41 out of 73 captures never left my inbox. Not because my retrieval system failed — because they never got processed in the first place.
I spent three weeks logging every note I captured across 21 days and tracing exactly where each one stopped moving. Every PKM framework I'd read pointed at the same culprit: retrieval. Bad tagging, weak search, no backlinks. So I'd built for that — custom Obsidian templates, a graph view, a daily note that auto-pulls open tasks. None of it mattered, because the bottleneck was upstream. The notes were dying at capture, not at search.
The finding that actually changed my setup: notes I captured with a single sentence of intent — why this matters, what problem it connects to — had roughly an 80% retrieval rate when I went back for them two weeks later. Notes without that sentence: around 20%. That's not a tagging problem or a folder problem. It's a 45-second problem at the moment of capture. I'd been optimizing the wrong end of the pipeline entirely.
The fix wasn't a better app. I swapped a frictionless Raycast snippet (fast capture, zero context) for a two-field Notion form with a mandatory 15-word minimum on the second field. Slower by 30 seconds. The survival rate difference was not subtle.
The other thing I hadn't measured: I tracked how often I actually ran the "daily review" my system was designed around. Nine out of 21 days. On the other twelve, the inbox just grew — and once it crossed roughly 25 items, I'd start skimming by title instead of reading. The most fragmentary captures (usually the most valuable) had the worst titles and kept getting skipped.
There's a third failure point I found that took me longest to see — notes that did clear capture and processing, then landed in folders that were functionally prettier inboxes. I had 340 of them with a last-reviewed date older than 30 days and zero outbound links.
I wrote up the full breakdown — including the four-label routing system I replaced my folder hierarchy with, and what "routing to a workflow" actually means in practice — over on dailyfocusmag.com.
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