Last update: 19 Sep. 2025
My PKM in Notion: Where Ideas Go to Compound, Not Die
Personal Knowledge Management (PKM) isn’t just another productivity hack for me—it’s the backbone of how I think, create, and grow. Using Zettelkasten principles in my Notion-based digital garden, I’m not collecting notes that vanish into the void. I’m cultivating ideas that actually compound over time.
Core Principles
- Ideas in my own words → Writing forces comprehension, not copy-pasting.
- Connections over collections → The magic comes from linking notes, not hoarding them.
- Structure + flexibility → I’m both architect (designing frameworks) and gardener (letting ideas sprawl).
Why Maintenance Matters
Adding notes isn’t enough—the real value is in revisiting, refining, and strengthening the connections. Each pass through my system makes it smarter, and me sharper.
My Update Rhythm
- Daily → Capture raw notes from reading, conversations, and life.
- Weekly → Process captures into permanent notes in my own words.
- Monthly → Review clusters of notes to spark insights and projects.
- Quarterly → Map knowledge with MOCs (Maps of Content) to define new territories.
Tools in the Mix
- Notion → The structured hub and dashboard.
- Obsidian → My deep-linking lab for emergent connections.
- Ulysses → Morning pages and reflective writing.
- Google Drive → The archive for highlights and source material.
Why It’s Valuable
This isn’t just a system—it’s an extension of my brain. My PKM helps me:
- Develop fragments into full ideas
- Retain and actually use what I learn
- Connect dots across career, health, relationships, and more
- Build a public “digital garden” where ideas evolve openly
Guardrails
To keep the system alive and not bloated:
- Capture and process—don’t just hoard.
- Don’t over-engineer structure—it kills creativity.
- Maintain consistency—growth only compounds with routine.
Bottom line: My PKM is where captured inputs become connected, living knowledge. Notion is the backbone, but the real power is in the rhythm—capturing, processing, connecting, and reviewing until ideas bloom into something worth sharing.