Use Cases

A place to land that grows with you.

StillPoint does not force a workflow. It gives you a steady home base, then lets a system grow naturally when you are ready for it.

Person taking notes at work
Patterns

Common ways people lean on StillPoint.

Consultants and lawyers

A daily page is the anchor. Plans, decisions, and follow-ups live together. Client names link to client pages. Over time, the graph becomes a map of professional activity.

Founders and operators

StillPoint becomes the logbook. Meetings, metrics, and strategic notes are captured without context loss, with tasks pinned right beside the decisions that created them.

Researchers and writers

Ideas connect to sources, quotes connect to drafts, and the graph reveals how themes evolve across months of work.

Personal life and learning

A single space for classes, projects, health notes, and travel plans. StillPoint holds life without asking you to become a manager of tools.

Mega brain for fast moving professional

I work for a large, fast-moving consulting firm with a half dozen clients and projects at any given time. My calendar is full of meetings that I need to lead, participate in, or summarize, with action items and follow-ups everywhere. When project managers miss things or get overwhelmed, I still have to keep track of the details.

On top of that, I have to track billable time. StillPoint lets me see the day at a glance, track what time was spent, and link every meeting to the work it connects to. As the graph grows, the relationships between projects, people, and outcomes become obvious.

I also keep a fast knowledge base of reference material. Sometimes I'm only a few steps ahead of the people on a call. StillPoint lets me file important notes quickly, recall them instantly, and link them to whatever I'm working on right now. When I need to share, I can print or export a page without rewriting it elsewhere.

I have several thousand folders, and gigabytes of notes in StillPoint. It never slows down, never loses data, and never gets in the way. It just works.

The page does not dictate the day. It receives it.