What I am actively writing now (these days) or ready for publication is marked with a flag. I called the bookmark that filters just such notes "In progress". I am not an adherent of Sheldonism. I do not build a hierarchy of bookmarks into a system that becomes uninteresting and irrelevant immediately after its complete debugging. Therefore, what is still raw, but is actively being worked on, and what needs to be published at the first convenient opportunity, are stored under the same sign: Flagged. Moreover, the difference between "hot" and "ready" is very illusory. Of course, with this approach we have a huge Inbox, but this is compensated by the fact that it takes a minimum of time to process each note. And believe me, sorting through the Inbox of your own ideas benin whatsapp number database is much more interesting and useful than the "Inbox" of other people's letters!
Take into work — flag . Published or transferred to Google Docs for adding illustrations — archive. Period.
I also set up Inbox itself to only contain Unflagged notes. That makes sense, right?
If you published or used a note somewhere, archive it immediately. Archived = used.
. My job is to periodically review Inbox and assign not only tags to the notes that have accumulated there, but also a flag if I am going to delve deeper into this particular material right now or in the near future.
Tags are everything. Without them, you will never become a writer (I hope Lukyanenko or Pelevin don’t read this).
LIFO. Last in or last modified — first on the list. That’s just how I want it, but you can set it up your way.
So, if you find it useful to listen to more than 80% of the simple principles presented here, you will be able to get to the point where you stand up in a subway car, open one of the Drafts folders on your iPhone and just start writing. And even if you hold on to the handrail with one hand, the other one will lead you to the fulfillment of your dream. Right now, without wasting precious time.
P.S.
A man who once and for all removed his phone from his desk talks about what inbound (search) marketing is and its role in business: