I'm working on my note-taking organization. I'm trying to keep the hierarchy of folders as flat as possible. This will work if I rely on linking and tagging. However, I may be constitutionally incapable of not making categories and sub-categories. ¯\_(ツ)_/¯ I need to create Maps of Content, which are manually-created summary pages of a particular topic. Creating these is overhead, but should help me better understand a subject and have a place where I can see all my notes and important links. In general, I have settled on the following structure, for now... - An inbox - A folder for daily notes, with subfolders for each year and month. - A folder for Areas / Books of Knowledge about a particular subject - A folder for concept notes (terms or ideas that cut across domains) - Folders for people and organizations - A folder for insights, particularly those that don't fit into a specific area or book of knowledge - A folder for sources with source types (webinars, videos, books, etc.) as sub-folders - A folder for source notes (though maybe these will eventually be moved to Area folders) - Utility folders for assets and templates I use tags to define the type of note (document, person, map of content). I use a "relates to" property to link relevant notes, particularly concept notes. (Though these properties aren't visible through Obsidian Publish, so for my commonplace book I have started to add a section for relevant notes at the bottom of the note, like so:) --- **Relates to**: [[Obsidian]], [[Personal Knowledge Management|PKM]], [[note-taking]], [[information architecture|IA]]