Overview

This piece is built for scanning. If you only have a minute, read the takeaways. If you have ten minutes, follow the steps and use the checklist at the end.

Key takeaways

  • Use checklists to reduce repeat thinking and avoid missed steps.
  • Keep visuals consistent: square crops, clear captions, predictable placement.
  • Prefer small batches over big overhauls — it’s easier to maintain.

Step-by-step

Use this sequence as a baseline. Keep the scope small and avoid adding extra tasks until the flow feels stable.

  1. Create a ‘start’ version that takes under 20 minutes to set up.
  2. Define the outcome in one sentence (what changes and for whom).
  3. Run it for 7 days and log only what you notice (not everything).
  4. Review, keep what worked, and delete the parts you didn’t use.

Common mistakes

  • Trying to optimize everything at once and losing the baseline.
  • Over-formatting notes so the system becomes the work.
  • Keeping ‘maybe’ items around instead of archiving them.
  • Skipping the review step, then repeating the same problem next week.

Checklist

  • Write the outcome in one sentence.
  • Set a 7-day test window and keep it unchanged.
  • Capture short notes (3–5 bullets per day at most).
  • Compress the result into a checklist you can reuse.
  • Archive the rest and move on.

FAQ

How long should I test one approach?

A week is usually enough to see friction points. If the change is big, try two weeks, but keep the scope fixed.

What if I don’t have time to write notes?

Capture only a few bullets: what worked, what failed, and what to try next. The checklist can be one screen.

Do I need special tools?

No. A simple text file and a calendar reminder are enough. Add tools only when the baseline is stable.

Next step: open the Blog index, choose one other post, and compare the structures. The goal is consistency: headings that mean something and pages that never dead-end.