It’s paperless day! Since the technology and systems for going paperless are always changing, I have Donnie take over the blog one time each year to write a post about the system he uses to keep all of our records and files completely digitally. We don’t have any big filing cabinets stuffed with paperwork, no cluttered mess of folders to organize, and we never have to search through stacks of paper to find the documents we need– we have everything we need available to us on both our computers and our iPhones at all times. Crazy, right?!
If you’re staring at your computer screen right now thinking, “Paperless?? Huh??” I completely understand. When Donnie told me he wanted to ditch our filing cabinet and process all of our bills, medical and insurance paperwork, bank statements, etc. electronically, I really didn’t have a clue what he was talking about. Boy am I glad I went along with his crazy scheme, though, because it has made a huge difference in the organization and declutter-ifying of our home.
Just to warn you– this post is waaaaaaayyyy longer than one of my normal posts here on the blog. We thought about breaking it up into a series but ultimately decided to leave it as one post because we thought it was important to have a “one stop shop” reference on going paperless. Feel free to pin it for later if you want to digest the information in smaller chunks, but if you’re ready to get reading, grab your favorite beverage, sit back and relax, and get excited about all of the paperless possibilities! Here’s Donnie…
My Life Before Paperless
Before I realized my need for a paperless lifestyle, I had to reach an organizational breaking point. You know that point where everything feels like utter chaos and you don’t know if you’ll ever be able to get it under control? We’ve all been there!
Shortly after getting married in 2006, Abby and I moved multiple times. Along the way we collected quite a bit of paper, all supposedly important documents. I tried to take ownership of the “filing” duties, but I ended up failing miserably. When we moved to our current home in 2009, one of the upstairs bedrooms was designated as my office. I couldn’t even stand the thought of going in the room. The far corner housed our two filing cabinets as well as stacks of paper all around. I’m slightly obsessive about having everything in its place (ask Abby), so this was more than I could take. If I needed a certain document, it would very easily take me 15 minutes or more to find. Unacceptable. Unproductive. I hated this situation. I thought about burning everything and starting from scratch, but fortunately I found a solution that worked better:
I went paperless!
I started on this journey hoping to achieve some ideal paperless vision I had in my mind. Unlike many other things in my life, I actually achieved my goal! Besides a perfectly organized desk, here’s what my vision of a paperless lifestyle can accomplish:
5 Benefits of Going Paperless
- Reduces Clutter. No more creaky filing cabinets and random piles of paper laying around.
- Saves Time. Instead of trying to remember what file folder that important document is in, only to mess up the whole system in the process of looking, I can now pull up any document, at any time, from anywhere, in about 10 seconds. Yes, 10 seconds!
- Increases Privacy. Does anyone consistently use key locks on all of their filing cabinets? What about the stacks of paper laying around? You wouldn’t believe some of the stuff I’ve seen just casually walking around someone’s house!
- Disaster Proof. How much does it take for water, fire, heat, damp, and mold to destroy documents? Or a cup of coffee for that matter? Not much. Now how difficult would it be to destroy documents stored on your hard drive, an external hard drive off site, and two cloud backup systems? That’s my system! I’ll take my chances with that.
- Spousal Collaboration. Can you and your spouse look at the same document at the same time from different locations? If Abby is at some appointment and needs a particular document that I’ve “filed,” she can access it on Evernote instantly. No one person is in control of the documents. They aren’t in my office or hers. Collaboration is seamless.
I could go on and on with the benefits, but I want to get to some actionable advice. First I’ll talk about the technology I use to accomplish my paperless goals, and then I’ll talk about my specific workflow. Just a word of caution — most people get all excited about the technology (scanners, software, apps, etc..) but then ignore the workflow part. DON’T! The technology, while important, is the easy part. Building the workflow and habits is the harder– and arguably much more important– part of adopting a paperless lifestyle.
I hope I’ve motivated you to dive into this paperless world! If not, let me say one final thing: It’s worth it! I’ve never met anyone that regretted ditching their file cabinet. There’s a reason for that.
The Best Paperless Tools and Technology (My Paperless Toolbox)
This post contains affiliate links. For more information, see my disclosures here.
1. Scanner
There are many options here, but I wouldn’t look any further than Fujitsu. They are the clear leaders in this space. If it’s been years since you’ve used a scanner, wait until you try one of these things– they’re amazing!
I have the S1300i, and I love it! For a while I traveled quite a bit with my job, and this little scanner could easily pack up and come with me. It has a paper tray (hugely important), scans both sides, and is relatively fast. You can’t go wrong with this scanner.
For someone who doesn’t need the same mobility as I did, the ix500 is the way to go. It has a larger capacity than the S1300i and scans much faster. The WiFi connection is also super convenient. It’s nice not having to plug the scanner into your computer.
For sure there are cheaper scanners out there. Honestly, I wouldn’t mess with them. If you are serious about going paperless, then I highly recommend investing some money in a high-quality scanner. It’s an investment in your sanity and WILL save you time and money in the long run.
If you do look at other brands, make sure your scanner has an 1) ADF (automatic document feeder) that can hold a large stack of paper, 2) duplex scanning (both sides at the same time), and 3) can send your scanned documents to your preferred storage location. In my case this is Evernote.
While a high quality scanner like those mentioned above is necessary to work your way through a backlog of old paper, it’s possible to implement a paperless lifestyle moving forward with a mobile app.
More and more I find myself pulling out my phone to quickly scan incoming paperwork. This is only possible because of the high quality cameras on iPhones and some Android phones. It’s definitely worth your time to test the scanning capabilities of a mobile scanning app. For iPhone I recommend you try Scannable. For Android phones I recommend you try ScanBot.
2. Inbox
In order to successfully transform into a paperless family, you need to have an agreed upon inbox. In my case, I use a wire inbox from IKEA.
All paper that enters the house goes into this inbox. There’s no guesswork involved here. When it’s time for me to process the paper (more on that later), I know exactly where to look. I like our IKEA option, but if you’re looking for something a little “prettier,” Abby likes this one from See Jane Work:
3. Firebox
I wish I could turn all paper into a digital PDF file, but the world hasn’t caught up with that yet. There’s still a need to save some (very little!) paper. This includes social security cards, birth certificates, marriage licenses (I scanned ours… shhhh…), and possibly legal documents with an original signature.
For these items, I use an inexpensive firebox. I bought a tiny one, not only because of the price, but also because it forces me to limit how much I can keep in it. Here’s the one I use:
(Amazon has many other choices if it’s not your style, but I do caution you against going too big. The point is to reduce clutter, not protect our clutter from fire.)
4. Evernote
I love this section! I think Evernote is the absolute ideal digital filing cabinet solution. There certainly is a little learning curve with Evernote, but it’s worth it to learn the software.
“But Donnie,” you’re thinking, “Can’t I just make a system of dozens of folders on my hard drive? Wouldn’t that accomplish the same thing as Evernote?” Nope. Not even close. It may seem like a good solution now, but you’ll just complicate your life and end up frustrated later. A folder system lacks the organizational options, search abilities, and ease of long-term use that Evernote has. Just like Fujitsu is the cream of the crop when it comes to scanners, Evernote wins in this space hands down.
Which version of Evernote should I get?
Even after you’ve decided to use Evernote, you still need to make a decision: Which version of Evernote should I use? Evernote has a three-tier system of accounts. For our purposes, the free version won’t work because the lack of mobile access. The $24.99/year “Plus” version would be great, but unfortunately it doesn’t have OCR functionality (more on that later!). The only appropriate account level for someone who wants to go paperless is the $49.99/year “Premium” version of Evernote.
Evernote Overview
After you’ve signed up for Evernote Premium, make sure you install it on all your devices: Mac, Windows, iPhone, iPad, Android Phone, etc. Also note that you have web access to your notes at Evernote.com. The web version is a good solution in a pinch, but I prefer the Mac desktop app.
I can’t get into all the nuances of Evernote in a single blog post, but I want to give you a quick overview of some of the terminology that’s helpful to understand when working with Evernote. Here’s a screenshot of my Evernote:
Notes
Notes are the heart and soul of Evernote. Like a filing cabinet has pieces of paper, Evernote has Notes. Everything you store in Evernote is stored in a Note. Whether it’s a scanned PDF file, some text, a Word document, an image, or any other type of file — they are all stored in a Note.
A decision you have to make with notes is how to name them. This is an important consideration and thinking about this now (as you’re setting up Evernote) will save you time and frustration down the line. If you already have Evernote and have saved lots of notes without a consistent naming convention, don’t worry. It’s not worth going back in time trying to fix it. Here’s how I title notes:
You can see that I start everything the same way. YYYY_MM__DD, followed by a descriptive note title. I like this consistency. On top of that, when I scan documents directly into Evernote with my Fujitsu, I have it set up to start each note with the date. Then I simply edit the last part.
Notebooks
Notebooks are a container for notes. Evernote will allow up to 250 Notebooks. In order to create the best organizational structure within Evernote, though, I would recommend way less. Notebooks are visually helpful for organizing work and projects, but I prefer to find notes by searching for tags, titles, or the body of the note.
Evernote allows for even more organization with Notebooks by creating a Stack. A Stack is simply a group of notebooks.
For instance, I have a Stack called “Projects :: Active.” In that Stack I have a few Notebooks with all of my notes and information related to a certain project. You can see Stacks in the image above.
Don’t worry too much about Notebooks. I find that my Notebooks are always evolving; sometimes I have many, sometimes I have few. Start with few, but realize it’s easy to add more and move Notes around.
Tags
This is what makes Evernote so special. I love Tags! You’ll see a lot of debate on Tags vs. Notebooks. Both are essential, but I am a big proponent of Tags. The reason? While a Note can only be in one Notebook, a single Note can have multiple Tags.
For example, take a look at this scanned 1099 MISC from Google. I tag it with five Tags: 1099, google, taxes, 2013 taxes, and adsense. That may seem like overkill, but it only takes a second and I can always go into my list of Tags and delete and re-organize Tags (which I do at least once a year).
I find that having lots of Tags is more helpful and more flexible than having lots of Notebooks. I use Notebooks to help me organize current projects, but once the project is over, I tag every note with the old Notebook name and dump everything into the general “filing cabinet” Notebook.
Shortcuts
Not much to say here; these are all the things on the left sidebar of Evernote. These allow for quick access to specific Notebooks, Notes, Stacks, or saved searches. In my Evernote, I’m currently only using Notebook and Note shortcuts, but the other options are available for you.
Notes, Notebooks, Tags, and Shortcuts are the basic elements of Evernote, but there is one more important feature of Evernote that is often overlooked.
OCR
OCR stands for Optical Character Recognition. This is the process in which Evernote transforms your scanned PDF files into recognizable text. It’s one thing to be able to search for certain text on a web page, Word document, or even a PDF file you created on your computer. It’s another thing altogether to search for text within a document you scanned into Evernote.
Once a document is scanned into Evernote, servers in the background are hard at work transforming the PDF into recognizable text. Why is this important? Search. With Evernote you can search for more than just Note title, Notebook, or Tags. You can search for text within your scanned documents. This is incredibly powerful!
Let’s take a look at the optical character recognitions (OCR) example in the note above. I typed the word “reactions” into the Evernote search bar. You can see this at the top of the screenshot. Evernote returned 48 results, one of which was this scanned vaccination information sheet from 2012. Using OCR, Evernote was able to find the word “reactions” within the body of this scanned note. I find it absolutely amazing that Evernote can turn an image (this PDF) into searchable text.
We’ve talked a little about the flexibility of Evernote. What type of files can’t Evernote store? Not many. Here’s what it can:
- Scanned paper
- PDF files
- Text
- Word files
- Excel files
- Pictures
- Web pages
- Voice memos
Or any other file under 200MB (with Premium account). Pretty awesome, right? Let’s talk about all the ways to get these documents into Evernote.
How to Add Information to Evernote
- Scan directly from Fujitsu Scansnap into Evernote (we’ll talk more about this later)
- Drag and drop files to Evernote icon
- Type directly into Note
- Evernote Web Clipper
via: SeanWes
- Email using unique Evernote email address
- Camera using Evernote mobile apps
And to be honest, this list could go on, but you get the idea. Evernote makes it simple to add all of the information in your life to Evernote. I even take things beyond this by sending Kindle notes to Evernote and automatically sending my Instagram pictures to Evernote and many other integrations using IFTTT and Zapier (web apps that connect common services like Instagram, Feedly, Pinterest, and dozens more in unique ways. It all happens automatically.)
How I Organize Evernote
There’s no one right way to organize your files in Evernote, but I thought it would be helpful to share my tried and true system. The beauty of Evernote is its flexibility! If you change your mind on how you want to organize things, you’re free to change without too much pain. As we talked about before, the thing you want to be sure of is your Note naming convention. I use this: YYYY_MM_DD Relevant Note Title.
You may have noticed in the previous screenshots that I don’t have very many Notebooks. This is on purpose. All of my “important” documents like bank statements, tax info, insurance stuff, utility bills, and other boring things like that all get named, tagged, and end up in the “Filing Cabinet” Notebook. This is the Notebook where I would never voluntarily look. It’s all necessary but boring stuff, so I dump it in here. Even though it’s all dumped in there, it’s still easy to find because I’ve given each Note a proper name and proper tags. This, along with Evernote’s OCR capabilities, make finding everything easy. An organized system of Notebooks just isn’t necessary.
The other Notebooks I keep are important but fun things — current projects, book notes, memories, pictures, and journals to name a few. These are things that occasionally I browse through. I appreciate how Notebooks make things easy for browsing. I’m assuming you don’t “browse” your old utility bills. That’s why you should dump those in your “Filing Cabinet” or similar Notebook.
I also want to mention that like everyone else, I change my mind periodically about how I organize Evernote. My first paperless post on the blog shows almost no Notebooks! It’s ok to change your mind, but I recommend growing with Evernote. If I would have started out trying to think up 35 different Notebooks, I would have driven myself crazy. Instead I opted to keep it simple at first and make adjustments as I grew with Evernote. If, in the future, I decide I want another Notebook, I can search for all Notes with a specific Tag and drag the whole group over into my new Notebook. It’s easy to change your organizational method on the fly.
5. The Paperless Home
Believe it or not, the previous 1,000 words or so about Evernote just barely scratches the surface. If you truly want to create a paperless home, you’ll need a resource you can turn to if you get stuck. I recently decided to document everything I know about using Evernote and going paperless into an eBook and course called The Paperless Home in order to help others make the most of their paperless tools and technology.
If you’re investing a few hundred dollars in a scanner in order to go paperless and making an investment in your sanity (good job!), you don’t want to overlook the importance of really learning how to get the most out of Evernote and your paperless workflow. The Paperless Home can help with that.
Since I know that the process of going paperless can seem daunting, I broke it down step by step to make it as easy as possible for anyone who wants to go paperless to follow along. I even created 17 screencast videos in addition to the eBook in order to provide even more in-depth instruction. My tried and true method has been a game changer in our home for the last four+ years, and I hope it will be for you as well!
6. ToDoist
I’ll be honest, ToDoist is not a necessary part of your paperless workflow. You don’t need to use this specific task manager, but you do need some way of recording and organizing tasks related to various projects. ToDoist is a great option.
via: ToDoist
For years I used pen and paper as my daily to-do list. There was something satisfying about crossing things off from my little Rhodia notebook. Abby still uses pen and paper, but I’m winning her over to the digital method. You still get the satisfaction of checking boxes in ToDoist, PLUS there are so many other advantages to a digital solution– what’s not to love?!
In first paperless post I talked about Wunderlist. While I think it is still a great task manager, about eighteen months ago I made the move to ToDoist, and I couldn’t be happier with the decision.
For starters, it’s absolutely beautiful! I’m a sucker for a good minimalist design with lots of whitespace and understated features. Call me crazy, but how my task manager looks is very important. I probably stare at this app more than anything else during the course of a work day.
Here’s what I love about Todoist:
- Easily organize tasks by projects. You’ll see in the screenshot above that you can assign tasks to various projects. You can color code those projects and even create hierarchy or projects to further organize yourself.
- Available Mac, PC, iOS, Android, and web. I love how ToDoist syncs across my Mac, iPhone, as well as iPad.
- Seamlessly share projects and tasks with Abby. You can see in the picture above a little picture of me next to the task. These are tasks assigned to me that are part of a shared project with Abby.
- Gmail integration. This, my friends, is absolutely amazing. ToDoist integrates directly into Gmail, and you can create tasks without ever leaving that screen. These tasks will link directly back to the original email. This is a major time saving feature!
I don’t have time in this post to get into all of its functions, but I can say that if you decide to use ToDoist as your task manager you won’t regret it. It’s the right balance between simple to use and still having powerful features. You will have to decide between the free version and premium version. We started with the free version and then after a few weeks of using it upgraded to premium, so you could always test it out and see which version works best for you.
Update: I now use Asana as my task manager. Todoist and Wunderlist are superior for the individual, but for team collaboration and project management, Asana is the perfect solution. If you’re not working with a team, I recommend you start with ToDoist.
7. Google Calendar
Last (but certainly not least) in my paperless toolbox is Google Calendar. This one is so simple, but I know so many people who don’t use an online calendar. The benefit for Abby and I is that we can view each others’ calendar. My entries show up as green and hers show up as pink.
We’ve agreed that any and all appointments (not tasks) end up on the calendar. There was a time before the kids when we weren’t disciplined in this area and on more than one occasion we ended up double booking ourselves for something. With our shared Google Calendars, we’re always on the same page and don’t have to check with each other to see if a time is open; we just look at the calendar.
Toolbox Wrap-up
Well there you have it, my 7 essential tools for going paperless! Sure, I could’ve included other things like a paper shredder or other helpful pieces of software, but I want to keep this process manageable for you. You can add those other things in the future.
The Great Purge
This part is lots of fun! You’ve already 1) purchased a scanner, 2) signed up for Evernote premium, and 3) read The Paperless Home. Congratulations! You are ready to start purging the backlog of paperless documents.
Note: For some, the idea of going back in time and converting everything to paperless is overwhelming and daunting. If that’s you, feel free to hold off on your purge until a later time. You can skip ahead to the “Paperless Workflow” section of this post to see how I maintain a paperless workflow moving forward. The purge is about looking back while the workflow is about maintaining your system going forward.
At this point you need to gather up all the paper documents in your house. If you’re lucky, it’s all in a file cabinet or two. If you’re not so lucky, it’s scattered about the house in various drawers and piles. Regardless, gather it all together.
I’ve found the best way to process this backlog of documents is to create three piles:
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Throw away (burn or shred)
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Scan and throw away
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Scan and keep
Those are really your only three logical options. Notice there is no option for “keep and don’t scan.” You’re trying to go paperless, remember? That would defeat the point! Here’s what you’ll want to do with each pile:
Pile 1: Throw away
This is the pile of stuff you do not want to keep. Just use your common sense here. Do you really need your electric bill from 2007 or your report card from high school? I hope not! Or what about that 401k prospectus from three jobs ago? No way.
As I proceeded through my great purge I used the mindset “when in doubt, throw it away.” This served me well, and to this day there isn’t a single thing that I threw away that I wish I had kept. Now this mindset will change as we process paper moving forward, but there is a big difference between cleaning up the backlog and maintaining a workflow moving forward. The backlog is more of a challenge, so be ruthless! The more paper you get rid of at this point, the better.
After my purge I ended up with four huge black garbage bags full of paper which we got rid of that weekend at a bonfire at my parents’ house. Unfortunately for them, the metal wires in the hanging folders still exist today in the fire pit as evidence of our great purge. Sorry, dad! I had no idea the metal was in there!
Pile 2: Scan and Throw Away
This should be a small pile in comparison to pile number one. Scan the things you obviously need: insurance policies, tax returns, the most recent statement from all of your accounts, and anything else you’re pretty sure you’ll need in the future. You may be thinking, “Wait, so you scanned your tax returns and then threw them away?” You are correct, my friend. That’s just me. You may be different and I don’t want to give you any legal/tax or other official advice and all that stuff, you know the drill.
I ended up with one filing cabinet drawer worth of stuff I wanted to scan and then throw away. I think that’s a manageable amount. Remember, you’ll have to scan, title, tag, and add all this stuff to various Notebooks within Evernote, so it’s going to take some work.
Pile 3: Scan and Keep
This pile will be tiny. I would say it should include less than 30 things. Be brutal! (But definitely don’t throw away your birth certificate and social security card. 🙂
This pile, once scanned, will be kept in your purposefully small firebox. In addition to official government identification documents, you may want to consider keeping things with original signatures in this pile. For me that includes a few mortgage-related papers with original signatures, car title, marriage certificate, and a few other documents.
How to Scan Documents Directly into Evernote
Before we move on to the paperless workflow, I want to give you a little primer about scanning documents directly into Evernote — how to do it and where to send the documents.
First things first, make sure you have a Notebook in Evernote called “Inbox” or if you’re fancy and want it to always be first in an alphabetical list of Notebooks you can call it “0 – Inbox”. Either way works.
Next, you want to make sure this “Inbox” Notebook is the default destination for all new notes. You change this in your Evernote preferences.
Now that we have our Evernote settings ready to go, in your Scansnap manager settings, use the “Scan to Evernote” profile.
In this manager you can also set a naming convention. See below for my YYYY_MM_DD format. Once a document is in Evernote I simply edit the hour, minute, second part and create a useful title.
My paranoid self likes to create a local backup of everything I send to Evernote. You can set this up from right inside the Fujitsu Scansnap manager as you can see above. I send everything I scan to Evernote as well as a folder on my hard drive. This is purely for backup purposes. I never actually go into this folder and view anything. Why would I? I have Evernote!
For scanning I use the “automatic” settings. Sure, if I want to scan a picture or something I may change this on a case by case basis, but these settings are good enough for me.
The file format you’ll want to use in the “file option” tab is PDF. That’s the standard at this point so I recommend just going with it.
You’ll also notice that the Fujitsu scanner has the ability to convert documents to searchable PDFs as you scan them (OCR). This is a nice feature but I don’t use it because 1) It slows down the scanning and processing and 2) Evernote does this for me in the background.
Once you adjust your settings in the Scansnap manager, you can just plug in your scanner and press the blue button to start scanning. It really is that easy and all of your scans will end up automatically in your Evernote inbox. Once set up, I rarely change these settings. It’s about making life simpler, not more complicated.
Boom! You’ve completed the great purge. If you’ve made it this far you are in rarified paperless air, take a deep breath and savor the moment. For some this process is a weekend, for others it happens over the course of a month or two. Either way is fine!
Just to recap a bit — by this point you’ve purchased/signed up for the best paperless tools and technology. You’ve completed (or at least started) the great purge. Now it’s time to put this all into practice and develop the key moving forward…
My (Simple) Paperless Workflow
The great purge was a sprint — an all-out effort over a quick period of time that left you gasping for air. It was necessary but it wasn’t exactly easy. That’s ok because you’ll never have to do that again!
The good news for you is that I’m a paperless marathon runner, so get your slow-twitch muscles ready and take nice and slow deep breaths. I’m going to show you a pace that you can maintain over the long term. You may start off a little slow, but keep moving forward. If you have to stop for a moment, that’s ok, just make sure you start up again. Your endurance will build and this will become easier, more enjoyable, and more relaxing as time goes on.
What you’re about to read is my simple paperless workflow that allows me to effortlessly maintain an organized and paperless life with a place for everything, and everything in its place, nothing floating around in my mind or on some rogue piece of paper. Ahhh the peace of mind!
1. Every incoming piece of paper goes to one central physical inbox.
I talked before about the necessity of having an inbox. Here’s where you get to put it into practice. All paper that enters your home or office immediately goes into this inbox. It doesn’t matter if it’s sermon notes from church, bills in the mail, a takeout menu, a business card, birthday party invitation, or that picture your adorable Kindergartner drew for you, it all goes into this inbox.

Yes, I even scan pictures from the Cs– Caleb made this when he was two!
2. All digital documents go into your Evernote Inbox
Fortunately I’ve been able to sign up for electronic statements for many of my bills and accounts. When I get the PDF file via email I immediately send it to Evernote, usually by forwarding the email to my Evernote email address.
The key here is that I don’t store important documents in my email. I push it on to Evernote for processing.
3. Weekly or Bi-weekly scan
In a worst case scenario, I process (scan) my physical inbox once per week. More often it’s twice a week, not because I feel like I have to, but because I want to. Usually I’ll listen to the Pens game and do my scanning. Sometimes I even have a movie playing in one corner of my screen while I do this. I love getting everything scanned and organized.
Part of your weekly or bi-weekly scan involves making some decisions about the documents in your inbox. Some of the stuff is junk and can be immediately tossed out. The rest of it is ready for your scanner. Once scanned, you can either shred the document or toss it in the trash can (depending on the privacy concerns and nature of the document).
4. Process Evernote Inbox to Zero
By this point you should have a pretty full Evernote Inbox! You’ve been collecting both physical and digital documents into that one central catch-all, so now it’s time to process.
Note: This is where a lot of people fall off the proverbial bandwagon. Don’t let this happen to you! It’s easy to let your Evernote Inbox pile up past the point of quick processing. Keep an eye on it. I usually process this Inbox twice a week, but you may need more or less. If I see more than 25 notes in there I start to get nervous!
As you go through this Inbox you’ll have to make decisions. Here are those four decisions:
A. Take action immediately for tasks that require 2 minutes or less.
Maybe you see something in your inbox about your EZ pass auto-refill being rejected. It takes about 2 minutes to fix that problem. Go ahead and and log into the appropriate website and update your card information. Title, tag, and move the Note out of the inbox. You’re done!
B. Move out of your Inbox and create a corresponding task in ToDoist.
I wish all tasks only took 2 minutes. Unfortunately, during your Evernote Inbox processing you’ll run across documents that require a task or next action. Don’t drop your processing now and spend 15 minutes completing that thing. Pull up ToDoist and add a task with an appropriate due date. Press Cmd, Shift, A — you don’t even have to click anything! You see, nothing gets lost in the shuffle. Now that the task is created, go ahead and title, tag, and move that Note out of the inbox into the appropriate location within Evernote.
C. Move out of your Inbox and create a corresponding event in Google Calendar.
Instead of tasks, some Notes will necessitate an appointment on your calendar. Maybe you scanned your son’s t-ball schedule. You’ll want to add his games to Google Calendar and then get that Note out of your Inbox. Don’t leave it hanging around with the mindset of “oh I’ll just leave it in the Inbox so I can reference it when needed.” The goal is to get things out of your Evernote Inbox. Once you create the appropriate events on the calendar, you can move the schedule out of the Evernote inbox and into a different Notebook. If you need it, you’ll be able to pull it up in seconds from any device, so there is no need to leave it in the Inbox.
Option “C” here may overlap with other options. Take this t-ball schedule for example. You added his games to the calendar but maybe that reminded you that he needs a new glove. What do you do about that? Put it in ToDoist as a task. The calendar is reserved for appointments — things that require a specific time and place.
D. Archive for future access.
These notes in your Inbox are the best! There’s no associated task or calendar event with the Note so all you have to do is title, tag, and move the Note to the appropriate Notebook in Evernote.
These notes can be accessed whenever you need them, whether days, weeks, months, or years down the line. Whether you are at home on your computer or out and about with your phone, you have access to all this information at moment’s notice. There is power in that, folks!
Processing done! It really is as simple as that. The key is to keep this process moving smoothly. If you notice some squeaks, make sure you address it before all of the wheels fall off.
Evernote inbox zero! Besides the Great Purge, if you see more than 25 Notes in your Inbox, it’s time to start processing.
A Quick Word on Digital Backup
I don’t have time to go into great detail in this post, but I do want to mention my digital backup system. I’m all about redundancy. I want a backup plan to my backup plan. I’m not saying my way is the right way, but I wanted to make sure I shared with you how I backup my digital files.
- Evernote. All my files are stored on the Evernote servers.
- Local hard drive. All of my digital files are stored separately on my Macbook hard drive. This happens automatically during the scanning process.
- External hard drive. Periodically I move my local Evernote backup files to an external hard drive like this one.
- Backblaze. $5 per month per computer gets you unlimited cloud backup. I recently switched from Crashplan because Backblaze seems to use less system resources while running in the background. A faster computer is always a good thing!
For sure there could be improvements to my backup system — particularly, a more automatic setup with my external hard drive. For now this system works for me, and I can sleep tonight knowing I’ve taken many steps to secure and disaster-proof my digital files.
On the other extreme is the person who stores all their files only on their local hard drive. If that’s you, you will definitely want to try Backblaze or a similar service. Computer hard drives can fail at any time.
Conclusion
Are you pumped up about going paperless or what? Hopefully not what. To be honest, I’m excited for you. I’ve had some friends read my paperless post from a few years ago and make some pretty drastic changes. I love hearing that! A paperless system that works is a load off your shoulders. It frees up so much previously wasted mental energy. It’s worth it. Commit to giving this a shot. If you wait, it probably won’t happen.
I must also mention that even though this post is well over 6,000 words, I’m just scratching the surface of my paperless workflow. If this was any longer my editor (Abby) probably wouldn’t let me post it. 😉 That being said, I hope this introduction to a paperless lifestyle will get you started off on the right foot. And if you need more detailed information about any piece of my paperless system, I wrote down absolutely everything in The Paperless Home, so be sure to snag a copy for yourself.
Whew! I know that was a lot, but believe me, the effort it takes to get this system set up is so worth the convenience and peace of mind that comes with having a paperless home. Even simple things are made easier.
For example, one time I was at the Cs’ doctor’s office and realized I had forgotten some information I needed to fill out necessary paperwork. Since we had the info scanned into Evernote, I was able to pull it up on my phone and have everything I needed in a few seconds– amazing! Our whole world is literally at my fingertips. 🙂 This whole paperless thing has literally been a game changer for our family, and I hope it will be for yours as well. Happy organizing!
Do you have a paperless home? What are your best tips and tricks?
This post contains affiliate links. For more information, see my disclosures here.
Wow, that is an incredibly organised system and such a great way to reduce clutter. An epic job to begin with. I pinned it in case I have the urge to be this organised (I do… One day hehe).
Thanks for reading! While my post may seem overwhelming, it’s really not too difficult to get started with this. Let me know if you give it a shot!
Going paperless seems the idea way to go but i still have to wander about the things that say you must have your “original” receipt. Also a lot of your documents i would think would need to be the original. I would like to know exactly what is safe just to have a scanned copy of because i know it would be awesome not to have all those papers.
Having the same concerns here… What do I need in original…
Also wonder about using my smartphone vs a scanner… I gave up before… felt it was to cumbersome to wait for scanning…. I snap a picture in 2 sec. (note 5) is there a bug benefit of scanning vs photo taking?
I am wondering about both of these things as well.
This is a personal decision but I keep most documents with an original signature and all documents with something like a raised seal.
Planning on implementing your strategies. However, one thing that’s frustrating about Evernote is that you can’t create a true hierarchy. You can organize notes into notebooks, sure… But it’s frustrating that you can’t go more than two layers in. For instance, if I want to see all of my Citibank statements, I don’t want to have to use tags – I want a simple ability to click on a folder and see them all in one place, and then I can organize them as I want. Any thoughts on why Evernote doesn’t allow for this, based on your experience?
It’s just a different mindset. You seem to like the idea of nested folders where you have to drill down to find various things. That’s very inefficient for the way my mind works. I much prefer tags (as many as I want) and one notebook. If you prefer nested folders you may want to set up something in Dropbox or Google Drive. I can’t imagine having to deal with tags AND multiple layers of folders.
Understood. But I think there are many people whose minds work with a hierarchy – e.g., folders. And Evernote could implement folders while still allowing for tags if they so chose, and let users gravitate toward the method that works best for them. There already is a de facto folder implementation, just with different nomenclature and it only goes a couple of levels deep, versus infinite. The problem with Dropbox or Google Drive is that they don’t provide some of the interface and functionality that Evernote does. Regardless, thanks for the in-depth explainer and the response.
Thank you for this article. I started going paperless over a year ago and your article last year gave me some more tips to use. I was glad to see the updated article to read about changes you found or new things that worked for you.
Do you use a website or app for keeping track of lists? For example, grocery shopping, to buy at store, things we need, etc? Thanks.
Thanks for reading Amy!
Depending on the list I either use Evernote or ToDoist. I keep a reading list in Evernote but I keep my shopping list in ToDoist. Generally speaking, I think it makes sense to keep shorter “action oriented” lists in ToDoist and longer “someday maybe” lists in Evernote.
Hope that helps!
Re google calendar – I have many scheduled that are RSS feed alas I can only get them to show on desktop – they don’t feed over the mobile devices 🙁 any thoughts?
Tiffany I’m not 100% sure I understand your question but I do know that using Zapier.com you can turn RSS feeds into calendar events.
Hi, I have a flatbed scanner already, why do you feel that it is not suitable to go paperless?
I already have Evernote, but haven’t used it the way I should. I’m definitely buying the book you recommended. This post has been so helpful. I started to go paperless, but was a little overwhelmed, this has motivated me to get started again!
Thank you so much!!
Michelle, the reason the flatbed scanner is not suitable is speed — placing a single piece of paper down and then only scanning one side before you have to open it up and replace or flip the paper. I’ve known some people who have tried it, I know no one who’s been able to stick with it using a flatbed scanner. Yes a tray fed scanner is expensive but I think it’s necessary for people serious about going paperless.
Thanks for your response! My flatbed does have the capability for paper feed so you can scan more than a single sheet at a time. I may try it and see how it goes. If it doesn’t work I will purchase a tray feed scanner.
Thanks again for this great post!
Hi Donnie, thanks for this great post! I have a few questions that currently deter me from going completely paperless. I wonder if you have any views on these:
1. What if Evernote shuts down its service? You mentioned local back ups – are the local back ups also named and sortable without Evernote?
2. What if Evernote/my machines get hacked? Are there any measures against this? (Apart from the usual anti virus software)
Grateful for any inputs you might have.
Thank you!
Cheryl
Great Questions Cheryl!
Sure there is always the chance that Evernote could go out of service but one of the reasons I use them is that they are the leader in this space. They are a profitable company who have been doing this awhile. It’s good to pick the winner when it comes to this stuff. Also, Evernote does allow you to export it’s database files (which I do) so you can be sure that if something did happen to Evernote there would numerous other companies competing for your business that would be able to read all the meta data attached to the .enex database files. And if all that fails and you don’t feel like re-organizing the documents from your backups, just merge the PDF files and print them out! That seems crazy and I can’t imagine that ever happening but you do always have that possibility.
You can read about Evernote security here: https://evernote.com/security/
If I still had a filing cabinet I would worry about someone breaking in and accessing that just as much as someone accessing my Evernote account.
Good questions! You have to be comfortable with this and be smart but at the same time you don’t want to live in fear! Trust me, I had the same concerns you have.
Thanks Donnie! Really appreciate your reply!:) it is re-assuring!
Donnie, the difference with the filing cabinet though is that you’d know that it had happened. There would be broken glass, a damaged lock etc. The police would treat it as a case for you, too.
Your data can be copied without your knowledge. For me, it’d also be in a different country with different legal protections (bless your NSA!).
I’ve just got myself a ScanScap 1300i with a view to going paperless (it does work much more smoothly than the Doxie Go I got last time I thought about this), but the lack of encryption as a default for resting data is making me think hard about Evernote.
Are you more worried about someone gaining access to your account by logging in or hacking into the Evernote servers?
Why do I need to choose? My point was that I do have some control over access via logging in (2-factor authentication, strong passwords), but I don’t really over what happens to the data sitting on disks (in the “filing cabinet”). Evernote have a policy of promising not to peek, except in a list of circumstances including the legal say-so of another (to me) country’s law enforcement, and to third-party organisations involved in supplying service. A far stronger statement would be “we *can’t* peek”.
I don’t know if I’m brave enough to go paperless yet, but I do hate clutter and love throwing things away. I think I would love it! I will definitely be reading this post again and sharing with my husband to see if we should give this a try. Thanks so much for the information. It’s great to find it all in one place!
If you love throwing stuff away and de-cluttering, you will certainly love this!
Hi Donnie! What a great post! Although I’m not 100% sure about going completely paperless, between Brett’s book and your post (which I printed up in PDF form-thank you!) I have some excellent resources on how to get rid of some more paper!
Hi, Donnie! Thanks so much for this update. We started going paperless last year after you wrote your first post, and I have referenced it many times in the year’s time since. This update is really helpful.
I’ve been slow in my process, and one of the big things slowing me down is how much we have in our purge process files. It will be an enormous task to go through it all! But I’m committed to making it happen this year.
Two questions for you related to this:
1. You mentioned the default naming system that applies the date to everything you scan. When doing the purge process, does this mean setting the date to the date on the pieces of paper or just having it be the date you scanned the stuff?
2. On a similar note, could you say more about what you do for the naming part of the process for clearing out your inbox? Do you have any shortcuts or mental rules for deciding what to name things? I seem to recall that last year’s tutorial focused more on tags than names, so I haven’t been paying much attention to the naming part of the workflow process, and the prospect of individually naming every item I scan — especially from my purge file — overwhelms me, which is another part of what’s holding me back from moving forward on this project.
Great questions!
1. For my great purge I left the date as the date of scanning for most things. I decided it would’ve taken too much time to date everything properly moving backwards. Fortunately tags and searching has allowed me to find everything I need.
2. Besides the the automatic date thing, I don’t spend too much time thinking about naming. Just think about how you would describe the document to someone in a few words. Don’t stress over the naming!
Thank you, Donnie! That’s helpful and gives me permission to JUST START. 🙂
Thanks for such a thorough, step-by-step outline of your process! I’m going to download the free PDF version of this post and share it with my husband. We definitely need to consider going paperless…our home office became the nursery once our baby boy was born, so we don’t really have a space for the filing cabinets anymore. We’re drowning in paper.
Sharing this link on social media!
Donnie,
Thank you for such a detailed and thoughtful post. I have Evernote and just set up my scansnaps1300i. I can’t find anyway to scan to evernote. It is just not an option available in in the profile settings. I’ve gone through all the troubleshooting and just can’t get anywhere. Any ideas?
Thank you!
Gail
That’s so strange Gail. Do you have Mac or Windows? Does your manager look like the one in my screenshots?
Yes, my manager looks just like your screenshot. Just no Evernote option. I have a MacBook. Appreciate any ideas.
Gail I’m just not sure. I wish I could see exactly what you’re looking at. Try a google search and see if others have the same problem. Maybe you’re using an updated version of the Scansnap manager and the Evernote integration is in a different spot.
Hi Donnie. I am having the same issue as Gail. Here are the options that are available in ScanSnap:
– None (Scan to File)
– Adobe Reader
– Scan to Folder
– Scan to Email
– Scan to Print
– Scan to Mobile
– Scan to Google Drive
– Scan to Salesforce Chatter
– Scan to Picture Folder
Any ideas on how to resolve?
Not sure if this is still relevant but I had a similar problem because I bought an older version of the scanner. But I’d like to share that I contacted their tech support and had a great experience. They were so helpful and assisted me in setting up other profiles and how to save a local copy. Here’s how to get ahold of them: https://www.fujitsu.com/us/products/computing/peripheral/scanners/contact/
What about coupons? They created a lot of paper clutter around our house.
Todd, with coupons you may have to check the fine print. I would guess that digital versions of print coupons wouldn’t be accepted most places. I could be wrong about that!
Thanks for the post! After making donations, I have been saving the giving receipts by saving the web page as a mhtml file. I guess instead I should have been forwarding it from my email to Evernote. But for the ones I don’t have a pdf file of, can I convert the mhtml into a pdf somehow?
Great question Joe! I’m not sure if you’re using a Mac or not? If you are, just view the html in a web browser and then just click file –> print –> save as PDF to Evernote. Hope that helps!
Very interesting blog.
How do you handle multi-page documents? If the scanner put each page into a single pdf, how do you associate multiple pdf files together and keep the correct order?
Thanks!
Good question Richard. I should’ve explained that better in the post. I just scan one document (no matter how many pages) at a time.
You do have the option of scanning stacks of paper all in one scan and then separating out the PDFs into multiple files using Preview for Mac. It’s a simple process on a Mac.
Donnie,
Thank you so much for the step-by-step details you included in this post. As an older person who gets totally confused by all the technology out there (that seems to be so intuitive to you younger folks), you include just the kind of details that I need to attempt to go paperless.
Thank you, also, for listing the best equipment and software to get to go forward with this process. It’s so much easier to go with tried and true equipment and software rather than spend days researching and reading reviews trying to find the appropriate items to undertake the task of going paperless.
By the way, your article is wonderfully written and is easy to understand. Thank you for taking the time to share your inspirational process with others.
Your post last year helped revolutionize my thinking about going paperless. A couple of other resources that talked about Evernote helped as well. I even did a blog post series about it. {Almost} Paperless Organizing (Intro to the Series) .
I bought and use the Doxie Go scanner which works well for me. I still use and love Wunderlist. I have tried ToDoist in the past, and it just didn’t work as well for me.
I really appreciate you taking the time to write last year’s article as well as this one. Although I haven’t made great progress over the past year, it has helped me a lot. I’m hoping to get more accomplished this year.
That looks like an awesome series Ava!
I’ve heard so much about the Doxie Go that I just ordered one myself to try out and see how it compares to the Fujitsu.
So how did it compare?
Great, simple, easy to follow post! Any suggestions on how to organize one’s work inbox? I currently feel overwhelmed with the amount of useful information that I’m holding onto in my inbox. I’ve tried keeping everything in the main inbox but I loose track of open items. I’ve tried creating folders but then when I’m trying to find an email at a later date I loose track of where I filed it. I’m using outlook. Any suggestion you have would be a huge help!
Thanks for reading Shannon!
Work inboxes can be frustrating. I have Outlook at work as well and I created 5 or 6 very basic folders and move everything into those after reading. I never keep anything in the inbox. Fortunately outlook has a really good search bar at the top so you don’t have to remember where you kept everything. Hope that helps!
This is a fantastic resource! I am going to be pinning and sharing on my blog, and of course implementing too. I do some of this but I have a lot of room for improvement. Thank you so much for such fantastic information, I’m excited to go even more paperless!!!
Thank you so much, Morgan! You are the sweetest! Hope you have a wonderful week!
~Abby =)
Thanks so much for this post. I’m working at being paperless (much easier for me than my paper-hungry husband). How did your husband convince you this was a good way to go? I don’t want to nag the Mister but I also want him to see the value in not keeping scraps of paper (or other things). Thanks!
Abby can chime in here if she wants. I never tried to convince her beforehand. I just started doing it. Eventually she saw how effective and time saving it was and she slowly adopted these strategies over time. Abby still loves writing and using physical paper but for all the important household I’ve taken ownership and do all the paperless stuff for her.
Thanks for reading!
The fact that he took it on as “his project” pretty much meant that I was fine with anything! 🙂 The paperwork is out of my hair, I don’t have to mess with it, and any time I need something, he can email it to me in a matter of seconds, which is amazing. I don’t think I “got” why he wanted to do it at first, but I’m so thankful now that he did!
~Abby =)
Hi Donnie,
Spectacular post. I tried going paperless last year but (gasp) failed. The rat race had me spinning. This post has encouraged me to give it another go.
Quick questions, I too have a kindergartener. How exactly do you file and/or tag his/her art work?
Do you have any opinion on the neat receipt app software for mac? Could you use this and Evernote?
Great questions!
No shame in trying and failing. I made a poor attempt back in 2010 that did not go well. You learn more from mistakes than successes so I’m sure now you know where you went wrong and how to change it for your next attempt.
As far as kids art work — I have a notebook in Evernote called “Connor’s Scrapbook” and I scan and date all his drawings and put them in that notebook. They are also tagged with “connor”, “art work”, and “memories”. You can do it however you want though! No wrong answer!
I am planning on reviewing the Neat series of scanners and software. I’ve heard some good things. In my opinion using that software as well as Evernote is redundant. I would pick one system or “eco system” to use. I’m guessing you can still use NeatDesk scanners with Evernote.
I think that the NeatDesk scanner and software can go straight to QuickBooks on-line for receipts and invoices, which is super helpful for my small business needs. Thank you for the great post and am looking forward to reading your book about Evernote!
Thanks so much for these tips!! I’m totally the keep-all-papers0in-a-filing-cabinet type of person, but just the other day my hubby told me he was thinking of putting everything online. While I love being able to just go in and grab whatever paper I need, I know it’d take up WAAAY less space in our house and it’d be a lot easier in the long run! I’ll be forwarding all this info along to him in case he was really serious about it. 🙂
Lol! It can be a little intimidating to do the initial setup, but we are loving it now and it’s a lot easier than manually filing everything! (and takes up less space too!) Hope you’re having a wonderful week, Amanda!
~Abby =)
Oh my! I have to admit this kinda scares me a little. Ha! I guess I’m just old fashion. Thanks for all the info. I need to look into all this, especially the scanners! =)
I have been challenged by your paperless suggestions. I am extremely paranoid however …after accidently deleting something. I can’t find it, what about backing up? In simple steps can you walk me through it? I scanned my work for 2015, don’t want to loose it. Thanks!
Hi Sylvia!
Like I mentioned in the post, I backup all my scans to a folder on my hard drive in addition to Evernote. I also backup up everything with Crashplan.
Hope that helps! Let me know if you have a specific question about my backup process.
I found your website a couple days ago and love it. Abby I love your writing style and the way you use examples to explain your process – it helps to relate it back to my life. Well done. Lots of blogs and articles don’t do this.
Donnie – you have convinced me. I plan to start with current stuff and work backwards onto my purged items as time permits.
One question – can we pre-purchase your new book?
Great job!
Thanks for reading Michele! Your strategy is perfect. Dealing with the old stuff can wait, just take care of new incoming paper.
I don’t think we are going to a pre-sale with the book but you can signup here to get a free sample chapter when it’s ready and be notified when it’s for sale on April 13th.
https://justagirlandherblog.com/paperless-sample-chapter
Donnie, just read last years article and this one without budging until I was done!! I love GTD but have been struggling with keeping all the paper lists. YOU have answered my prayers in these articles!! I’m wondering if you could do a follow up on the Doxie Go and Neat scanners vs the Fujitsu. If I can get a scanner a bit cheaper than the Fujitsu that you feel still fits the bill, I can start sooner rather than later. But I’d also rather spend the extra money than waste $300 on, say, a Neat if it’s just subpar. Thank you and Abby so much!!
I’m glad you liked the article Catherine!
Click over to my blog to read some more scanner reviews. In short, I would definitely avoid the “Neat” family of scanners.
The Doxie scanners are really nice and really well designed. They have the best scanner software on the market. That being said in my opinion they don’t fill much of a need. They don’t have an ADF (automatic document feeder) and only scan one side of the paper at once. For quick scans like that I use the “scannable” app on my iPhone.
If you want to avoid the expensive scanner cost you could always start with a scanning app. That will work ok for new incoming paper and then you can later get a full scanner with an ADF to deal with your backlog.
Hopefully that helps!
Donnie,
Did you use the Evernote software that comes with the scanner or did you download Software from Evernote.
Thanks
Hello,
I enjoyed reading your post here about going digital. I saw your comment about the Neat scanners. I had bought one quite some time ago and have never used it. 🙁 Since I already have the neat scanner would it work anything like what you are talking about or would I be better off in the long run to save and get the scanner you recommend in this post?
Thank you,
Pam
Thanks for the question, Pam!
Since you already have a Neat scanner you should try and use it. Despite my negative comments, some people love their Neat scanners! It for sure will integrate with Evernote and you will get most of the functionality I mention here. I certainly would use the scanner with Evernote instead of the pre-packaged NeatCloud document storage software.
Thank you for your reply. I was wondering if I bought your book, would it help me no matter what scanner that I use?
Absolutely! More than half of the video focuses on how to properly setup and use Evernote. There’s tons of other paperless related stuff that will be helpful. There are a few chapters that focus specifically on the Fujitsu software but the same techniques can be applied to your Neat scanner.
Have a great day!
Great! Thank you!
Hiya, if you ever stop using Evernote for whatever reason, how easy would it be to find documents on an external or local harddrive if they have not been labelled or made into PDF searchable at the time of scanning?
That’s a good question. If I was ever forced into that situation I would run all my non OCRed PDFs through some type of OCR software. Then I would be able to search and find what I need. That’s the worst case scenario — if I lost access to Evernote.
This post made me so excited and just inspired. I’ve been in such an organizing mood lately (even more than normal which is just crazy). I love clean and organized things. I am just 15, so of course I can’t implement this on my own but I am sure my dad would love to do this. We are about 50% paperless so this info may help us close that gap. Thank you so much for this amazing post. I am so glad I found this blog! I love everything about it. Y’all rock and seem to have yall’s lives very well put together. Thanks again!
Do it Courtney! Your future self will thank you!
(I’m not so sure about our leaves being all together.)
I love the idea of going paperless, and I am really excited to give it a try (I’m saving up for a scanner now!).
I do have one question though, Donnie. You said that you only physically keep about 30 documents, but what about warranties on appliances or electronics? Do you scan those in, then throw away the documents, or are those included in the papers that you keep?
Great question!
Anything with a raised seal or original signature I usually keep. Warranty information usually isn’t anything special. It’s not the paper that’s important but rather the information like serial numbers, proof of purchase, and all that. I just scan and toss.
I’m getting hung up on what to do about receipts. My Fujitsu scanner comes with a nifty receipt program that looks through the receipt, logs the taxes, etc, but that’s not in Evernote so if I need to search for it, it’s only on the one computer that I’ve scanned that receipt into.
What do you do with Receipts? Scan to Fujitsu then also share it to Evernote? Seems like a lot more work that way. Export it in batches? This is — so far — my only hiccough. Still reading the books recommended, haven’t found this solution (yet).
Great question Randy! I don’t use the proprietary Fujitsu document storage software. I just scan receipts into Evernote like all my other documents. I’ve found that software that attempts to parse data from receipts is generally unreliable. I like to keep it simple and store receipts in Evernote.
Thank you for your reply.
I guess it boils down to — what am I going to do with that information? If this was a business and I was going to import it into Quickbooks or some other accounting software, or if I was going to attempt to report/deduct the taxes, then I guess it would make sense to use their software since it parses it out.
But simply storing them for retrieval or reference later makes your answer the one I was looking for.
Thanks again!
Donnie,
Thank you for this blog and all of this information. It has really helped me, and now I’m able to help others. Because of that, If I may, please permit me to share a couple solutions that I got hung up on until they were solved in one way or another.
First, above in these comments, was the receipts issue. I took your advice and never looked back: if you must scan a receipt, just put it into a normal Evernote document scan and don’t worry about the taxes and breakdown – unless you’re a financial firm, accountant, etc, and/or plan to import it into Quickbooks or other accounting software. In that case, use the scanners receipt program for your receipts.
Second – scanning and backup. I have used Google Drive since it first came out, and I pay for a ton of storage for business and personal items on email, computer, and more. When I first tried scanning into Evernote with Google drive, though, I would have cascading issues where the file would go to Evernote and then into Google drive in a folder I had set as an import folder, but then Google Drive would sync with my other Google Drive-enabled computers putting a copy on my alternate computer where that version of Evernote also had the Google Drive folder set as an import folder, and I would end up with two or three copies of the same item in Evernote, and sometimes the INI files would be there as well. What a mess!
To fix this, I set up my ScanSnap software so, yes, scans go straight to Evernote, but the Save button has them go to a the Google Drive “Inbox” which is NOT an import folder; it’s a folder that I can move items FROM — just like you do in Evernote, but into Google Drive folders (or the computer, thumb drive, or trash) instead for a more traditional form or organization.
This means that I’m now backed up on both Evernote and Google Drive automatically with each scan, and I can reach either version of the document from any device. Plus, if I accidentally delete it from one application, I still have it retrievable in the other since they are not directly linked in that way, which is the way I wanted it.
I also have the “rename the file” button checked in ScanSnap Manager (hey, if you don’t see that, hit the Details link to open up a whole new world of options, but uncheck the Use Quick Menu to make your options work properly), and I give it a name that starts with YYYYMMDD (as in, 20150806), then what the scan is on a high level, and then a few details. For example: “20150806 Menards Receipt drill bits plywood masonry cement”. It sorts well, it’s searchable, and it’s quickly identifiable.
I also renamed the “Scan to Evernote (note)” to “Scan to Evernote (handwritten note)” to remind me that scanning a handwritten note as an image makes it searchable, eventually.
Because my “ScanSnap Folder” on my computer doesn’t always allow me to drag and drop a document, I created a folder off of my C: drive called “Move To Evernote”. In Evernote, I set that folder as an Import Folder, changed the source to Delete, and set the destination Evernote notebook to Inbox. Dropping a file or a copy of a file into “Move To Evernote” now whisks it away, which helps when I have a file already on my system, or one that comes as an email / Skype / Asana / whatever attachment, that I want to save separately away from that app.
Since I use both a laptop AND a desktop, I make sure both are set up the same way.
I’m sure there are plenty of people who are concerned that Google has my/their information and Evernote has my/their information and OMG my life is now an open book! Well, I figure that, on one hand, yes, that is true, but they probably have most of that information anyway, and on the other hand, while they may use it to direct market to me (hey, it’s all digital, I can set up filters and trash it automatically), I’m one drop in the ocean of humanity.
And I don’t store copies of my bank cards this way. That’s a photo-copy and piece-of-paper issue where I can live with keeping this on actual paper in a fireproof safe….but I can also keep an Evernote list (or blocked scan) of the first and last four digits, the type of card, and the phone number of whom to call if my card(s) get lost or stolen.
Hope this helps someone!
RLS
One last tidbit: I know they sell “Scanned” stamps you can use. My solution is much more simple. if I’ve scanned something but I need to keep it around for a little while, I’ll write an “S” in the upper-right corner and circle it. That tells me I’ve scanned it in.
Donnie you have rescued me from trying to think of a way to clear paperwork. Big thank you. I have always had to do the paperwork at home. For some years I began to chuck it into boxes (as I grew older) instead of putting those papers into neat files as I had always done. Hobbies, work & projects,, you name it; we have Boxes of papers and they need to be cleared. My husband is 68 & I’m 62, we are on the verge of moving, so before it comes to that. The other thing is I have a friend who asked me to store a lease doc for her, that I helped her draw up. My son keeps asking me how to organize his paperwork. (actually both my son’s do). I’m going to invest in your Fujitsu Scanner. Thank you again many times.
This is amazing information and helpful tips. I am in college right now and I am working on a proposal for class about why companies would benefit from making the change to paperless. I think that everyone should read this because it would help both companies and people who just need some help organizing at home.
Since Evernote has a limit of 100MB/month for the paid, when you did the initial “purge” , did you run into an upload limit?
Did you take all of your electronic files on your computer and put them on Evernote, so that everything is there?
Is there a maximum total in Evernote? What about your backup drives?
Do you store all of your photos/videos there too?
Evernote has changed their plans around in late spring and I believe their $2.99/month plus account offers 1GB upload allowance per month. I would never come close to that even during the purge.
This is great, Donnie!
Do you scan all of your children’s papers? Between daycare and school I have a solid 30 sheets of paper, per week! I have a hard time throwing them away, but 30 per week quickly creates a huge paper pile! If you scan it all, do you then throw them away? If you keep a hard copy of something, how do you decide to keep it? And if you only scan some things that they make, how do you decide??
Thank you very much!
Great question, Jennifer! We do scan a few things. I wrote about our whole system for kids’ papers in this post: https://justagirlandherblog.com/how-to-organize-kids-school-papers/ . I hope it helps!
~Abby =)
This is a fantastic post, I’m inspired to give this a try. I dread going into my home office, and it’s actually a very pretty space when there’s not piles of paper all over the desk. I had given up on Evernote because the free version stopped allowing me to email notes, but $5 a month would be a small price to pay to see my desk every day. What I love about emailing notes is you can add the Notebook’s name and tags in the subject line and the Note is stored for you. I can’t wait to read your ebook and get started.
Hello! I really enjoyed your post. I’m a teacher and would love to go paperless–I’ve accumulated 20 years of files. What is the advantage of Evernote over Google Drive? Also, would you recommend two evernote accounts: 1 for personal and 1 for teaching or is there enough space/organization to do everything in one spot?
Thanks so much for the advice!
Hi Jan! Evernote just has better search and organizational features than Google Drive. It would drive me crazy if I had two Evernote accounts so I would lean towards one. You can always separate things with Notebooks within Evernote.
Thank you Donnie and Abby,
Currently i’m researching about what is the best way to implement paperless at work.
Your post is very resourceful for me.
Thank you so much,
Irpan
Great article! A few things…
1) One thing I’m a little concerned about with Evernote is that, as companies often do, they may get purchased or make a policy change I disagree with.. Can I download/export all of my data (including the OCR they may have performed and the tags) to my computer in case I want to change vendors? I’ve read that if they do the OCR, it cannot be exported. Might be a case for local OCR using ABBY…
2) Do you upload paperless bills to Evernote or just leave them on the company site? I’ve started using Filethis.com recently and it automates the process of sending these to Evernote or downloading them.
3) Does Evernote have any automation capabilities that allow you to auto-tag or auto-name? I currently use Hazel for this.
Hi Brooks,
You can export a .enex file. If something happens to Evernote I’m certain there will be companies jumping all over the opportunity to import .enex files and get a whole lot of new customers. Evernote OCR is for use in Evernote. If I wanted, I could take all my backup PDF scans from my Scansnap which are stored in a separate folder and batch OCR them if the need ever arises. It’s not an issue.
Zapier has some Evernote triggers/actions like adding tags and creating notes. I much prefer a web service than a standalone Mac app like Hazel — a more modern solution. Hazel is a powerful app but complicated for most users.
Your ideas are great if someone wants to nerd out on all of this (maybe 1% of those interested in going paperless) but I favor simple over complex. My process takes less than 15 minutes a week.
Oh, I NEED to do this! I feel like I’m constantly surrounded by stacks of papers.
Thanks Donnie! I often say, “Don’t tell me what to do, teach me how to do it.” Thanks for teaching me how and in such great detail. This is just what I needed to take the last step to going paperless. One question. Is there a way to scan Abby’s printables and fill them out digitally on Evernote or do you recommend another app?
Just wondering, what did you ever think of that Doxie scanner? You mentioned that you bought it, and I’m trying to decide between that and the new Fujitsu xi100. Thanks for all this info! It’s great!
I personally don’t think there is much use for single sheet scanners. Scannable app for iOS and ScanBot for Android do a better/faster job in my opinion.
Once you’ve gotten all your paperwork on Evernote, is it easy to print something if you need a hard copy? Also, if you find that you no longer need an item stored on Evernote, can it be deleted?
2 questions: how do you print something if you need a hard copy some day? Is it possible to delete something from Evernote if you no longer need it?
You can print directly from Evernote if you wish. It is possible to delete Notes but it’s typically not worth the time. If the Note is tagged and titled properly it doesn’t take up any room. I just leave them alone.
Is the cost difference of the Evernote edition scanner directly from Fujitsu worth getting over the iX500 from Amazon?
I am looking into going paperless. I loved your post and had a question…. do you know anything about the difference between Evernote vs. NEAT? Neat also has a set of plans, but they seem MUCH higher I was trying to figure out why this is and thought maybe you might know.
and, one more thing, Recipes? I was thinking of putting everything into ChefTap (which automatically imports recipes from webpages), but maybe these should go into Evernote too?
I am soooo ready to purchase a scanner and go all in! My husband is always concerned about our ‘stuff’ being ‘out there in the clouds’. What about security?
We also have a lot of cards that we love to keep but whew the piles! Do you scan them in as well?
last question – do you scan receipts? If so, have you ever had a problem with returns?
Love your system, blog and all things =)
Great article/post. Thank you for taking the time to write it up so that it’s actually understandable. Coincindentally, I started my file purging about a month ago–I outgrew two large file cabinets and lost count of the number of cardboard file boxes; so I’ve been working one box at a time everynight going thru as many file as I can in an hour or two. Right now I’ve only been sorting into shred now & save. After reading your post I have changed my save box to scan-then shred. Thanks.
I’m not yet comfortable saving such sensitive information on any cloud/site/internet– 🙁 and hubby won’t use electronics so he wouldn’t need access to anythng without me.
Accessing them via all my electronic equipment also means a hacker could access them giving them every single thing they need to steal my life. How do you get past that ‘real’ fear? Just when I think I want to try it, I have a customer come in all upset because they store all their photos ‘online’ and they’re gone, and of course they have no backups because they trusted the company they stored with. Or the company converted all their photos to 1″ thumbnails. As it is I use a desktop to access the internet–my laptop houses my personal information and never goes online, except to update my quicken/QB–business & personal accounting programs. I don’t even allow sites to save my payment information or login information–I prefer to key it in at every visit.
Thanks again for taking the time to post your information–very, very, very helpful.
It wasn’t hard for me to get past the fear because of all the redundant backup systems I have. Thanks for reading!
I found your website quite by accident looking for tips on going paperless and this is great stuff! I’ve been heading toward going paperless for the past year but this helps make the task seem less overwhelming. Some of the tips have helped refine ideas I had started on but wasn’t completely confident in. I especially love how specific emails can be forwarded to Evernote. After some researching, I was able to make it an automatic rule so I don’t have to worry about missing one. Thanks!
Wow, I love how organized this is. I started a similar system a while back minus Evernote. I am excited to go more paperless and integrate Evernote into my system. Love it! Thanks for sharing.
Hi,
thanks for the post! it really got me thinking, I am still digesting it all and wonder should I go for it (main cons are the huge commitment and my fear of being dependent on Evernote). One question – currently I don’t really use google calendar because most of “what’s happening” is happening at work, and work uses Outlook and my organizational email address, not gmail or google calendar. How do you reconcile them? clearly, not every work meeting should go on my private google calendar. But the major things (a day I need to stay late, a business trip, a day off) – should, otherwise there’s no point sharing calendar. Also personal things such as a doctor appointment require blocking the time on the work calendar. Any advice on this?
thanks!
Thank you so much for this really great blog post about going paperless Donnie. I have been wanting to go paperless but wasn’t sure how to go about doing it efficiently and in a way where my electronic files were safe and secure (and backed up). I got my Fujitsu scanner today and started scanning. It is super fast and is a really great product. I took a Getting Things Done (GTD) training two years ago (based on a book by David Allen) and it was apparent to me after that class that I really needed to get more organized with my todos, filing and storage of documentation. Going paperless is the perfect answer. I have Evernote set up just like you explained and the system is working well so far on day 1. I’m looking forward to getting organized at home. Thanks again for the tutorial!
I don’t know why you couldn’t just have a bunch of digital files without Evernote. If everything is a pdf you can just search all your documents at once. I do use and love the free version of Evernote though. I use a Doxie Go along with two portable hard drives that take turns going in the safe so everything is on Evernote and on two different hard drives. I love that you took the time to write this stuff because you are the one who inspired me to go paperless in the first place so thank you.
A (mostly) paperless home is my 2016 resolution. This is the most comprehensive “how to” post that I have seen. My biggest hold up has been a fear that I will get deep into the scanning/pruging process, realize that I set my system up incorrectly and have to go back through everything again. After reading your post I realize that I know how to do it and I just need to go for it!!
Funny enough I came online to google file cabinets. I was trying to figure out how to store all the paper I have from my home business, life, kids, etc. How many drawers would I need. It was all so overwhelming trying to figure out how to sort/categorize everything and then in the back of my mind I was worrying about a fire… did I really need all these papers??? That’s when I googled going paperless and found this blog. AWESOME is all I have to say and I’m so excited about making the decision to go this way. I have felt for some time that I’m DROWNING in all all the paper.
I do have just three questions though.
I had planned on storing (digital) photos on Google Drive (my initial thoughts before finding your blog). I already use your naming convention for my photos. I scanned and got rid of all of our photo albums a few years back so THAT major hurdle has already been done. Do you upload your digital photos to Evernote?
And a second question… I have a problem with magazines. I hate throwing them away because there was an article or two in there I MAY need to reference some day. Do you pitch magazines? Do you tear out and scan articles that may come in handy some day?
And a final question. When you find something online that you like (say an article)… now I bookmark it but my bookmarks are an absolute mess. Is there a way to send that link to Evernote? I just love the idea of putting it in a notebook/tagging it for ease of reference.
THANK YOU so much for saving me from buying umpteen filing cabinets. I’m trying to simplify my life and this DEFINITELY is going to be a key component in that effort!
Hi Elizabeth! Great questions.
1. I store all my photos in Google Drive/ Google Photos. Evernote is not really built for storing and organizing normal photos that would go in an album.
2. I scan (with my phone) pages I wish to keep and then throw the rest away. It would be a pain to scan each and every page.
3. I use something called Speed Dial 2 (it’s a Chrome extension) to manage my bookmarks.
Wow, that’s one big tutorial. Took notes, will get back to you on how “going paperless”, goes for me. 🙂
Hi Donnie
Awesome post, just found it as I start on my journey of going paperless. Throwing myself in the deep end and wanting to start with scanning my old photos/prints and ditching the albums. Just wondering if you may have done the same and if so which scanner and/or software did you choose for that? So far I’ve read about the Doxie scanner and Epson Perfection V600 for good photo scanning. Feeling more clueless the more I read. Thanks so much
A long time ago I scanned our photos. If I was doing that again now, I would send them off to a professional service. Expensive flat bed scanners are really the only good solution for photos and I’m just not interested in buying one and spending the hours involved in the slow scan.
I just used the ScanSnap s1300i to do that exact same thing – – – I spent about two hours every day for about four weeks. I scanned everything from all my old photo books and threw the albums away! About 5,300 photos. It even scans the back where we had written stuff on it. Yes, the scanner gets dirt on the inside glass sometimes and I watch every picture that comes through to make sure it scanned properly, but it is so worth it. Sending out to a service would have cost tons of money. And I tried using a flatbed for the first 200 pictures and it took 8 times longer (yes, I calculated the time, and it takes longer since you have to flip over and scan the backs). The quality is amazing – – even the same as my old flatbed scanner (600dpi). I would definitely recommend it to anybody else wanting to do the same.
Great article on implementing a GTD system with today’s tools. I loved the Todoist interface but it lacked the near real-time updates with Google Calendar. The sweet spot for me was to use GQueues (task manager), Sunrise Calendar, Evernote, and GMail. Any updates within GQueues quickly appear on Sunrise Calendar and any reminders I have set in Evernote also appear on Sunrise Calendar. If you move something in Sunrise, it pushes those updates right back into GQueues and Evernote. Unfortunately, with Sunrise Calendar being bought out by Microsoft and now being terminated I’m not sure how much longer it will remain useful.
How do you handle bills to be paid, particularly medical bills? We have a high deductible and generally do a payment plan for most large bills ($500 and up) from doctors. Would you scan into a “to be paid” file?
Great question! All of my unpaid bills are scanned into the “Inbox”. I don’t move them out of the Inbox folder until they are paid. Having a separate folder or tag would also work but I like to keep things as simple as possible.
Hi! This is the best beginning tutorial to Evernote that I have read. I am FINALLY trying to get into Evernote. One thing I have googled and search, etc. is, can I easily and quickly get my hundreds of Word docs into Evernote (I am on a PC). or, do I have to go into the Word Doc and copy and paste into a note? Thanks!
Glad you’re going to give it a shot! You’ll have to check on a PC but I know on a Mac I can just highlight dozens of files, drag them to the Evernote icon, and a separate note will be created automatically for each file.
Great article! I used it as a template for my own paperless workflow. I would like to add that you mention that keeping all your documents online is more secure and private that that is only the case if you take some steps to ensure they’re secured correctly online. If you have an easy to crack password or an unsafe computer that has keyloggers, or malware on it, your documents’ safety would be analogous to that of a keeping them in a box in your closet. A thief that breaks in could easily find them and steal them. Some quick tips on how to change this circumstance to more like a safety deposit box in bank (Evernote servers) would be to ensure 2-factor authentication, and to have a tough to crack password. The same goes for your email account used to sign into Evernote, and the computers you use to access it.
Absolutely! Two-factor authentication with Google Drive and Evernote is a must. I also use Dashlane to use, store, and change passwords on a regular basis.
Very amazing, going paperless is very efficient and affordable. the best thing about paper less is portable we can use our data anytime anywhere which not just makes life easy and affordable but also make accessible anytime.
Yes, so true! It has been so great for our family! Thanks, Karan! Have a great week!
~Abby =)
I want to go paperless and will step up and buy either the Scansnap S1300i or the Scansnap 1X500 with Nuance Power PDF, also your book and videos. I have Mac everything and it seems that a lot of scanner programs don’t like Mac. I am retired and just want to clean up all my Misc paper files with memories, pictures and articles of interest. (Also bills and statements) Im thinking the Scansnap may be more than I need for home but will the S1300i work good enough for home stuff on a Mac. Do I need the nuance power pdf?
Your info on paperless is very helpful and I look forward to getting started with your help.
Janet
Have you tried using Trello as a task managing system?
I’ve used Trello in the past for specific projects but not as an ongoing task management system.
Hi Donnie, thanks for sharing your system. I’m curious how you share your evernote account with Abby so you both have access to all scanned documents? Do you share a single account? Or use an app like 1Password to share one another’s log-in? Or do you simply share your archive notebook and make sure that all documents you might want to share are stored in that notebook? Thanks!
We have shared notebooks with separate Evernote accounts. Great question!
May be a silly question, but if no home computer is in my possession, can I purchase a scanner and scan all paper from my filing cabinet to a memory stick? Can I use a similar program as Evernote on the memory stick?
Hi! Thanks for all the great info! I am currently looking into the ix500. However, they make a regular version and an “Evernote” edition. Do you know the difference between the two and/or have any recommendations?
Stick with the regular version. The Evernote Edition could be limiting moving forward.
Wow, Too good tutorial. Looks like its convenient and environment friendly, will defiantly try this, Thanks a lot.
So glad it was helpful for you, Daryl!
~Abby =)
Love this idea! We are in the process of going as paperless as we possibly can in our home and in my learning center as well. I have tons of paper for all of the kids I follow and my office will be much better organized once more documents are scanned! Thank you for sharing your family system!
So glad it was helpful, Alix! It’s a good amount of work initially but so worth it! 🙂
~Abby =)
I have two questions. 1) Do you also store your yearly tax returns on Evernote and then shred them. 2) I have two different real estate investing businesses. Would you suggest keeping the two different businesses and our personal stuff all in the same Evernote. I would like to go paperless with all closing docs and yearly tax returns for my LLC’s. Thanks for the advice.
thanks for the nice sharing
Wow, This is amazing and unique idea. Thanks for the share Abby.Will definitely share this with my friends as well 🙂
So glad it was helpful, John!
~Abby =)
What if something happened to you and your wife? Do you have a plan for anyone else to have acces to your digital filing cabinet for important estate related documents?
We do! Access codes and instructions in a firebox as well as conversations I’ve had with family and beneficiaries. Important question. Thanks for asking.
Hi,
I’m very keen to do this. I feel like I drowning paper. I use gmail and it sorts thins into social, promotional and primary. I then move primary emails I want to keep into folders in gmail that I have setup. For e.g.: school newsletters. Are you saying that all your email gets diverted to evernote? Or do you cull or save emails in gmail? Would you then just save these emails as notes that can be searched later if required?
Thank-you
Jo
Great question Jo!
I used to be meticulous about tagging emails in Gmail. I don’t do that anymore. Instead, I forward important emails to Evernote with my unique Evernote email code. For all other email I just archive everything (never delete) so it’s all searchable within Gmail. If I switch email addresses I can export and then important all that historical email.
I’m using Evernote, but until now I know it has this feature, thank you very much.
The S-Note application on the Samsung Note series is also a great note-taking application. I’m using S-Note and it’s very great, using with Evernote is a perfect couple.
Hi Abby,
It is good idea to go paperless. It saves lots of trees and also it is good to stop wastage to papers.
I really appreciate your effort and I try myself to go paperless always.
Thanks so much for the wonderful post.
Avinash
So glad it’s been helpful for you! Have a great week!
~Abby =)
Hey Donnie,
Thanks so much for this blog! It’s been so helpful. My husband and I are recently first-time homeowners and just getting settled in. Thankfully, we didn’t have many papers to begin with so I was able to have a little scanning/shredding party yesterday and it was freeing. We’re so excited to now be paperless. I do have one question regarding tax returns. I gathered from this blog that you store them in Evernote. Is this correct? I am curious about the security Evernote offers. From what I could tell, they now offer some encryption, but I am not too knowledgable when it comes to security speak. Is Evernote safe to store these kinds of documents? Thanks again for the great post. ~ Maddie
I’m comfortable storing all sorts of documents with personal information in Evernote. Other people have different comfort levels. I also make sure to have two-factor authentication setup on my account.
This has been an interesting read. I have One Note and what I’ve read above about Evernote, I think I would find it a bit too technical. I have 20 family albums I want to scan from. My kids art work and reports are never ending. We do have a scanner but I think it’s a Brother and we mostly use it for printing from.
1. Can I use One Note?
2. Which scanner for photos?
3. Can I use that scanner for art works as well?
Thankyou.
Abi
Hi Abi! I don’t have much experience with OneNote but from my limited testing it’s not suitable for a proper digital filing cabinet. It’s better as a pure note-taking app.
I used to have a flat bed scanner for photos and that’s about the only way you’ll get a fantastic image quality. The problem is that they are incredibly slow and not suitable for scanning documents. You may get a better image quality from some of the photo scanning iOs and Android apps like Google Photo Scan.
Donnie,
Thanks for this post! It was so simply written and practical! I purchased the e-book, and read it also. From there, I purchased Evernote, downloaded Scannable, and ToDoist. And I have started the GREAT PURGE!!
1 – Would you recommend moving everything on my hard drive into Evernote?
2 – Also, I currently use DropBox to backup certain folders. Would you recommend doing away with DropBox and moving those items into Evernote as well?
3 -How about photos – I have many on my laptop.
Great questions Alicia!
1. I don’t think everything on your hard drive should be in Evernote. Think of Evernote as a filing cabinet, not file storage.
2. I wouldn’t do away with Dropbox. They serve different purposes.
3. I use Google Photos to store and organize all my digital photos. Evernote is not a good solution for this.
Hi, I purchased your Ebook (something I never do) and really enjoyed it and implementing it. I was wondering if you all had a recommendation for accounting software that fit this lifestyle approach to on the go, seamless, paperless etc! Would love to hear about it.
Thank you so much for your sweet words, Meghan! Donnie does our accounting and really likes WaveApps for tracking everything. He talked about some of his favorite accounting tools in this post: https://justagirlandherblog.com/blogging-business-essentials/ . I hope you’re having a great week!
~Abby =)
First of all great article. I’ve been thinking of going paperless for a while and just recently came to the conclusion Evernote was the best tool to do this.
I know this is long after the post, but I’m curious if you both have individual Evernote accounts or if you use one shared Evernote account. If you use individual Evernote accounts how easy is it for both of you to add content to the same “notebook” or “inbox”?
Great article! I would have bought the book, but I’ve never heard of the payment processor (newkajabe?) and I hate creating a new username and password to download a book. Maybe consider paypal, stripe, or gumroad?
Nonetheless, a lot of great info. Ive never found Evernote appealing before, but as a scan repository, it sounds pretty boss!
Hi, Tim! Kajabi is just the course platform where you download the eBook and view the videos. Payments are processed through Stripe; Kajabi doesn’t house any credit card information. You would just need a Kajabi account to view the course files. I hope this helps! Have a great week!
~Abby =)
I am currently looking into the ix500. However, they make a regular version and an “Evernote” edition. Do you know the difference between the two and/or have any recommendations?
The Evernote edition has a slightly different interface, that’s it. I wouldn’t spend a cent more on the “Evernote” edition.
I hope you’re still checking the comments on this post since it’s pretty old. I don’t really understand the value of evernote over a well organized folder system on my hard drive. With the option to have my entire documents folder on the cloud I can access all the files within it from my mobile devices just like evernote does. I can make folders instead of notebooks to organize in a similar manner. I can add tags to any file on a mac which seemed to be one of the key points in your post. So with this in mind what is the major advantage to using evernote over a well organized documents folder that is shared on the cloud?
Search is a big difference. And also changing organization structure as needs change is another benefit of Evernote… it’s easy to make a massive strategy change. Not so easy with a bunch of nested folders. That being said, there are quite a few people that don’t want to pay a few dollars a mont for Evernote and are perfectly happy managing folders on their hard drive.
Thanks for this article, Donnie!
For anyone currently looking for a scanner, I found a good comparison of 2017 models here: https://tidyflat.co/duplex-scanner-review
I went with the Fujitsu, but there are more economical options that got good reviews as well. Hope this helps!
Hey, I just purchased your eBook, looking forward to read it this weekend. Many of my friends recommended me about that, so decided lets read it 🙂
Oh, great! Hope you enjoy it!
~Abby =)
Grrrrrr…it’s so annoying to be ocd at times. You have stated several times that you like to save scanned documents in the “yyyy_mm_dd relevant note title” format. Do you use the preset formula “yyyy_mm_dd_hh_mm_ss” format and then delete the “hh_mm_ss” portion when adding your “relevant note title?” What I want is the following to be fully aitomated “yyyy_mm_hh serial number” . I cannot find a way to get the “custom file name” to automate with with “yyyy_mm_dd” only. I’ve wondered if I could code with java or applescript and have tried but nothing seems to take. VERY new in the coding world. Do you know how to do and if you do not, do you at least know what cod language scansnap uses? I’ve spent WAAAYYY too much time trying to set up this functionality but dang it…I wanna WIN!!!!! Thanks 🙂
I just delete the hh_mm_ss part in the note title in Evernote.
What an incredible and helpful system. My only question is – if one’s files are stored on Evernote’s server, what happens when Evernote goes out of business? Do they have a contingency plan for how to hand your files over to you? So many tech apps like this just disappear along with your files.
Sorry if someone has already asked this.
I export all my files as a .xml file once per month. That file has all my data.
What about receipts for store / online purchases? Do you scan those, too? And if so, have you ever had problems making a return?
Evernote is what i am using it till date, i loved the app. Though, there are some new apps which you listed, i should try those as well to make life easy. Thank you for the article.
So glad it was helpful for you. Have a great week!
~Abby =)
Hi Donnie and Abby –
I found this article and loved it. I already have the Scansnap and this has motivated me to get going with Evernote and work to get rid of the paper files in my personal life. One comment I have is that I am an estate planning and probate attorney. With people going paperless and using cloud storage, I have seen several cases in which family members cannot find the assets and insurance after a family member passes – especially if it is someone who is digitally savvy. A great follow up blog would be to emphasize the importance of having well-organized estate plan with detailed instructions to family on where to find your estate plan, financial accounts and insurance, and a list of account numbers and advisors should something happen. Many people omit this step and they are the only ones that know where things are and how to access them.
Thanks again for the great article. I am inspired to start scanning.
This is great advice! Thank you!
I was always organized, never missed paying a bill, knew right where to find something if I needed it, everything had a place in my life. Then seven years ago my life went through some major significant changes and for some reason, it continues to do so and I can’t seem to catch a break, The paper is the biggest issue. It was on the kitchen table, forcing me to do it, but that didn’t work so I moved it into my bedroom which has only produced many, many more boxes. I would have never read a blog this long that kept my interest as well as all the comments. Thank you so much for taking the time to do it. I’m going to try this instead of the huge metal filing cabinet I have (I hate filing) and now use a large box next to my desk to put the paper that needs to be filed into it with the intention of filing it “tomorrow” I actually need another box, this one is so full it broke! I would rather use my computer and “watch a movie” while I file then open and close a metal file cabinet!! Now we need to find a use for all those metal cabinets!!! lol I know, the metal chop shop! (need to print this out!) Thank you again, I’m so glad I saw it.
Yay! I’m so glad it was helpful for you, Barbara! We love to hear that! <3
~Abby =)
I realize this post is over 2 years old. I wonder if you have upgraded or rethought any of the technology. I have been an Evernote Premium user and a Mac user for a long time. I have an ix500 scanner. I love Evernote ands tore eveything there…well almost. I have always kept a an offline system or area for those private documents. Evernote is wonderful for catching everything, finding everything and sharing it, but has two major flaws from a security standpoint.
1) It hosts your files in the cloud, great for sharing, bad for unintentional sharing should they be hacked. 2) it has no inherent encryption, I realize that encryption is self defeating if OCRing in the background is the goal. Consequently I cannot file my tax returns in Evernote for sure (and many more sensitive documents). Also, Evernote unfortunately seems to be moving away from “local’ notebooks. Alternately DevonThink looks very powerful but very long in the tooth and I worry about long term support with any software. So what do people do with sensitive documents?
Not so easy with a bunch of nested folders. That being said, there are quite a few people that don’t want to pay a few dollars a mont for Evernote and are perfectly happy managing folders on their hard drive.
Thanks so much for this blog! It’s been so helpful. My husband and I are recently first-time homeowners and just getting settled in. Thankfully, we didn’t have many papers, to begin with, so I was able to have a little scanning/shredding party yesterday and it was freeing.
Yay! So glad it was helpful for you! Congrats on owning your first home… what a fun and exciting time! Enjoy! <3
~Abby =)
We use Google Calendar, which isn’t integrated with Evernote. Is this an issue? Is Google docs improved enough to use instead of Evernote? I paid for Premium last night, wondering if I made a mistake. See some others love Trello?
When will the updated Paperless Home be available (estimate)?
Hi, Trish! We’re hoping by March-ish! 🙂 Hope you’re having a great week!
~Abby =)
When you say you and your wife are both looking at the same document does that mean you’re logged in as the same user?
Separate users.