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Learn Process | Building Your PKM System
Personal Knowledge Management

Process

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Capture fills your inbox. Processing empties it. This is where the real work happens – where raw fragments become actual knowledge. Most people skip this stage, which is why their systems accumulate notes that are never used.

What Processing Means

Processing a note means asking: what is the actual idea here, and how does it connect to what I already know?

This is not about cleaning up formatting or adding tags. It is a cognitive act. You are reading what you captured, understanding it more deeply, and writing a version of it that will be useful to your future self.

A processed note has three qualities:

  • It is written in your own words, not copied from the source;
  • It contains a clear idea, not raw information;
  • It connects to at least one other note or concept in your system.

The Processing Workflow

A practical processing workflow for your inbox:

  • Read: what does this actually say?
  • Distill: what is the single most important idea?
  • Rewrite: express it in one to three sentences in your own words.
  • Connect: what does this remind you of? What existing note does it relate to?
  • Act or file: does this require action? If yes, add it to your task system. If no, move it to your notes.

This process takes two to five minutes per note. That is the cost of actually learning something rather than just saving it.

The Danger of Over-Processing

Processing should not become a perfectionism trap. A note does not need to be beautiful. It does not need to be complete. It needs to be useful.

The enemy of a good PKM system is the belief that every note needs to be perfectly written before it can be filed. This leads to either an overflowing inbox or hours spent polishing notes instead of using them.

A good enough note today is worth more than a perfect note you never write.

Progressive Summarization

One useful technique is progressive summarization: you process a note in layers over time rather than all at once. On first pass, you highlight the key points. On second pass – perhaps weeks later when the note comes up again – you bold the most important of those points. On a third pass, you write a brief summary at the top.

This approach respects the reality that you often do not know what is most valuable in a note until you need it for something specific.

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What distinguishes a processed note from a raw captured note?

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Section 2. Chapter 2

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Section 2. Chapter 2
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