Notice: This page requires JavaScript to function properly.
Please enable JavaScript in your browser settings or update your browser.
Oppiskele Organize | Building Your PKM System
Personal Knowledge Management

Organize

Pyyhkäise näyttääksesi valikon

Once a note is processed, it needs a home. Organization is the stage most people over-engineer – spending hours building elaborate folder structures before they have enough notes to make organization meaningful. The right approach is simpler and more flexible.

Three Tools for Organization

Modern PKM systems use three organizational primitives: folders, tags, and links. Each has a different purpose and a different strength.

Folders are hierarchical containers. They work well for organizing by project or area of life – things that have a clear boundary and a finite lifespan. A folder for a specific project makes sense. A folder for "psychology" does not – because psychology is not a project, it is a topic that bleeds into everything.

Tags are flat labels that can be applied to any note regardless of where it lives. They work well for cross-cutting themes – ideas that recur across multiple projects or topics. A tag like #decision-making or #to-review can apply to notes from completely different domains.

Links are direct connections between notes. They are the most powerful organizational tool because they reflect how knowledge actually works – not in categories, but in relationships. A link says: "this note is directly relevant to that note."

The PARA Method

One of the most practical folder systems is PARA, developed by Tiago Forte:

  • Projects: active work with a specific outcome and deadline;
  • Areas: ongoing responsibilities with no end date (health, finances, management);
  • Resources: reference material organized by topic;
  • Archive: inactive projects, areas, and resources.

PARA works because it organizes by actionability rather than topic. The question is not "what subject is this?" but "how actively am I working with this?"

Links Over Folders

The most valuable organizational work you can do is linking notes to each other. Every time you write a new note and ask "what does this connect to?", you are building a network of ideas rather than a pile of documents.

Over time, highly-linked notes become hubs – concepts that many other ideas flow through. These are often your most important ideas, the ones worth revisiting and developing further.

Organize as Little as Necessary

A common mistake is building an elaborate organizational system before you have content to organize. Organization should emerge from your notes, not precede them.

Start with a single inbox and a handful of folders. Add structure only when the absence of structure creates a real problem – when you genuinely cannot find something you need.

question mark

What is the main advantage of using links over folders for organizing notes?

Valitse oikea vastaus

Oliko kaikki selvää?

Miten voimme parantaa sitä?

Kiitos palautteestasi!

Osio 2. Luku 3

Kysy tekoälyä

expand

Kysy tekoälyä

ChatGPT

Kysy mitä tahansa tai kokeile jotakin ehdotetuista kysymyksistä aloittaaksesi keskustelumme

Osio 2. Luku 3
some-alt