I love trying new tools, which is exactly why you should be suspicious of most tool recommendations, including mine. Shiny apps come and go. So instead of listing whatever is trending, here are the few tools that have survived years of daily use in my life. Everything else got deleted.
For writing: a plain text editor
I draft almost everything in a simple text editor with zero formatting. No fonts, no colors, no menus calling for attention. Formatting comes last, thinking comes first. The fancier the writing app, the more time I spend decorating and the less time I spend writing. Plain text keeps me honest.
For notes: one notebook, one inbox
My rule is one physical notebook for daily thoughts and one digital inbox for everything else. Links, ideas, half-written paragraphs, all go to a single notes app inbox that I clean every Friday. Before this, my notes were scattered across five apps and I could never find anything. One inbox changed that completely.
For focus: a timer, nothing smart
The most effective productivity tool I own costs nothing. I set a timer for forty minutes, put the phone in another room, and work until it rings. People keep asking which app I use for deep work. The honest answer is a kitchen-style timer and a closed door. Discipline does not need a subscription.
For publishing: WordPress
This site runs on WordPress and it gives me something I value more than convenience: ownership. My words live on my own domain, not inside someone else’s platform that may change its rules next year. It took a weekend to learn the basics and it was worth every hour.
What I stopped using
I dropped the complicated task managers, the read-later apps with thousands of unread articles, and every app that needed a tutorial to open. A tool earns its place by disappearing into the work. If I notice the tool more than the task, it goes.
My advice: pick fewer tools and stay with them long enough to stop thinking about them. The boring stack wins.