Evernote isn’t a revolution. Like most of the technology products we
tend to use regularly in our daily lives, Evernote is an evolution, a
collection of good ideas that rolls into a single program the functionality of a half-dozen apps you would otherwise use separately.
Evernote was designed
for individuals, but businesses have been adopting it in increasing
numbers, finding unique ways to put it to use. Evernote itself has taken
notice of this, and later this year it will be launching Evernote for Business, which could elevate Evernote’s business utility even further.
Meanwhile, if you’re new to Evernote, or are just dipping your toes into it, here’s how to put the little app that could to its best use.
Get started with Evernote
Evernote is a hybrid system of offline and cloud-based features. You’ll
need to create an account when you first download Evernote; you can then
install the software just about anywhere. In fact, the more places you
install it, the more useful it becomes. Evernote is available for the
Mac and Windows and all mobile platforms, so no matter how
multi-platform you are when you work, there’s nothing keeping you from
running Evernote on every device.
Evernote’s core functionality is in storing your notes and keeping them
organized and synchronized, in real time, among all your devices. It
pays to understand a bit about Evernote’s terminology, which isn’t
always intuitive, before you start filling the app up with content.
In Evernote terms, every page you create is its own Note. Notes are most useful when organized into various Notebooks,
essentially a folder full of notes. Setting up notebooks tends to be
easier on a computer than in a mobile app, so it’s a good idea to
configure your notebooks ahead of time on a PC, even if you leave them
empty to start. A group of notebooks is a Stack. Just drag one notebook to another to automatically create a stack. (Right-click to rename it.)
For example, if you used Evernote to keep an archive of payroll, each
paycheck would be a note, each employee would be a notebook, and various
classes of employees (full-time, part-time, contractor) might be a
stack.
Add content
When you create a note, you can give it multiple Tags, by clicking the “Click to add tag” button in Windows or the Info button (an i
in a circle) in the mobile app. Tags are especially useful when you’re
embedding nontext content, since everything in Evernote is searchable.
They’re most useful when you have common but more general terms that you
might want to search across all of your notebooks: “2012 taxes,”
“personal,” or “urgent,” for example. Adding content from within the
mobile app may be less intuitive than it should be to new users. To
create a note on the go, navigate to the notebook you want to work in,
then click the oversized plus-sign (+) button at the bottom of the screen.
Speaking of adding content, one of Evernote’s major features is that you
can add all types of content to the archive, not just text. The program
supports PDFs, images, audio recordings, sketches (with the Skitch plug-in), webpages (with the Web Clipper
browser plug-in), and more. Evernote has a rich plug-in ecosystem,
which you can explore on the Evernote homepage if you want to delve even
further into special types of content.
Share content
Finally, we come to Evernote's marquee feature: Sharing. Everything you
create in Evernote is automatically shared with your various
installations of the software unless you specify otherwise when creating
a notebook. (Note that you can't change this behavior later.) By
default Evernote synchronizes all installations of the software every 30
minutes; or, you can press F9 to initiate a manual sync.
You can also share content with other Evernote users. The easiest way to do this is to right-click a notebook and select Share Notebook.
You’ll be prompted to enter email addresses or to create a public link
to the notebook that is accessible via the Web. After accepting the
invitation, the recipient will find the shared notebook under the Shared
tab on the left-hand navigation pane in Evernote. Note: To share
notebooks with full read/write access, the owner of the notebook must be
a Premium user ($5 a month), which comes with additional features like
extra content and the ability to make text within PDFs searchable.
Otherwise, notebooks are shared as read-only.
Now that you’ve got a handle on the basics, it’s time to put your new
Evernote skills to better use. Here are some ways that small business
owners are elevating Evernote beyond the obvious.
Combine text and audio recordings into a single note.
Upgrade your note-taking
At its core Evernote is a juiced-up note-taking system, but you can get
more out of it if you make use of the software’s multimedia
capabilities. Joey Price, CEO of Jumpstart:HR,
says, “I record the audio of client meetings while jotting down notes
in real time. We manage a lot of different clients, and sometimes taking
notes in shorthand isn't enough. Being able to replay the audio back
once I've left helps me re-immerse in my thought process and generate
new ideas to help our clients.”
Archive essential emails
Storing email permanently in a webmail folder or within Outlook is
usually fine, but it means you have to have access to your inbox in
order to read it. Evernote gives you a couple of options for upgrading
the way email is archived. First, Outlook users can use the “Add to
Evernote 4” button that appears in the toolbar to send the full text of
an email to Evernote as a note at the touch of a button.
Not an Outlook user? Use the “email to Evernote” capability to send any
message directly to Evernote. When you create your account, Evernote
assigns you a custom email address to use. Just forward notes or
received messages to this address, and they’ll automatically be
converted into notes behind the scenes.
Forget about that receipts shoebox. Evernote digitizes and filters receipts with OCR.
Keep tabs on inventory
Evernote may not be robust enough to replace your inventory-management
software, but it’s an excellent tool for keeping tabs on the various
items you sell, along with basic pricing information. If your business
involves a smaller number of SKUs, you can even use Evernote as a way to
showcase your wares from any device. Just add a photo, details, and
prices, and Evernote turns into a handy mobile portfolio that you can
update anytime.
Collaborate on projects
Building an agenda for a meeting either with staff or with clients is
usually a tedious, email-based affair. But share a notebook from within
Evernote, and the process becomes much more collaborative. Agendas can
be built and refined on the fly right up until the meeting begins.
Brainstorming sessions can take place asynchronously, and each
participant can add notes whenever the mood strikes them instead of
being limited to a single brainstorming session. Got a big event to
plan? Evernote can keep a dozen subcontractors on the same page.
Integrate with Getting Things Done
Evernote is a natural tool for the productivity obsessed, and while you
can probably figure out how to add it into a Getting Things Done
workflow, one Web programmer has done the heavy lifting for you, thanks
to this 15-minute configuration guide. It's definitely worth a look if you’re a GTD freak.
One Evernote user captures all check pay stubs sent to employees for an easy archive.
Track expenses, pay employees, and prep for taxes
No, Evernote can’t cut a check, but it can keep tabs on who got paid what. Justin Lugbill of Lugbill Designs
uses Evernote to replace the shoebox full of receipts. You can scan or
take a snapshot of each receipt, and then save it to Evernote. Says
Lugbill, “Every receipt that I get, whether it’s paper or an email
confirmation, I forward to my Evernote account.” Different expense
categories each get their own notebook, and employees have their pay
stubs archived and organized in separate notebooks, so Lugbill can
easily look up any given check. The end result looks more like a
bookkeeper’s chart of accounts than a to-do list.
Archive analog notes for posterity
The conference rooms of the world are covered with whiteboard notes that
are promptly erased by the evening cleaning crew, just as many a hotel
bar is littered with note-covered cocktail napkins that are swept away
into the trash. No one wants to have to be the guy who copies this
information down into digital form, and with Evernote you don’t have to.
Jesse Waites of PNTHR.com says
he snaps photos of anything drawn or hand-written outside the office
and drops the picture into Evernote. As noted earlier, Evernote can
convert handwriting in PDFs into plain text for you. It even scans
images for text and saves that text separately.
Stash software keys
What do you do with all those software keys you get for registering
purchased and downloaded software? If you’re ultra-organized, you might
save them in a file that you store on your computer… which you have to
hope you remember to back up or print out before you wipe your hard
drive (at which point you may actually want to use them again). Simple
solution: Forward all registration-code emails to Evernote and drop them
all into a notebook, and you’ll never lose them again.
Store business cards in Evernote. OCR turns text into usable, searchable data.
Remember a name
Business cards have a nasty tendency to end up in stacks (or the trash),
which makes them virtually useless to both the giver and the receiver.
Evernote makes for a great repository for contact information. Just snap
a picture of the card, and let Evernote’s OCR go to work. Add notes and
tags to remind you why exactly this person was important.
Alternatively, you can use Evernote Hello,
which, while it isn’t specifically designed with business cards in
mind, does let you use Evernote as a sort of souped-up contact manager.
Spy on competitors
David Handmaker of Next Day Flyers
says Evernote makes competitive analysis on the Web easy. “I’m also a
huge fan of Skitch [the Evernote add-on that lets you edit and annotate
screenshots and images]. I, along with many of my team members, use it
frequently to take screenshots of our website or our competitor’s sites,
and we mark it up to highlight important information. The functionality
and ease of use is fantastic. Plus it saves our company money, as now
we don’t have to buy as many Photoshop licenses for the team.”