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

  • Keep visuals consistent: square crops, clear captions, predictable placement.
  • Write decisions down in a short format so you can reuse them.
  • Use checklists to reduce repeat thinking and avoid missed steps.

Step-by-step

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

  1. Review, keep what worked, and delete the parts you didn’t use.
  2. Compress the notes into a short checklist and keep the rest optional.
  3. Create a ‘start’ version that takes under 20 minutes to set up.
  4. Run it for 7 days and log only what you notice (not everything).

Common mistakes

  • Adding more tools instead of clarifying the workflow.
  • Over-formatting notes so the system becomes the work.
  • Keeping ‘maybe’ items around instead of archiving them.
  • Trying to optimize everything at once and losing the baseline.

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.