the ones I would like to preserve, however, I just send them over to Evernote using the email address. I love how I can select the notebook and tags right from my email subject line, so I don't even have to open Evernote to move the new clip.
The other thing that got me back to Evernote is “mobile scanning.” There are a couple of apps for the iPhone that use its camera to take a scanned image of small docs and white boards. You can do this with the camera alone, but JotNot allows clipping and formatting of the image based on the kind of document it is. I started using it for expense and warranty receipts. JotNot amps up the brightness and contrast so the text is readable, no matter how dim the pic was, and the outcome is legible and searchable in Evernote. You can enter your Evernote info in the app and get a dialogue with your Notebooks and Tags built in for easy exporting. If you have to keep up with receipts for work, this is the best tool for it. It also works great for keeping up with business cards.
As you can see here, the basic nottaking abilities may not be enough to hook everyone, but if you dig a little deeper, there is so much power in under Evernote's hood.
I used Evernote a lot before google wave… Adding the chrome extension wave means Evernote is just a second rate utility to me! I would still recommend it for some but personally it just isn't collaborative enough! My 2 cents!
I'm so glad I found this. I am downloading this now!
I’ve been thinking about using Evernote more extensively for a while, but I could never get myself to fall into a pattern with it. After reading your writeup, I just might give it another go.
Great, now I feel guilty about rarely using my Evernote account. I’m having a hard enough time keeping up with my Gmail-as-todo-list, Google Docs, Moleskine notebook, Dropbox, Printed-to-PDF websites system. So now there’s one more thing I can load stuff up to and then promptly forget all about.
You listed all the things you like about Evernote…was there anything you didn’t/don’t like?
Also, does anyone know if it syncs to Android? Thanks!
Carrie,
Yes Evernote syncs to Android. It syncs to my Android phone perfectly.
I’ve been using Evernote for a long time now but never explored it as you describe here. Have got to do more with it myself and get less side tracked by other apps I come across and then try and discard. Nothing I’ve tried so far outperforms Evernote. Thx for the primer.
Interesting timing: I just wrote a post about how I’m using Dragon Dictation on the iPhone along with Evernote to capture ideas: http://www.innovationtools.com/Weblog/innovationblog-detail.asp?ArticleID=1524
Love it! Thanks for illuminating some additional uses that I hadn’t thought of!
Hi Amber, Thanks for this thorough review of Evernote. I’ve been using it at a basic level for a couple of months but now that you’ve done a broad-stroke cool-features list, I’m eager to dig in. I’m guessing you operate pretty efficiently. Are you good enough to just create an extra hour or two in the day?
Hi Amber, I’ve just installed Evernote (yesterday) and I came across your post in my rss feeds. Thanks for the ideas! I’m excited to get started.
nice blogpost about your evernote use. Most interesting for Evernote power use is the Evernote Essentials eBook. Have a look here: http://goo.gl/AUb8b (affiliate link)
nice blogpost about your evernote use. Most interesting for Evernote power use is the Evernote Essentials eBook. Have a look here: http://goo.gl/AUb8b (affiliate link)
I haven’t heard of Evernote either but I am going to try it after reading your post. It sound incredible for the same reason it scares me. What happens if there’s an Evernote glitch instead of a WordPress glitch? Seems terrifying to lose all that information. That said, I shall be hoping for the best and trying it out shortly. Thanks, Amber!
I use it to take pic of my work schedule so I always have it along with notes of any changes. I have about 1600 notes in my account
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