
Having a library of update ideas could not only increase your productivity but also help you create a more effective social media marketing campaign. Updates are probably one of the most valuable items in a social media marketers’ toolbox. Here is a handful of the best tips I found. I had a blast researching all the neat ways you can tap Evernote to help with marketing, productivity, organization, and more. How to use Evernote: 19 Little-Known Evernote Uses to Power Your Marketing and ProductivityĮvernote-a notes and to-do app-can be used in many different ways and for many different purposes. (A sneak peek at one of the ways: I researched and wrote this article all from within Evernote!)Īre you an Evernote fan? It’d be great to hear your favorite tips and workflows in the comments. There are so many ways to use the app and since we talk a lot about productivity here on the Buffer blog, I wanted to share 20 ways you can use Evernote for your productivity and marketing. One of my favorite fixes for helping stay organized is Evernote. Saving search queries to a shortcut can also find you notes in whatever date or department groupings you may need.I imagine many marketers might feel this way, what with all the wonderful hats we all get to wear.

Instead of different sub-tags for agents under the 'accounts' heading, naming the tags 'accounts_james', 'accounts_bob' etc means that searching for 'acc' will (probably) get you a menu of all the options - depending on what other tag names you have. There are ways around the issue - instead of nesting, various naming formats give the ability to find and apply the correct tag quickly.


Makes me wonder how organized the Evernote programming staff really is.Īs mentioned, this (only) applies to mobile apps, and might have more to do with the OS than Evernote being dismissive of tags. With Evernote on my Android, I'm must have over a hundred tags and am forced to use search as my organizational tool which as you can imagine is not always successful. I suspect only the technically minded really care about keeping their data organized. This is nested tag issue somewhat understandable because 30% to 40% of those who use Microsoft Explorer don't even save their information to nested folders.
