para-method
PARA Method - Organize Your Digital Life
The PARA Method is a universal organizational system developed by Tiago Forte for organizing every piece of information in your digital life across any platform.
When to Use This Skill
- Setting up a new note-taking system (Notion, Obsidian, Evernote, etc.)
- Organizing digital files and folders
- Categorizing notes, tasks, or projects
- Migrating from other systems (GTD, Zettelkasten, etc.)
- Conducting weekly reviews of your productivity system
- Deciding where to store or move information
- Maintaining an organized Second Brain
Core Principle
Organize by actionability, not by topic.
Traditional (Topic-Based) PARA (Actionability-Based)
───────────────────────── ──────────────────────────
📁 Work/ 📁 Projects/
📁 Personal/ 📁 Areas/
📁 Reference/ 📁 Resources/
📁 Archive/ 📁 Archives/
❌ Where do I file this? ✅ What is this for?
❌ No clear answer ✅ Clear answer every time
The PARA system organizes information based on how actionable it is right now.
The Four Categories
1. Projects - Active Endeavors with Deadlines
Definition: Short-term efforts with a clear endpoint and deadline.
Projects have:
├── Specific goal/outcome
├── Clear deadline or timeframe
├── Series of tasks/actions
└── Defined "done" state
Examples:
- "Complete Q4 financial report by December 15"
- "Launch new website by March 1"
- "Plan summer vacation in July"
- "Write article draft by Friday"
- "Prepare presentation for conference"
How to identify:
Question: Can I cross this off my list when done?
Answer: YES → It's a Project
Key Test:
- Does it have a clear finish line?
- Would you throw a party when it's done?
- Will it definitely end?
2. Areas - Ongoing Responsibilities Without Deadlines
Definition: Spheres of responsibility requiring continuous attention.
Areas have:
├── No deadline (ongoing)
├── Standard to maintain
├── Never "completed"
└── Requires regular attention
Examples:
- Health & Fitness
- Finances
- Career/Professional Development
- Relationships
- Home Environment
- Personal Growth
- Team Management
- Client Relations
How to identify:
Question: Is there a clear endpoint?
Answer: NO → It's an Area
Key Test:
- Will this continue indefinitely?
- Is there no "done" state?
- Does it require ongoing maintenance?
3. Resources - Topics of Ongoing Interest
Definition: Topics, themes, or interests you want to reference in the future.
Resources have:
├── No action required now
├── Potential future value
├── Topics of interest
└── Reference material
Examples:
- Marketing Strategies
- Cooking Recipes
- Design Inspiration
- Programming Tutorials
- Writing Tips
- Travel Guides
- Mental Models
- Leadership Frameworks
How to identify:
Question: Is this useful/interesting but not directly actionable?
Answer: YES → It's a Resource
Key Test:
- Would you reference this later?
- Is it educational/informative?
- Does it support your interests?
4. Archives - Inactive Items
Definition: Completed or inactive items from other categories.
Archives have:
├── No current relevance
├── Historical value
├── Potential future reference
└── Storage for completed/deferred items
Examples:
- Completed Projects
- Inactive Areas (past jobs, ended relationships)
- Old Resources (no longer relevant)
- Past reference materials
How to identify:
Question: Is this inactive but worth keeping?
Answer: YES → It's an Archive
Key Test:
- Project completed? → Archive it
- Area no longer relevant? → Archive it
- Resource outdated? → Archive it
Actionability Spectrum
Most Actionable ←────────────────────────────→ Least Actionable
┌─────────┐ ┌────────┐ ┌───────────┐ ┌──────────┐
│PROJECTS │ → │ AREAS │ → │ RESOURCES │ → │ ARCHIVES │
└─────────┘ └────────┘ └───────────┘ └──────────┘
│ │ │ │
Active now Important but Useful for Inactive
must focus ongoing future ref storage
Key principle: Information flows from left to right as actionability decreases.
Decision Framework
The PARA Test
Ask these questions in order:
1. Is it active right now?
YES → Projects (has deadline) or Areas (ongoing standard)
NO → Continue
2. Does it have a deadline?
YES → Projects
NO → Areas
3. Is it useful/interesting reference material?
YES → Resources
NO → Archives
4. Is it inactive but worth keeping?
YES → Archives
NO → Delete/doesn't belong in system
Quick Decision Tree
Where does this go?
│
▼
┌────────────────┐
│ Active now? │
└────────────────┘
│ │
YES NO
│ │
▼ ▼
┌──────────┐ ┌────────────┐
│ Deadline?│ │ Useful ref?│
└──────────┘ └────────────┘
│ │ │ │
YES NO YES NO
│ │ │ │
▼ ▼ ▼ ▼
Project Area Resource Archive
Implementation Guide
Phase 1: Quick Setup (First Hour)
1. Create four top-level folders:
📁 1-Projects/
📁 2-Areas/
📁 3-Resources/
📁 4-Archives/
2. Number them (1-4) for:
✓ Sorting by actionability
✓ Quick visual reference
✓ Consistent ordering across platforms
3. Don't create subfolders yet
→ Let structure emerge naturally
Why numbering matters:
Without numbers, alphabetizing gives:
Areas, Archives, Projects, Resources
↑ ↑
Wrong order - breaks actionability principle
With numbers (1-4), always correct:
1-Projects, 2-Areas, 3-Resources, 4-Archives
Phase 2: Initial Sorting (First Day)
Process existing items:
1. Create "To Sort" temporary folder
2. Move ALL existing notes/files to "To Sort"
3. Start with empty PARA structure
4. Sort items one by one using decision tree
5. Ask: "Is this active now?"
Benefits:
├── Clean slate
├── Forced reconsideration of every item
├── Prevents hoarding in wrong category
└── Ensures intentional placement
Phase 3: Detailing (First Week)
Add subfolders as needed:
1-Projects/
├── Q4 Financial Report/
├── Website Redesign/
├── Summer Vacation/
└── Conference Presentation/
2-Areas/
├── Health & Fitness/
├── Finances/
├── Career Development/
├── Relationships/
├── Home Maintenance/
└── Personal Growth/
3-Resources/
├── Marketing Strategies/
├── Writing Tips/
├── Design Inspiration/
├── Programming/
├── Mental Models/
└── Productivity/
4-Archives/
├── Completed Projects/
├── Old Jobs/
├── Past References/
└── Inactive Areas/
Categorization Examples
Real-World Scenarios
Item: "Meeting notes: Marketing sync, Dec 5"
Decision: Where does this go?
Analysis:
├── Actionable now? → Check if follow-ups needed
├── Meeting itself: Informational → Resource (if valuable)
├── Has action items? → Create Project for each
└── Just reference? → Archive or delete
Placement:
└── Extract action items → Projects
Save key insights → Resources: Marketing
No value? → Archives or delete
Item: "Reading list of business books"
Decision: Where does this go?
Analysis:
├── Currently reading? → Project: "Read [Book Title]"
├── List of books to read → Areas: Learning & Development
└── Book notes/summaries → Resources: Book Notes
Placement:
└── Split into multiple locations based on actionability
Item: "Vacation photos from 2023"
Decision: Where does this go?
Analysis:
├── Part of active project? → No
├── Ongoing responsibility? → No
├── Reference material? → Maybe (Resources: Travel)
└── Just storage? → Archives: Vacations/2023
Placement:
└── Resources (if you reference for future trips)
OR Archives (if purely historical)
Maintenance & Reviews
Weekly Review (15-30 minutes)
Weekly PARA Check:
Projects (5 min):
├── [ ] Review active projects
├── [ ] Move completed projects → Archives
├── [ ] Check deadlines are still relevant
├── [ ] Update project status
└── [ ] Identify stalled projects
Areas (5 min):
├── [ ] Review areas needing attention
├── [ ] Check systems/spreadsheets are updated
└── [ ] Note any neglected areas
Resources (5 min):
├── [ ] Brief scan for misfiled items
└── [ ] No action typically needed
Archives (5 min):
├── [ ] Usually minimal action
└── [ ] Clean up if needed
Monthly Review (1-2 hours)
Monthly PARA Maintenance:
1. Review All Projects
├── Close completed projects
├── Assess stalled projects
├── Prioritize active projects
└── Check alignment with areas
2. Audit Areas
├── Are all areas still relevant?
├── Any new responsibilities emerged?
└── Standards being maintained?
3. Clean Resources
├── Remove obsolete items
├── Merge duplicate topics
└── Reorganize if needed
4. Purge Archives
├── Delete truly unnecessary items
├── Compress old files
└── Check for items to reactivate
Quarterly Deep Clean (Half day)
Quarterly PARA Overhaul:
1. Complete PARA audit
├── Every folder examined
├── Every item reconsidered
└── Structure refined
2. Update systems
├── Templates refreshed
├── Processes documented
└── Tools evaluated
3. Set quarterly goals
├── Major projects identified
├── Area focus areas defined
└── Resource gaps addressed
4. Archive management
├── Major archival
├── Cleanup completed
└── Storage optimized
Migration Guide
From GTD (Getting Things Done)
GTD Structure → PARA Structure
─────────────────── ───────────────
Next Actions → Projects (with next actions)
Projects → Projects
Areas of Focus → Areas
Reference → Resources
Someday/Maybe → Archived Projects
Tickler → Archive with dates
Waiting For → Project notes
Key difference:
├── GTD: Action-focused (what to do next)
└── PARA: Actionability-focused (when to engage)
From Zettelkasten
Zettelkasten Structure → PARA Structure
──────────────────── ───────────────
Main notes (Zettels) → Split by actionability:
├── Permanent notes → Resources (concepts, ideas)
├── Project notes → Projects (active work)
├── Structure notes → Areas (topic overview)
└── Literature notes → Resources (source material)
Key integration:
├── Keep Zettelkasten principles for note-taking
├── Use PARA for overall organization
└── Zettelkasten lives within Resources
From Folder Chaos
Common folder mess → PARA migration:
1. Start fresh (don't try to sort in place)
└── Create clean PARA structure
2. Create "To Sort" folder
└── Move everything there
3. Sort items using decision framework
└── One by one, deliberate placement
4. Resist creating subfolders initially
└── Let structure emerge from needs
5. Trust new categories
└── Items will flow where they belong
Platform-Specific Implementation
Notion
Para Structure in Notion:
Workspace
├── 📊 Dashboard (linked views)
├── 📁 Projects (database)
│ ├── Status: Active/Completed
│ ├── Due Date
│ └── Related Area
├── 📁 Areas (database or pages)
│ ├── Area template
│ └── Linked to Projects
├── 📁 Resources (database)
│ ├── Tags for topics
│ └── Related Projects/Areas
└── 📁 Archives (database)
├── Original location field
└── Date archived
Notion-specific tips:
- Use databases for Projects (filterable by status)
- Create templates for each project type
- Link Resources to active Projects
- Use relations between databases
Obsidian
Para Structure in Obsidian:
Vault
├── 1-Projects/
│ ├── Project A.md
│ └── Project B.md
├── 2-Areas/
│ ├── Health & Fitness.md
│ └── Career.md
├── 3-Resources/
│ ├── Marketing/
│ ├── Writing/
│ └── Mental Models/
└── 4-Archives/
├── Completed Projects/
└── Old Resources/
+ Daily Notes (linked to projects)
+ Dataview queries for active items
+ Tags: #project, #area, #resource
Obsidian-specific tips:
- Use Dataview plugin for queries
- Create MOCs (Maps of Content) for Resources
- Link daily notes to active projects
- Use tags sparingly (folders do heavy lifting)
Evernote / OneNote / Apple Notes
Para Structure in Traditional Note Apps:
Notebooks/Sections:
├── 📓 1-Projects
│ └── One notebook per active project
├── 📓 2-Areas
│ └── One notebook per area
├── 📓 3-Resources
│ └── Topic-based notebooks
└── 📓 4-Archives
└── Stacked notebooks by category
Tags (secondary organization):
├── Project-specific tags
├── Area tags
├── Topic tags in Resources
└── Date tags in Archives
Templates & Examples
Project Template
# Project: [Name]
## Overview
- **Status:** [Planning/Active/On Hold]
- **Start Date:** [Date]
- **Target Completion:** [Date]
- **Area:** [Which area this supports]
## Goal
[Clear outcome - what does "done" look like?]
## Success Criteria
- [ ] [Criterion 1]
- [ ] [Criterion 2]
- [ ] [Criterion 3]
## Key Tasks
- [ ] Task 1
- [ ] Task 2
- [ ] Task 3
## Resources Needed
- [List resources from Resources folder]
## Notes & Progress
[Running notes]
## Links
- [Related resources]
- [Reference materials]
---
Created: [Date]
Last Updated: [Date]
Area Template
# Area: [Name]
## Definition
[What does this area encompass?]
## Standards
[What does "good enough" look like in this area?]
## Current Projects
- [Active Project 1]
- [Active Project 2]
## Key Metrics
- [Metric 1]
- [Metric 2]
## Regular Actions
- [Daily/Weekly/Monthly actions]
## Resources
- [Links to relevant Resources]
## Notes
[Running thoughts and observations]
## Last Review
[Date: Summary of status]
Resource Template
# Resource: [Topic Name]
## Summary
[Quick summary of what this contains]
## Key Concepts
- [Concept 1]: [Brief explanation]
- [Concept 2]: [Brief explanation]
## Related Areas
- [Area 1]
- [Area 2]
## Active Projects Using This
- [Project 1]
- [Project 2]
## Notes Collection
### [Subtopic 1]
[Notes, quotes, insights]
### [Subtopic 2]
[Notes, quotes, insights]
## Links & References
- [Source 1]
- [Source 2]
---
Created: [Date]
Last Updated: [Date]
Best Practices
Do's ✓
✓ Start simple, let structure emerge
└── Don't over-engineer from day one
✓ Use numbering (1-4) for consistent ordering
└── Ensures most actionable items first
✓ Move items freely between categories
└── PARA is dynamic, not static
✓ Create new project folders for active work
└── Projects are temporary homes
✓ Review weekly to maintain system
└── Prevents buildup and misfiling
✓ Keep "To Sort" folder for quick capture
└── Sort later during reviews
✓ Archive completed projects immediately
└── Keeps Projects folder clean
✓ Link related items across categories
└── But don't duplicate - reference instead
Don'ts ✗
✗ Don't organize by topic
└── "Work" and "Personal" are topics, not actionability levels
✗ Don't create too many subfolders
└── Max 3 levels deep
✗ Don't duplicate items
└── Link/reference instead
✗ Don't skip weekly reviews
└── System degrades quickly without maintenance
✗ Don't let Projects become Areas
└── Projects must have deadlines
✗ Don't hoard in Archives
└── Delete truly useless items
✗ Don't overthink placement
└── Better to place and adjust than procrastinate
✗ Don't create "Miscellaneous" folders
└── Everything has a place in PARA
Common Questions
What if something fits multiple categories?
Place where you'll LOOK for it first.
Example: "Health insurance documents"
├── Actively needed? → Projects (if switching plans)
├── Ongoing reference? → Areas (Health & Fitness)
└── Pure storage? → Resources (Insurance)
Rule: One home, link elsewhere if needed
How detailed should project folders be?
Match complexity to project:
Simple Project:
└── Single note or document
Complex Project:
└── Folder with:
├── Project brief
├── Research
├── Drafts
├── Assets
└── Final deliverables
When should I archive?
Archive immediately when:
├── Project completed
├── Project cancelled
├── Area no longer relevant
├── Area ended (job ended, relationship ended)
└── Resource no longer useful
Don't wait for "review" - archive now
How many projects should I have?
No strict limit, but consider cognitive load:
Healthy range: 5-15 active projects
├── Too few: May lack progress on goals
└── Too many: Split focus, stalled projects
If > 15 projects:
├── Some may be Areas mislabeled
├── Some should be archived
└── Some need delegation/declining
Integration with Other Methods
PARA + Other Systems:
GTD (Getting Things Done):
├── PARA organizes WHERE items live
├── GTD defines HOW to process items
└── Use GTD for task execution, PARA for organization
OKRs (Objectives & Key Results):
├── Objectives → Areas
├── Key Results → Projects
└── Initiatives → Project tasks
Agile/Scrum:
├── Sprints → Short-term Projects
├── Epics → Larger Projects
├── Backlog → Resources + Archives
└── Product Areas → Areas
Zettelkasten:
├── Lives within Resources
├── Knowledge work goes here
└── Active thinking remains in Projects
Quick Reference Card
THE PARA QUICK GUIDE
PROJECTS (Active + Deadline)
├── Specific endpoint
├── Clear success criteria
├── Has due date
└── Can be "completed"
AREAS (Ongoing Responsibilities)
├── No endpoint
├── Standards to maintain
├── Requires attention
└── Never "completed"
RESOURCES (Reference Material)
├── Topics/interests
├── Educational/informative
├── Potential future value
└── No immediate action
ARCHIVES (Inactive Items)
├── Completed projects
├── Inactive areas
├── Old resources
└── Anything not current
DECISION ORDER:
1. Active? → P or A
2. Deadline? → P
3. No deadline? → A
4. Reference? → R
5. Inactive? → Archive
6. Useless? → Delete
Troubleshooting
"My Projects folder is overwhelming"
Diagnosis: Likely mixing Projects and Areas
Solution:
├── Check each "project" for deadline
├── Move ongoing work to Areas
├── Break large projects into smaller projects
└── Archive stalled projects
"I never look at Resources"
Diagnosis: Resources too disconnected from active work
Solution:
├── Link Resources to Projects/Areas
├── Create "quick reference" sections
├── Review Resources during project planning
└── Consider: Is this truly useful? Delete if not
"I don't know where to put X"
Decision paralysis → Use the PARA test:
1. Does this require action? → Projects/Areas
2. Does it have a deadline? → Projects
3. Is it ongoing? → Areas
4. Is it reference? → Resources
5. Is it inactive? → Archives
Still unsure? → Put in "To Sort" and decide during review
Resources
For detailed implementation guides, platform-specific setups, and advanced techniques, see REFERENCE.md.
- Building a Second Brain - Tiago Forte
- The PARA Method - Tiago Forte
- Official PARA Method Book (2023)
- BASB Course by Tiago Forte
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