Let's face it. Many people interested in the productivity space are master procrastinators. After all, checking new productivity tools and hacks seems like a perfect excuse to put real work off. But that ends now!
In this Building a Second Brain review, we revisit a personal knowledge management system from Thiago Forte that promises to put you into high gear to finally get stuff done!
Is the book worth your money?
Can it help you scale the slopes of personal productivity?
Let's find out.
💡 Before you start... Haven't heard about knowledge management? Be sure to check other similar articles on the blog where we cover it in detail.
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Building a Second Brain (BASB) is a personal knowledge management (PKM) system created by productivity expert Tiago Forte. BASB is designed to help you free up your brain's resources by storing notes, ideas, to-dos, and projects in an external digital brain.
According to the official Forte Labs blog:
"Building A Second Brain is a methodology for saving and systematically reminding us of the ideas, inspirations, insights, and connections we've gained through our experience. It expands our memory and our intellect using the modern tools of technology and networks."
"Wait, I think I've heard that already..."
Building a Second Brain isn't exactly new. People have been coming up with ways of recording ideas, thoughts, and observations for thousands of years. From commonplace books to intricate systems like Niklas Luhmann's Zettelkasten, the PKM business has been going places.
Forte's BASB blends all those tools and techniques into an appealing (and acronym-filled) commercial product. There's a lot to unpack here, so let's start from the beginning.
Forte's Building a Second Brain doesn't teach you how to consume information. You probably know how to do that all too well. It teaches you how to use information effectively.
BASB is for productivity masters as well as chronic procrastinators. It's a resource for content creators, writers, students, and academics. BASB is for everybody who's either a self-professed or a designated knowledge worker and can't keep up with the information overload.
You should consider building a second brain if you:
Sounds great, right? But there's a catch.
Much of the content in the book is actually readily available on the official Forte Labs blog completely for free. If you've already snooped through Tiago's blog archives and mastered the core principles of BASB, you should probably spend that $28 on something else.
But if you're new to the concept or need a little more organized guide---and you don't feel like paying upwards of $1500 for the course---here's a breakdown of what the book has to offer.
The short answer is... a note-taking app. That's it. While you can keep your trusty pen and notebook for quick notes, Forte recommends using digital tools as the "home" of your digital second brain. And there are some compelling reasons why digital beats paper anytime:
Already using Taskade? You can switch between six unique project views---List, Board, Calendar, Action, Mind Map, and Org Chart
Want to keep track of your reading list?Organize your books visually by embedding covers from Amazon and Goodreads
And speaking of templates, here's a free Building a Second Brain template. Customize it, save it to your workspace, and start building a better, digital brain in minutes. 👇
Still need a hand in choosing from a wide array of popular tools? Here's our list of the best apps to use when building a second brain.
Forte's methodology consists of two core components: C.O.D.E. (Capture, Organize, Distill, Express) and P.A.R.A (Projects, Areas, Resources, Archives). The first is the workflow for using and maintaining your second brain. The second helps you organize notes into folders.
Your second brain needs information to grow. In this stage, you capture all kinds of notes, and resources into four containers (more on that in a bit). Whether you're highlighting passages from a book or saving snippets of conversations, there are a few rules to keep in mind:
Folders and notes, that's all you need to organize your second brain. Instead of dumping things into dozens of ambiguously named piles, Forte recommends the P.A.R.A. (Projects, Areas, Resources, Archives) approach, a set of four (yes!) folders to capture everything,
🗂️ You can organize your second brain with Workspaces, Folders, Projects, and color-coded #tags
You have your notes and folders in place. So now what?
Your notes, as compact as they may be, are still in a raw format. According to Forte, this is where most note-takers give up. You've probably created many intricate systems, captured a lot of valuable content, and then let those notes collect digital dust. But not this time.
Once you've captured notes into your second brain, you need to distill them. In a nutshell, every time you revisit an entry, you need to chew on it, read and reread, and extract the core message.
This is where Progressive Summarization comes in.
🟢 Highlight text to distill notes and add a bulleted executive summary at the top
Gathering knowledge for the sake of it is pointless.
Sure, you may nurture your little garden, walk around and marvel at all the notes and ideas you've collected. But hey, you're in the knowledge game. And that means you need to make the best use of what's in your second brain and create new value out of it.
Here's how to do that. 👇
As your system grows, you'll need to learn how to find information quickly and efficiently. Whether you're trying to write a blog post or find inspiration for a movie script, there are four ways in which you can use your second brain in the creative process:
🔎 Use global search to find notes, tasks, and keywords.You can also look for #mentions and #tags by typing them into the search bar
And that's it! 🥳
There are two problems with *Building a Second Brain. *None of them is serious enough to throw the book off of your buying list, but we feel compelled to talk about them anyway.
With all the focus on brevity, selectivity, and summarizing, Forte's book is surprisingly long for the type of advice it offers. While that's not necessarily a bad thing, much of the overhead is filled with philosophical musings that contribute very little to the overall picture.
It's hard to shake the feeling that the book could've been a pamphlet. And if you've followed Tiago's blog long enough, you probably know everything you need to get started. The book is a great addition to BASB, but you'll get the best bang for the buck if you're new to the concept.
Another problem that also pops up in many reviews is the common-sense nature of the method. After all, it's not like we don't know how to take notes or be productive.
This knowledge has been around for thousands of years. And now that we have powerful tools to match, Forte's advice doesn't seem all that revolutionary.
But does it have to?
Sure, Thiago Forte's BASB offers common-sense advice. But so does Dale Carnegie's How to Win Friends and Influence People and Cal Newport's Deep Work. Heck, even the concept of "resistance" from Steven Pressfield's War of Art isn't exactly new.
Still, all those books offer a ton of value.
Forte doesn't hide his inspiration with Sönke Ahrens How to Take Smart Notes or David Allen's Getting Things Done. And that's perfectly ok because he mashes all those fine resources into a simple and intuitive framework anybody can start using in minutes instead of hours.
🐑 Before you go... Are you ready to build your digital second brain? Try Taskade. Taskade is an outliner and a note-taking tool that has everything you need to get started (it's free!). 👇
Create a free account or visit our live demo page to take Taskade for a spin!
Building a Second Brain is a good investment for anybody who's seriously interested in personal knowledge management (PKM). For $28---$22.99 if you can pick it up on sale---you get everything you need to know to build and maintain a digital second brain.
There are many apps you can use to build your second brain. Look for note-taking tools that offer essential BASB features like search, tagging, organization into folders, and quick capture. Want a few recommendations? Check Best Second Brain Apps For Knowledge Management for a detailed comparison.
The PARA (or P.A.R.A.) method is a simple organization system that's part of the Building a Second Brain methodology. PARA divides notes into four containers: Projects (active projects), Areas (goals and long-term commitments), Resources (reference materials), and Archives (completed/canceled/deferred projects).
The five-week course has a hefty price tag of $1,500. A more expensive Premium Edition includes 5 additional Q&A sessions. There's also an Executive Edition (limited to 12 participants) that features 1:1 coaching and priority support.
The course covers the tools and techniques you need to build your second brain, but you can get all that by browsing the blog or buying the book, which is much cheaper. We're not entirely sold on the community factor and lifetime access either. If you have the money to throw around, go for it. But there are many other educational investments with a much better ROI.
What is C.O.D.E?
CODE is an acronym for Collect, Organize, Distill, and Express. It is used for maintaining your second brain and helps with organizing notes into folders.