Sticky-note signpost crossroads representing note-taking choices

“What note-taking system should I use?” is usually the wrong question. A better one is: “What am I doing right now, and what do I need the note to do later?”

If you match the format to the job, your notes get shorter, clearer, and easier to reuse.

Below is a decision framework you can run in your head in about 15 seconds, plus examples and a small Chrome-friendly setup.

The 15-second decision tree (if/then)

Start with the end. What should happen after you write the note?

  • If you need an outcome or decision, then use Decision Notes (capture options, constraints, decision, next step).
  • If you need to remember what someone said, then use Meeting Notes (agenda, notes, decisions, action items).
  • If you need to learn and recall later, then use Learning Notes (question → explanation → example → self-test).
  • If you’re collecting sources, then use Research Notes (claim, evidence, link, your take).
  • If you just need to not forget, then use Scratch Notes (fast capture, then either delete or promote).

One practical rule: if you can’t name the “future use” of the note, it’s scratch.

Choose your “unit of organization” (page, list, or card)

Page, list, and card shapes as organization options

Most note-taking frustration is actually about the wrong container.

Use this if/then:

  • If the information changes over time (a project, a process, a living doc), then use a page (one place you edit).
  • If the information grows as a sequence (daily log, running meeting notes), then use a list (entries in order).
  • If you want to rearrange ideas (planning, writing, clustering), then use cards (each idea stands alone and can move).

This is format, not app. You can do pages/lists/cards in most web tools.

Pick a capture style: fast, structured, or hybrid

You don’t need “perfect notes.” You need notes that survive a week.

  • If you’re in the moment (call, hallway chat), then go fast: short bullets, minimal headings.
  • If you’re making a decision, then go structured: fixed headings that force clarity.
  • If you’re learning/researching, then go hybrid: quick capture now, then a 3–5 minute cleanup pass.

A useful compromise: write fast, then add just two lines at the top afterward—“Summary” and “Next.”

Templates you can copy (with if/then triggers)

Four template panels for different note types

Use one template per note. Don’t mix styles inside the same note unless you have to.

1) Meeting Notes (If you need accountability)

  • Context: date, attendees, purpose
  • Agenda: topics (one line each)
  • Notes: bullets under each topic
  • Decisions: who decided what
  • Action items: owner + next step + due date

2) Decision Notes (If you’re choosing between options)

  • Decision to make:
  • Constraints: time, money, risk, scope
  • Options: A / B / C
  • Trade-offs: what you give up with each
  • Decision:
  • Next step: smallest action that moves it forward

3) Research Notes (If you need to cite sources later)

  • Question:
  • Claim: one sentence
  • Evidence: quote/stat + link
  • My take: why it matters, limitations, what to verify

4) Learning Notes (If you want recall, not just storage)

  • What I’m trying to understand:
  • Explain it simply: 5–8 lines
  • Example: a worked mini example
  • Self-test: 3 questions you should answer tomorrow

Worked examples: running the framework in real life

Here are four “if/then” runs so you can see how it lands.

Example A: You’re in a weekly team sync

  • If the goal is shared understanding + follow-through, then use Meeting Notes.
  • If action items are the risk point, then write “Action items” as you go, not at the end.

Example B: You’re comparing two tools

  • If you’ll need to justify the choice later, then use Decision Notes.
  • If you keep waffling, then write constraints first (they usually decide for you).

Example C: You’re reading and collecting sources

  • If you’ll quote or cite, then use Research Notes.
  • If you can’t explain why the source matters, then don’t save it yet (or save it as “Maybe”).

Example D: You’re taking an online course

  • If the goal is recall, then use Learning Notes.
  • If you’re short on time, then write only the self-test questions now and fill answers later.

A lightweight setup in Chrome (capture now, sort later)

Tabs flowing into an inbox tray for capture workflow

You don’t need a complex app stack to use the framework. You just need a reliable capture point and a predictable naming habit.

  • If you’re browsing and want to capture quickly, then pin your note app tab (or keep it as the first tab in a window).
  • If you lose notes because titles are vague, then use a consistent prefix: MTG, DEC, RCH, LRN, SCR.
  • If you end up with too many open tabs, then capture links as bullets in the note instead of keeping tabs open.
  • If you never review, then add a repeating calendar reminder: “Notes sweep (10 min)” and promote/delete scratch notes.

A small habit that helps: at the end of any note, add one line: Next: and write a single action.

Takeaway: pick the note that matches the job

When you’re stuck, don’t search for the “best” method. Run the if/then: what do you need this note to do later?

Choose a template, write the minimum, and add a clear “Next.” That’s the whole system.