Overview
Notes is a growth operator’s workspace. Every note is a strategic asset — not a blank page. It is a clean space to get ideas, drafts, and reference out of your head and somewhere you will actually find them again.
It is built for speed, so it never gets in the way of the thought you are trying to catch.
Every note is an asset
Most note apps give you an empty rectangle and wish you luck. Notes is opinionated: it assumes you are capturing something you intend to use — a mechanic worth stealing, a page worth modelling, a line worth reworking.
- Capture the thing — what is it? For example, a value-stack landing page you want to learn from.
- Capture the source — the URL, so you can go back to the original.
- Capture the mechanic — the part actually worth stealing. This is the field most people skip, and it is the one that makes the note valuable six months later.
Creating a note
Start a note the moment an idea lands — momentum matters more than tidiness.
- Click New note. You get a blank note titled Untitled and a cursor, immediately.
- Give it a clear title. Titles are what you scan later, so write them for your future self.
- Keep writing. Everything autosaves as you go.
Tags & search
As the collection grows, search is how you get back to anything fast. Search runs across notes, tags, and ideas.
- Tag by intent — what you would be doing when you need this again, not what topic it belongs to.
- Search matches titles and body, so a memorable first line pays off.
- Recent notes surface first, so today’s work is always one click away.
Notes in your workflow
Notes pairs naturally with the rest of the suite.
- Draft campaign copy here, then schedule it in the Calendar.
- Capture the reasoning behind a decision here, then break it into work in the Task Manager.
- Collect the mechanics you want to model, then build them into Funnel OS.
Saving & exporting
Notes saves your work automatically to your browser’s local storage as you go — there is no save button to remember. Because that storage is tied to one browser on one device, exporting is how you back up or move your work.
- Export writes your current data to a file you can keep or transfer.
- Import loads a previously exported file back in — useful on a new device.
- Keep periodic exports of anything you would hate to lose; local storage is convenient, but it is not a backup.
The Tutorials walk through a full backup-and-move, step by step. For the underlying rules, see Importing & exporting.