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How Evernote Works for Moms, Business, and Everything in Between, by Carley Knobloch, Digitwirl Founder

Tips and Stories | By Carley Knobloch
 
  Name: Carley Knobloch
Profession: founder of Digitwirl, a weekly tech web show for women
Location: Los Angeles
Website: http://digitwirl.com
Facebook:
http://www.facebook.com/digitwirl
Twitter:
@digitwirl

 

Bio

Carley Knobloch is the founder of Digitwirl, a weekly web show that teaches women how to make technology work for them. Carley has held various creative positions in digital Hollywood, building some of the first-ever film and television websites for clients like Sony Pictures and Warner Bros. She is a regular contributor to Lifetime’s The Balancing Act and has appeared on ABC News and Fox News. In 2001, she started her consulting practice, Mothercraft, to help coach moms on how they can simplify and organize their lives.

Evernote, Everywhere

Women, Technology and Life/Work Balance

In my experience, I’ve found that women have different needs than men when it comes to technology. Women often ask: How will this save me time? How can this save me money? How will it help me get things done faster so I can spend more time with my family?

I use Evernote for…

When I became a mom, I was struck by how my life was turned upside down and I wasn’t as organized as I used to be — I couldn’t keep my address book or my calendar and was very distracted all the time. It inspired me to create my coaching and consulting practice, Mothercraft. I started coaching moms and writing a weekly newsletter on how they could simplify and organize their lives as moms. When I began attaching a video to the newsletter, it really took off… and the idea for Digitwirl was born!

I’m a busy mom of two, running my own business, looking for tools that can help me manage my life — and since I can’t live without Evernote, it’s no surprise that it’s been one of the most popular Digitwirl episodes we’ve aired.

Here’s a look at how I use Evernote:

  • For collaboration: Digitwirl’s content director is in New York and I’m in Los Angeles, so we use a shared Evernote notebook to communicate about technologies that we want to cover. We tag all of the products according to type (travel, beauty, home organization). When we’re going over materials and I’m trying to remember the name of a digital luggage scale that lets you know if you overpack, I can search through tags like ‘travel’ and ‘luggage’ but also inside of everything I’ve written or clipped. I never have to have that moment of “I sort of remember, but don’t really remember.’ [Learn how to start sharing notes]

  • For my business: When I started my new business, I opened all of my bank accounts with Evernote. I didn’t bring any paper to the bank. I had my EIN and my article of incorporation scanned into Evernote.
  • For gift ideas: When I’m out and about with my kids and they say “I want that!” I take a picture of the item and tag it with ‘want’. The next time I’m on Amazon and I want to buy a present, I just browse through notes tagged ‘want.’
  • For instruction manuals: Every time I get a new device, the instruction manual gets scanned into Evernote. Before Evernote, I had a big box full of instruction manuals for things like my washing machine from my old house. Now, I can keep things up to date; if something is out of date, I delete it.

  • For warranties, receipts and contracts: I save warranties for appliances like my washer and drier in Evernote, as well as receipts. I also have a contracts and agreements notebook.
  • For photos of kids’ art: I take a lot of photographs of my kids’ artwork — especially their 3D art. We do a lot of ‘this has lived its life on the counter, let’s take a picture of it to remember it and then throw it away.’ The kids love looking through this notebook. It’s a sentimental place for me and for them.

  • For class rosters and school documents: I keep my kids’ class rosters in Evernote. I have a class rosters notebook with each scanned note labeled by year and kid, along with important school forms and notices, and all their report cards.
  • For travel: Evernote keeps me organized when I travel and attend conferences. I email myself all kinds of correspondence that’s important. I have one notebook for each event I’m going to. Right now, I have a notebook for my speaking engagement at BlogHer. It includes my speaker agreement, hotel reservation information, itinerary, information on meetings I need to attend, etc. When I get there, I know I can pull up my phone and have everything in one place.

Evernote is like having a filing cabinet in your back pocket. All of my important documents follow me wherever I go — my house is virtually paperless and all of my information is accessible whenever I need it, from wherever I am. It’s one of those rare services that becomes more useful as time goes on. The best part is, using Evernote means never having to say to someone, “Oh I left it in my other purse,” or “Oh it’s in my hard drive.”

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  • Phaedra

    Brilliant tips! Funny, I organize work emails by projects or teams and yet I had not organized my Evernote clips. *GASP* I’m slacking! LOL The best tip ever: MANUALS! I’m currently purging papers and have bags to be shredded. THANK YOU for the manuals, warranties, receipts tip I’ll be tossing even more in the bags!

  • Deb Reale

    This was a terrific article, and the readers’ comments and questions were helpful too. I started an Evernote premium account a couple of weeks ago after reading articles about how useful Evernote could be. I love it. I would like to get a good scanner when I’ve saved up for one, to really use Evernote to the max. It’s great– already makes me feel so much more organized after drowning in paperwork in the past.

    My favorite note (though my kids are now grown) was photographing the kiddos’ artwork and making a notebook for that. I’m going to share that with others who I know will love it.

    Thanks! Need to go check out Digitwhirl!

  • http://www.crossternal.com Steven G

    Also.. likely you know this Carley… but there is an iphone app called FastEver Snap which facilitates taking pictures and sending them directly to Evernote. It saves a few steps… also you can so-save them to the iPhone camera roll. It’s $1.99 app (sometimes it goes on sale for 0.99) but I found worth it if you take a lot of pics… good time saver… thanks again for your story…

  • obiwan

    Suggestion: amazon has an app for your phone that allows you to take a picture of what you are looking at, and someone at amazon will instantly send the price of it to your phone

  • http://www.facebook.com/memorytipsforall Sudhanshu

    Hi, I am a Guinness World Memory Record Holder. I give FREE MEMORY TIPS to the world. But still I use evernote to manage information . Now this article has given me enough motivation to go for “documentation” also. Thanks.

  • Mike Carrington

    … and not just useful for women!
    But I still have to get Evernote organised and remember to tag everything – otherwise it will start to look like my desk.
    Incidentally, this may be a silly question, but what is “dry rub”?

    • Christina

      LOL! Trust a guy to pick up on that, huh ladies?! @Mike A dry rub is a mixture of dry spices that you rub onto fish, steaks, poultry. A dry marinade of sorts. BBQ aficianados love dry rubs. Adds alot of complexity to the flavors of your foods. I noticed the way you spelled “organized”…maybe its and American thing and I am thinking that you are not. :)

  • Jacques

    Good article. Thanks. I have a question. I have been thinking about putting all my user IDs and passwords on Evernotes. That way I do not have to remember them. I only need to Evernotes’s. Is this a good idea?

  • Julia Krasinski

    I just downloaded the app to my phone and have no clue what to do with it!! This article was helpful, thanks! Now to find some step to steps for this newbie…. :)

  • http://www.facebook.com/mbritb morgan b.

    Great article!! Very helpful! My favorite part was the way you dealt with the kids’ drawings. I’m overrun with all of my son’s artwork (he LOVES to color)!! Thanks!!

  • Laurie

    Your article is FANTASTIC!! I’m so thankful that you created it. I’m a full time school teacher, I have a jewelry business, and my husband and I are working on the family. There’s tons of paperwork involved at school. Staying organized with 24 kids, their parents, and administration is key to your sanity. This eliminates a ton of binders and folders! Thank you for the tips!

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