
The Midori Travelers Notebook
The Midori Traveler's notebook (or just Traveler's notebook now with their recent rebranding). has become a bit of a phenom in productivity circles. A highly customizable design and adaptable nature have made the Traveler's notebook become the tool de jour to the productivity obsessed.

OneNote TIP of the Week Whether you're using OneNote desktop or mobile, you can use brackets around text to automatically create a new page and a link to that page from your current note. For example if you have a daily note you track your activities from and then want to add a second note for minutes from a meeting just: [[Meeting Minutes - Aug 17]] The text format doesn't matter. After pressing Enter your text will be highlighted with a dotted underline indicating you have a new, unedited note connected to that text.
Sections, Section Groups, and Notebooks in OneNote There's a lot of interest around when is it right to use a section, section group, or notebook in OneNote to organize your information. I'll admit it can be very confusing so here's some rules of thumb I follow when managing my own. Notebooks * Use when you're likely to need to share content. * Allows you to isolate materials around large topic areas (work vs. home, large projects, etc.) * Good for materials you may not need to access all the time (open the notebook when you need it, close it when you don't) Sections * Useful for breaking down notebooks into logical groupings (work - meetings, notes, plans, schedules, etc.) * Can be secured by password for better protection * Can be color coded for easy reference Section Groups * When you need larger subdivisions in a notebook (Work - Projects (Section Group) - Project A (Section)) * Helpful when archiving content into a master notebook If you're organizing your personal content, don't worry about getting it right the first time. If you're organizing collaborative content, adding a page showing the organizational structure can be a boon to anyone using your notebook.
