Templates
Goodnotes comes with a good selection of cover and page types for daily use, but adding your own templates, with sections appropriate to your work, hobby or other needs can save time and effort, meaning you can spend more time on the actual notes. The simplest way to begin is to make your template inside Goodnotes. This means the page size is going to be right, and you can also use familiar tools to create your design. Once you know what’s going into each page, draw it out. I prefer to start with the dotted paper and use the Shape tool to keep my lines and boxes straight. It helps to know how you like to divide up your thinking and how extensive your note-taking will be. For some, a page per week is adequate, while people with busier lives may want one page per day with lots of procedural or creative sections. Either way, your template sets out your structure, so it’s worth spending some time thinking about it. Goodnotes allows multiple templates per notebook, so if you’re a weekly person suddenly hit with a tidal wave of work, you can add a new page, set it to a daily template and get writing. When you’re happy with your layout, hit the Share button and select “Export this page.” Export the page as a PDF somewhere in your file system.
Import and select
Next, clear the page and go back to the Library. Tap the Gear icon in the top right of the page and choose “Notebook Templates.” The first time you come to this section, you’ll need to tap the “+” icon at the top right and create a new group. Give it a descriptive name, then within that new section, tap the Import button, navigate to your PDF and import it. Back in your notebook, tap the “…” icon on the top right and select “Change template.” Choose your new template and select Apply. You’ll have a page that looks like your original design, but the label elements are all fixed. You can start filling in your sections. The next day, slide left with two fingers and a new page is created with your template in place, ready for filling. The really nice thing about this is that the elements you’ve imported are treated as surface elements by Goodnotes, so when highlighting something, your design elements will show through the highlight color.
Page links
Depending on how you decide to organize things, Favorites could become the most valuable part of your setup. To get to your notebook overview, tap the Pages icon in the top left to get to your page grid. At the beginning of your usage, this page is going to be a little sparse. As you move through the month, it can become more chaotic, especially if you’re doing one page per day and adding project-based notes. It’s a good habit to add a bookmark at the beginning of each week (tap the “Favorite/Bookmark” icon on the toolbar when you’re on that page), then next time time you go into the overview, you can touch Favorites and see the beginning of each week. Of course, you can base your Favorites on any criteria, so long as you understand it. Note, Favorites here relate to the internal structure of a notebook. You can also favorite individual notebooks in the library, which is useful for denoting active or archived projects.
Search tips
As you accumulate notes, effective search becomes more and more important. You can access Search with the icon in the toolbar. As you type your query, matching words should appear in the menu along with a screen shot of the word. Tap the result to go to the page. While it does quite a good job of deciphering even the most terrible scrawls, you’re going to find it far more efficient if you’ve taken a bit of care with your handwriting. I found that zooming in, using a medium thickness pen and writing in caps made for more successful searches, but I suspect that mostly because those actions force me to slow down with the writing a little more, meaning neater letters. As good as Goodnotes is, it is a walled garden, so if you’re working across platforms, you may need something a little less Apple-centric. And if you’re a Google fan, Keep is a great app for making your notes-habit accessible everywhere and to collaborators.