Innovation, New Ideas and How The World is Changing

How to turn Evernote into an Insight Bank

 

We need tools to manage our thoughts, data, information and knowledge to be able to find insights. A bit of structure and system could benefit you when seeking new ideas – and keeping track of them!

Having a Brain Bank is very useful. I have one on my Evernote. But ideas are a dime a dozen. What you need is an ‘Insight Bank’.

What’s an Insight Bank?

For practical purposes, I’ll tell you how I use Evernote to store insights.

From Brain Bank to Insight Bank

For me, an insight bank is where you keep observations about customer/client attitude changes, noticeable problems and/or problems that are not there yet but you see coming. This helps you organize your thoughts and connect the dots. (P.S. A better tool would be a combination of Evernote + MindManager. If you want to partner to build one, let me know!).

I use Evernote as both an Idea and Insight Bank. Here’s my breakdown of the folders I have:

Every weekend I go over these folders one by one. I then synthesize all those notes and write them on my “WeeklyNotes” folder. This folder has less files.

This system is in Beta. It is a work in progress and I tweak it constantly. The system is not limited to Evernote though. The benefits of using Evernote are amazing. But it should not end there. I still think we need better tools.

For example, I’ve recently started using Storify to experiment with text snippets collection. I think it could become a great ‘dot connection’ tool if it were easier to use.

Do you have an Insight Bank? What tool(s) do you use? Evernote power user? Please share your thoughts.

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