Since I received my very first Rocketbook, I haven’t been able to let them go.
Ever since school years, I was known to jot down everything. As the teacher or presenter talked, my fingers would start moving. Now, I think I just learn new information that way.
Visual learners learn new things by picturing the material. Specifically, I learn best by reading my own material. I write, then rewrite (or type for legibility), and then I am able to retrieve the information better than listening.
Because I was writing and rewriting so much, I felt horrible for throwing away all the papers when I was done. All the notebooks, planners, and journals end up in trash when filled to max.
Now that I have come across a smart notebook, I can’t reach for another new paper to throw away days later.
I am able to use Rocketbook products to hand write my notes, transfer them to my smartphone/ computer, or rewrite on google doc, and then wipe it clean for a new story.
Here is the story where I talk all about how I got introduced to Rocketbook.
I am so hooked to their products, that I recently bought a new lined notebook to use as a content planner.
I love their planner because I can reuse them with a monthly agenda, and wanted something similar for writing content. Unfortunately, I couldn’t find any.
It was time to improvise what I did have. I bought a new notebook and washi taped squares on a few pages. Now I have 50+ boxes to pre plan my writing and social media content.
I simply use Pilot FriXion pens to write down what topic to write, blog to recycle, or a day to recognize, and once a story is posted, the plan is to erase it for the next month’s content.
How else do I use my Rocketbook products?
- Grocery list
- Daily goals
- Appointments
- Reading notes
- Search results
- Guest list
- Meeting notes
- Blog post ideas
- Journal prompts
- Bucket list
- Packing reminders
If you use a Rocketbook, share your favorite part by commenting below.