5 Ways a Bullet Journal Can Supercharge Your Work Day

Every working person is looking for new ways to improve productivity and organization. There’s always a new app, a new planner, or a new website to try. But there is an analog system that actually works much more effectively than any of these options. It’s called a bullet journal.


This is a system created by designer Ryder Carroll to combine his calendar, tasks and journal all into one notebook. Here are a few ways this system can help improve your productivity and organization at work.

1. Organize and prioritize your tasks

There are plenty of to-do list apps to dump your tasks into and they offer tons of ways to organize and prioritize them. But while these apps have infinite space to jot down as many tasks as you want, you don’t suddenly have infinite time to complete all of them. Seeing how much room your tasks take up in your bullet journal will force you to prioritize. You will end up choosing what you absolutely need to have done versus what would just be nice to have done. Also, writing by hand improves your memory so even without referring to your list, you’ll be less likely to forget what you planned to do next.

2. Change your layouts based on your needs

No matter how flexible planners and apps claim to be, there will always be some restraints. But in a journal, you can personalize and rearrange your spreads however you like. Your bullet journal can adapt based on the projects or assignments you’re working on. With just a pen and a ruler, you can create entire spreads personalized to your specific needs. To have the same thing in a traditional planner, you would have to pay $50 to $100. But with a bullet journal, you can have your own personalized workspace pretty inexpensively.

3. Take meeting notes right next to your task list

This goes back a little into the flexibility of the system. A great perk of a bullet journal is that you can turn the page and start something new. If you were to go all digital, you would probably have separate to-do and note-taking apps. No need for that with a bullet journal. Just take your meeting notes right next to your task list or projections or goals or whatever you want. No need to scramble around different applications for the information you need. Everything is in one place.

4. Track long-term goals over several months or even a year

You can literally put anything you want in your journal. Want to track your work hours? Write it down. Need to check off when you talked to a client when? Write it down. You don’t need expensive proprietary software. Anything you need to track, you can. Even if you don’t purposely track anything, you can always flip back through your pages and see what you worked on when. It’s a good record to keep in the months and years to come.

5. No charging, syncing, or updating required

Technology offers great tools, but there are a few drawbacks. Ever been in a long meeting and anxious about your tablet or phone battery? Needed to grab some notes but your app wouldn’t sync? Wanted to input tasks but your app was updating? None of these issues exist with a bullet journal. Just put it in your bag and go. You will probably be the most organized and on-top-of-it person in your office. (Of course, you don’t want to get it wet or accidentally leave it behind, but nothing’s truly perfect.)

string(3943) "

Every working person is looking for new ways to improve productivity and organization. There's always a new app, a new planner, or a new website to try. But there is an analog system that actually works much more effectively than any of these options. It's called a bullet journal.


This is a system created by designer Ryder Carroll to combine his calendar, tasks and journal all into one notebook. Here are a few ways this system can help improve your productivity and organization at work.

1. Organize and prioritize your tasks

There are plenty of to-do list apps to dump your tasks into and they offer tons of ways to organize and prioritize them. But while these apps have infinite space to jot down as many tasks as you want, you don't suddenly have infinite time to complete all of them. Seeing how much room your tasks take up in your bullet journal will force you to prioritize. You will end up choosing what you absolutely need to have done versus what would just be nice to have done. Also, writing by hand improves your memory so even without referring to your list, you'll be less likely to forget what you planned to do next.

2. Change your layouts based on your needs

No matter how flexible planners and apps claim to be, there will always be some restraints. But in a journal, you can personalize and rearrange your spreads however you like. Your bullet journal can adapt based on the projects or assignments you're working on. With just a pen and a ruler, you can create entire spreads personalized to your specific needs. To have the same thing in a traditional planner, you would have to pay $50 to $100. But with a bullet journal, you can have your own personalized workspace pretty inexpensively.

3. Take meeting notes right next to your task list

This goes back a little into the flexibility of the system. A great perk of a bullet journal is that you can turn the page and start something new. If you were to go all digital, you would probably have separate to-do and note-taking apps. No need for that with a bullet journal. Just take your meeting notes right next to your task list or projections or goals or whatever you want. No need to scramble around different applications for the information you need. Everything is in one place.

4. Track long-term goals over several months or even a year

You can literally put anything you want in your journal. Want to track your work hours? Write it down. Need to check off when you talked to a client when? Write it down. You don't need expensive proprietary software. Anything you need to track, you can. Even if you don't purposely track anything, you can always flip back through your pages and see what you worked on when. It's a good record to keep in the months and years to come.

5. No charging, syncing, or updating required

Technology offers great tools, but there are a few drawbacks. Ever been in a long meeting and anxious about your tablet or phone battery? Needed to grab some notes but your app wouldn't sync? Wanted to input tasks but your app was updating? None of these issues exist with a bullet journal. Just put it in your bag and go. You will probably be the most organized and on-top-of-it person in your office. (Of course, you don't want to get it wet or accidentally leave it behind, but nothing's truly perfect.)

"

This Credit Card Myth Simply Will Not Die

I can’t remember who gave me this personal finance hack, or, rather, advice: but one juicy tidbit was that I should keep a balance on my credit cards and that it would up my credit score. I’ve even wiped out the balance on a credit card debt and then purchased something that I slowly pay

Creating A Distraction-Free Zone At Work

Photo by Arlington Research (Unsplash)

You’re powering through your morning. You’re in the zone. Getting so much done. But then you get Slacked with an innocent question: “Gotta moment to discuss the Jefferson thing?” “💯!” you answer instantly and get pulled off-task for 15- 20 minutes. And just before you’ve solved the Jefferson issue, your manager’s supervisor’s EA emails you

The Artists Vs. The Machine: The Dark Side Of AI In The Music Industry

Taylor Swift, The Tortured Poets Department

Republic Records

Artificial Intelligence (AI) has become overwhelmingly popular in the past few years. The world has leaned full-force into technology and entrusted AI with, well, everything. You can see AI commercials, AI-powered statistics during sports games, and there was even a whole writer’s strike over the AI Invasion of storytelling and Hollywood. As I’ve watched tens

So…The Hybrid Work Model Is Weighing On Your Mental Health

A majority of the population works from home...but are you happy about it?

Resume Genius via Unsplash

Ever since the pandemic popularized (or forced) virtual meetings and, countless companies adopted the hybrid work model or went completely virtual. And once the public health crisis was declared over, we remained confined to our desks in our kitchens and attics working from home. And it’s not just work. Doctor’s TeleHealth appointments, therapy visits on

The Worst Ways To Use Your Company Credit Card

If your business offers corporate credit cards or expense accounts to employees, there’s a good chance there is unethical spending going on. 33% of corporate credit card holders admit to blatantly defrauding the companies they work for, and twice that amount confess to making “risky purchases.” But a thread on AskReddit reveals some of the

The TRUTH About The Trad Wife Trend

Nara Smith, Lucky Blue Smith, and daughter Rumble Honey

Matthew Brookes / Oliver Peoples

Imagine this: you marry the man of your dreams. You have two beautiful children with another on the way. You spend your days cooking gorgeous, nutritious meals for your family…. from scratch. You get paid to share your daily life and meals with people around the world. But here’s the catch: half of those people

You’ve filed an extension, now what?

April 18 came and your taxes were not ready. So you filed a tax extension. Well, you should file an extension, if you haven’t already. Form 4868 is one of easier tax forms to fill out and it will give you an extra six months to get your taxes together. Everyone is eligible for a

The Unexpected Emergence of Personal Finance TikTok

When you think of personal finance, what springs to mind? Kevin O’Leary of Shark Tank fame? Dave Ramsay yelling into a podcast mic? Finance bros tracking their Bitcoin? Unfortunately, these are the images we’re constantly bombarded by. So they’re the archetypes overwhelmingly represented in personal finance. But it’s not all Chads in down vests and