Want to know one common habit among successful people?
They get things out of their head and down on paper (or some other note-taking device).
In fact, Richard Branson has been known to carry a notebook with him everywhere he goes, and credits writing things down as one of his most powerful success habits.
The billionaire founder of Virgin Group is not alone – here are some other examples of highly successful people who swear by note-taking:
- Bill Gates is an avid note-taker, preferring to use old-fashioned pen and paper, despite being celebrated for his computer genius.
- Entrepreneur and author Tim Ferriss uses the Evernote app 10+ times per day for all of his note-taking, research, and brain decluttering (Adam Savage of Mythbusters is a huge fan of Evernote as well). Ferriss previously detailed a highly-rigorous (and more old school) notetaking routine.
- Facebook COO Sheryl Sandberg is rarely spotted without her spiral-bound notebook.
- Two of J.K. Rowling’s most prized possessions are a pair of small notebooks, which contain her very first scribblings about Harry Potter.
- Taylor Swift immediately records a voice memo on her iphone whenever she has song ideas.
Note-taking (in various forms) is clearly as relevant today as it has been throughout history, when Mark Twain, Thomas Edison, Ludwig van Beethoven, and Pablo Picasso all relied on their pocket notebooks.
Of course now there is no shortage of note-taking apps, from Evernote to OneNote to Google Keep, and beyond. And there is a hot debate about whether note-taking digitally or by hand is superior - with pen and paper seeming to still have the edge for learning and information retention.
This old-fashioned method has the support of productivity guru David Allen, author of the classic book Getting Things Done, who has said that “the easiest and most ubiquitous way to get stuff out of your head is pen and paper.”
This tried-and-true system is still so popular because it “requires no power source, no boot-up time, no program-specific formatting, and no syncing to external drives and the cloud,” according to David Sax, author of The Revenge of Analog.
I prefer the analog approach as well. I carry a pen and notebook with me wherever I go, opting for physical over digital for my note-taking. I find that this method helps me focus and absorb the most important information, even if I sacrifice some speed and efficiency along the way.
Even when reading books, I choose to underline key passages by hand, and then transcribe my top takeaways into a real notebook after I am finished reading. And I always keep a notebook by my bed to get things out of my head for a peaceful night’s sleep.
Whatever method you choose, the critical part is that you free your mind from excess information. Behavioral science expert Caroline Webb, author of the excellent book How to Have a Good Day, implores us to “Write it down as soon as it comes to mind. Use your intelligence for getting things done, rather than trying to remember what you need to do.” She says it doesn’t matter if you use real paper or an electronic version, as long as you get your thoughts, worries, and ideas out of your head as soon as possible. This is absolutely true for me – if I don’t write it down, I don’t remember it.
Going a step further, Branson says that the most important part of note-taking is having the discipline to “go through your ideas and turn them into actionable and measurable goals.”
That is what today’s most successful people are doing, and why Branson asserts that notetaking should be an essential habit of every leader.
Duly noted.