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Lära Choosing the Right Tool | Tools and Habits
Personal Knowledge Management

Choosing the Right Tool

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The PKM tool market is large, loud, and opinionated. People argue about Obsidian vs Notion vs Roam with the same energy they argue about text editors. The truth is simpler: the best tool is the one you will actually use consistently, and the differences between them matter less than the habits you build around any of them. That said, the tools are genuinely different in ways that matter for how you work.

Obsidian

Obsidian stores notes as plain Markdown files on your local device. There is no database, no proprietary format – your notes are just text files in a folder.

Strengths:

  • Complete ownership of your data – no subscription lock-in, no company going out of business and taking your notes with it;
  • Powerful linking and graph visualization – the local graph view shows connections between notes visually;
  • Highly extensible via a large plugin ecosystem;
  • Fast, works offline, no sync latency.

Weaknesses:

  • The interface is not beginner-friendly;
  • Collaboration is limited – it is primarily a personal tool;
  • The plugin ecosystem means you can spend more time configuring than writing.

Obsidian is the best choice for a Zettelkasten-style PKM system where linking and long-term knowledge building are the priority.

Notion

Notion is a flexible workspace that combines notes, databases, wikis, and project management in one tool. It lives in the cloud and is designed for collaboration.

Strengths:

  • Extremely flexible – can be a note app, a project tracker, a team wiki, and a database simultaneously;
  • Excellent for structured information – tables, kanban boards, and templates work well;
  • Strong collaboration features.

Weaknesses:

  • Not optimized for linking between notes – it is primarily a database tool, not a thinking tool;
  • Can become a second job to maintain if you over-engineer it;
  • Performance degrades with very large workspaces.

Notion is well-suited for project management and team documentation, but less suited for the kind of associative, link-heavy knowledge building that Zettelkasten requires.

Roam Research

Roam popularized bidirectional linking and the daily note format. It was the tool that sparked the current PKM movement.

Strengths:

  • Bidirectional links are first-class – every link shows what links back to it;
  • The daily note as the default capture point makes starting easy;
  • Powerful for non-linear thinking and idea development.

Weaknesses:

  • Expensive;
  • No offline mode;
  • The company is small and the product's long-term future is uncertain.

The Tool Is Not the System

The most important thing to understand about tools is that no tool will build your PKM system for you. A beautiful Obsidian vault with no consistent writing habit is worth nothing. A plain text file you write in every day is worth more than any sophisticated setup you abandon after two weeks.

Choose the simplest tool that supports your actual workflow. Add complexity only when the absence of a feature creates a real problem.

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What is the most important criterion for choosing a PKM tool?

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