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How to save $30,000 a month using OneNote

OneNote is the tool you need to stay organized and focused and save $30.000 a month on the way

How to save $30,000 a month using OneNote

Staying organized and focused in today’s fast paced world is a basic requirement for any business leader.

However, differentiating yourself and your business requires a whole new level of organization!

A differentiated leader must have instant access to all of their past and current business notes, data, ideas, and plans. All of this information must be organized and indexed electronically in a manner that allows easy access from anywhere, at any time, using any platform. This is not a simple product but a system that contains two distinct elements:

  1. A cloud-based software tool (the subject of this blog post)
  2. A systematic approach to organization for an effective business leader (the subject of next week’s post!)

Gone are the days of taking notes in a paper notebook!

Wasting $30,000

Around the 2001 timeframe, I was a business leader with more than 10 people reporting directly to me.

Every hour I spent looking for something meant that those 10 people were not properly productive.

Each hour of “down time” cost my business $150/hr times 10 people. I realized that when I wasted this hour each day searching for critical information, I was wasting $30,000 a month in unproductive time between me and my team. 10 people*$150/hr*5 days/week*4weeks/month = $30,000!

Something definitely had to change!

So, I started taking notes electronically using Microsoft Word and then migrated to an electronic form of Franklin Covey’s Daytimer. Although these methods were marginally better than traditional notebooks, I still found that Word and Franklin solutions were clumsy tools at best. They were hard to: use, organize, index, search, and store.

Fortunately, Microsoft OneNote was released around 2003 and I started using it shortly after.

Just a couple of important notes before proceeding with the rest of this post:

  1. I am not being paid by Microsoft for this post but if they want to pay me gobs of money I would be fine with that!
  2. In fairness to other tools like Evernote, I am sure they can provide the same functionality as OneNote. I simply have not used them enough to comment on them.
  3. What I am going to discuss here is not necessarily specific to OneNote. It can be applied to any other enhanced note taking the tool in the marketplace.
  4. This post is not meant to be a OneNote tutorial but rather an article that describes how I use OneNote. For this reason, I will not define the OneNote terms and functionality. I will assume that you already have this knowledge or can google it easily enough.
  5. This post is longer than my standard 500-word posts so you might need to set some additional time aside to work your way through it!
  6. As mentioned above, I will cover my “personal systematic approach to organizing” in next week’s post

Why I use OneNote

Microsoft OneNote provides an amazing way to record your thoughts, organize your notes and keep track of to-do lists.

It is cloud based so it can synchronize across multiple devices and it runs on many different platforms. I have it installed on my PC, iPad, and my iPhone. This means that I have access to all of my data pretty much all of the time.

But, if you stop there, you are missing out on its greatest benefit; it is a tool that you can use to plan and focus your daily life and your business!

What I describe below is how I set up OneNote to ensure that I am as organized and productive as possible.

OneNote desktop

OneNote is extremely flexible and completely customizable.

This is a very good thing but it can also result in scattered notes and a highly dysfunctional system.

So, the first thing anyone needs to do when they start using OneNote is to come up with a structure that makes sense for them and their business.

The screenshot below shows my OneNote desktop with the important components labeled. I will take you through these components starting with the Notebooks I use. The Notebooks are shown on the vertical column on the left side of the screenshot below.

Notebooks

You can have as many notebooks as you want.

The only limitation that I have seen is the cloud space that you have purchased (and this really isn’t a limitation – if you don’t have enough cloud space you just buy some more).

I add and remove notebooks as they are required but there are a number of notebooks that I use consistently. The screenshot below shows some of my current notebooks.

I will briefly describe the most important notebooks and what I use them for below:

OneNote sections

As mentioned above, I use the “Sections” within my Daily Notes “Notebook” for each month of the year. This is shown in the screenshot below.

In comparing a traditional paper based notebook to OneNote, Notebooks would be the book and Sections would be the chapters within the book. Keep this in mind as you design your Notebooks.

OneNote pages

I use OneNote “Pages” to record each day of the month within the “Sections” created inside the Daily Notes “Notebook.” This is shown in the screenshot below.

In comparing a traditional paper based notebook to OneNote, Notebooks = book, Sections = chapters within the book, and Pages = traditional book’s pages.

Pretty simple stuff!

Now, within each of the “Pages” in my Daily Notes “Notebook” I have two main components; Action Plan and Specific Notes. These are detailed below.

Action plan

This is where the processes and mindset of a well planned and organized executive meet up with the tool!

The Action Plan contains the actions, deliverables, meetings, and activities that must be completed each day. There should be one of these templates completed within each daily page.

The Action Plan consists of the following components:

Activity-specific notes

Just below the Action Plan area of a OneNote page, I create headings for each Activity listed in the Action Plan for that day. Below each of these headings I record all of the notes that may be applicable to that activity. I am one of those people in meetings who types their notes rather than scribbling illegibly into a traditional notebook!

Basically, I treat these sections as I would treat a traditional notebook. However, the functionality is much greater! With OneNote you can record:

This means that at the end of the meeting or activity I can copy and paste my notes into an email, meeting minutes, or any other electronic media. There is no time required to try to read scribbled notes and transcribe them into a electronic format or to ask people to send me the “charts” that they shared during a WebEx meeting. This alone saves enormous amounts of time and rework!

Saving $30,000 a month

In conclusion, the massive advantage of this system is its structure and it’s search capability.

I no longer have 10 people charging unproductive time waiting for me to dig through piles of paper looking for notes. All I do is type a keyword into the OneNote search bar and all instances of that keyword across all of my notebooks instantly pops up on my screen. No lost notes, no wasted time, and no wasted money!

Take action

Spend some time this month and set up your cloud based note-taking tool and begin transitioning away from your traditional paper-based notebook. This transition takes time and discipline but you will soon see that it is well worth the effort!

Also, take some time and read these related posts:

Finally, stay tuned for next week’s post where I show you the second component of a differentiated organizational system: a systematic, organizational methodology.

Human beings are creative by nature, and are goal seekers and problem solvers.  Every human being needs to be an originator of ideas and a creator of structures.” Tom Morris

Download a PDF of this article here.

Leave a comment below on what you use a cloud-based, note-taking tool for.

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