Few people actually love organizing their calendars and projects—there's nothing terribly exciting or sexy about most productivity tools once you actually sit down and start using them. Except for the new Springpad, that is! It's a fantastic, easy-to-use webapp that helps you organize your life, your ideas, and your projects, and once you get started, it's also a lot of fun to use. Unlike most tools of its ilk, Springpad thinks for you, working like a personal assistant to cut down on the time you spend on the less enjoyable aspects of organizing information—meaning you'll spend less time organizing things and more time doing them.


Getting Started with Springpad

The new Springpad is a little like Pinterest—if Pinterest were insanely useful! Here's how it works:

Sign up for a free Springpad account, and the service starts you off with a few notebooks. Notebooks are like categories; you can create notebooks for specific projects or for broad sweeping ideas. Your notebooks are where you'll store lists, notes, bookmarks, or anything else you want to keep for future reference.


To add something to Springpad, just click the plus sign at the top of the page in your Springpad account. You can paste a URL of something you want to come back to, search for an item in the Springpad database, use the Springpad bookmarklet to "spring" an item or bookmark into your notebooks when you're elsewhere on the web, or use one of the Quick-add tools in the drop-down menu to let Springpad do the thinking for you. We'll go into more detail on adding and organizing items a little later, but the point is that adding items is so easy you won't need a lengthy tutorial or a bunch of third-party add-ons to help you get started.

Springpad is most often compared to poular snipping and capture tool Evernote, and while that's fair, the one that's best—or at least best for your use case—will depend heavily on how you like to keep track of your ideas and projects. Choosing one over the other is ultimately a matter of taste. Evernote's fine if you're really into it, but Springpad is, in this writer's opinion, a much better tool, and a slick way to visually organize your thoughts, projects, and shopping lists. Plus, Springpad's smart sorting and social features put it over the top.

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Don't Think Organizer; Think "Personal Assistant"

Collecting data is easy; any service can do that. Springpad's secret sauce lies in how it organizes your data once you save it to your account. Springpad's smart sorting means you don't have to manually create notebooks for movies, music, recipes, bookmarks, or anything else you would normally want automatically organized (although you can!). Springpad tags it all for you, and lets you filter based on those tags across multiple notebooks, or drop the same item in more than one place.


For example, say you have a gadget you want to research or buy. Click the plus-sign to quick-add that item to your Springpad account. You can paste a URL, or just start typing the name of the product, and Springpad will auto-complete the entry for you. Then it'll add links to buy the product at Amazon, check other prices elsewhere, and even look up reviews and other information on the product so you can make an educated decision, all without you spending time looking it up yourself. If you decide to sleep on it, Springpad will even send you an alert if the price on your item drops to warn you that now might be a good time to buy. The same applies for music, movies, and books—Springpad automatically organizes them for you and pulls in relevant information so you don't have to. We noted this a while ago, but perhaps the biggest joy of using Springpad is that you don't have to have a half-dozen tools and utilities that do similar-but-just-slightly-different things (web clipping, public sharing, private collaboration, to-do and task management, etc) when Springpad does them all well enough that you can spend more time doing instead of planning and organizing.


Organize Your Life with Springpad

Each notebook in your account can represent a category that you want to organize items into, like "Recipes to Try" or "Parts for My Next Computer Build," or a whole project where you can to collect ideas and to-dos instead of projects, like "Basement Renovation" or "Garden Planning." Once created, you can start filling up your notebooks with snippets from the web, to-dos, products, and more. Here's how:

Web clippings are simple: you can either copy/paste URLs into the webapp, or you can use the Springpad bookmarklet to instantly add a web page, article, or anything else you see on the web to a notebook.

are simple: you can either copy/paste URLs into the webapp, or you can use the Springpad bookmarklet to instantly add a web page, article, or anything else you see on the web to a notebook. Products are just as easy. Springpad has a dozen or so quick-add items organized into groups like productivity and media, all of which will mine the Springpad database for matching items to autocomplete your entry while you type. Select "Wine," for example, and start typing "2009 Russian River-" and you'll see all of the wines that Springpad already knows. If you see the right one, select it to add it to your list, pre-tagged and organized. CDs, movies, books, and other products all work the same way.

are just as easy. Springpad has a dozen or so quick-add items organized into groups like productivity and media, all of which will mine the Springpad database for matching items to autocomplete your entry while you type. Select "Wine," for example, and start typing "2009 Russian River-" and you'll see all of the wines that Springpad already knows. If you see the right one, select it to add it to your list, pre-tagged and organized. CDs, movies, books, and other products all work the same way. Checklists, text-notes, events, and to-do lists are also in the quick-add list. You can use checklists for grocery lists, to-do lists, recipes you want to try, and more. You can always tag them, move them between notebooks, and leave comments and notes on the checklist later, or invite others to comment on them.


Your notebooks can be public, private, or only available to a select group of people. If you and your significant other are planning to redecorate the living room, for example, the two of you can share a notebook where you both post design or furniture ideas for the other to see. You can connect your Springpad account with your Google account to pull in events from Google Calendar. If you have a friend who's into music, you can create a notebook for new albums, and invite them to comment on your tastes and suggest new bands without exposing the world to your music tastes. If you prefer being public, you can just as easily share your notebook with all of your friends on Twitter or Facebook so they know what you're into. It's flexible, and the way you use the notebooks is entirely up to you.

Springpad is primarily a webapp, but you can also manage your notebooks on your iOS or Android device thanks to the Springpad mobile apps. There are also tablet-specific variants for the iPad and for Android tablets, and while we love the webapp, the mobile apps are just as useful, especially for retrieving information on the go, like a shopping list or itinerary. Don't be fooled though—the mobile apps are designed for data entry as well, and you can get some real work done using the Springpad mobile apps, especially on a tablet.


Be More Productive with Springpad

Up to this point, we've been discussing Springpad as something of a more elegant and visually attractive way of organizing your life than Evernote, and a more useful way of organizing the things you find on the web than Pinterest. Now let's talk about how you can use Springpad to get some real work done.


The latest springpad update lends itself to topical notebooks with checklists or specific to-dos and events inside each one, all linked to your Google or Yahoo account, and to your mobile devices. This setup is perfect for productivity systems like GTD or Personal Kanban.

If you prefer GTD, you can take the simple approach with a few notebooks like Marcel Chaudron outlines in his walkthrough, or you can go all out and build a rich and deep productivity system like Bobby Travis explains over at 40Tech. Regardless of your approach, here are the basics:

Create individual notebooks for each of your projects and tag them accordingly.

for each of your projects and tag them accordingly. Create a "Waiting For" notebook and tag / for all of the to-dos that you're waiting for others to complete, or want to follow up with someone else on.

/ for all of the to-dos that you're waiting for others to complete, or want to follow up with someone else on. Create a "Next Actions" notebook and tag for the items that are on your plate right now.

for the items that are on your plate right now. Create a "Maybe/Someday" notebook and tag for the items that you want to get to eventually.

for the items that you want to get to eventually. Start tagging items in your project notebooks with the tags above, and add them to multiple bookmarks so you can see them whether you're looking at a specific project notebook, or your GTD activity notebooks.


That's all there is to it, in the simple case. 40Tech explains how to amp this up a bit and take it to a more granular level. If you're reading this and still thinking about how this all compares to Evernote, Daniel E. Gold explains how Springpad stacks up to Evernote from a productivity standpoint for him. He argues—and we agree—that it's Springpad's flexibility that stands out, even if Evernote has it beat in some other areas.

If Personal Kanban is more your style, and you're familiar with tools like previously mentioned Pegby, your initial setup is easier. You'll follow the same steps above, but instead of the GTD-themed notebooks and tags, you'll only create three: "Pending," "In Process," and "Done."



Have More Fun with Springpad

All of these tips are designed to keep you organized and help you be more productive, and while you can do them all in public (especially some of the more goal oriented ones—you know how we feel about working towards your goals in public) most of them may be more suited to private notebooks that you only share with the people you're working with, or your family and friends. That said, Springpad's flexibility means that you don't have to just use it as a stodgy productivity tool.


Create some public notebooks for your interests, whether it's movies, music, books, hardware, electronics, anything, and start sharing. You can use Springpad partially as a service to keep those items so you can return to them and enjoy them later, whether they're articles you meant to read or the upgrades you want to buy for your home theater, and you can share them with the world and the Springpad community. Follow other users, like their bookmarks and notebook entries, and invite your friends to join you. Yes, we know this all sounds a little Pinterest-y, and if you're already having a blast with friends at Pinterest, this use case may not resonate with you, but the fact that you can use Springpad for work and for play illustrates its flexibility and saves you the hassle of joining another network if you don't want to.


One of the most compelling things about Springpad is that it's growing and changing faster than most other services like it. That cuts both ways, but I've found that the changes are largely positive, and the features added with each new revision improve its functionality without compromising its core features. Others can (and will) disagree, but Springpad is a service that's gotten better with age and change. It's still under heavy development, and the team behind Springpad are keenly aware to the needs and feedback of its userbase, which is another huge point in its favor.




We hope we've shown you how you can put this great, free tool to use for your personal projects, productivity, and even have a little fun in the process. Are you a Springpad user? Do you have your own custom productivity setup, or find it's best for a specific use case? Share your thoughts in the comments below.