How to Make a Personal Planner that Works for You

As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases. For more details, please see our disclosure policy.

Want to put a little order in your life? Consider this diy planner: a personal planner to suit your life and needs in this season you’re living. You’ll save time and money as well as reach your goals sooner when you have a personalized planner to track it all in one place.

blue spiral planner with pens and post-its on white table.

Want to save this post?

Enter your email below and get it sent straight to your inbox. Plus, I’ll send you time- and money-saving tips every week!

Save Recipe

A DIY planner may not look like much. It’s just paper, right? Or if it’s digital, it’s just some charts.

But, trust me when I say a personal planner is a powerhouse just waiting to be unleashed. It can hold all your goals, hopes, and dreams inside its pages and help you accomplish things you didn’t know you were capable of.

I say this without exaggeration.

Without a personalized planner, there’s no way I could have written four cookbooks, raised six children, homeschooled said children from birth through high school, and managed to run a home business — all on an very tight budget.

I’d have gone crazy trying — if it hadn’t been for a tracking system, a personal planner that truly worked for me.

I’ve mentioned before that my goal planner is my brain on paper. It’s how I organize my days for success. I take it with me everywhere and always have what I need to keep track of household, family, and personal responsibilities.

This DIY planner has evolved with me over the years. At one point it housed several calendars, a contacts section, several to-do lists for different areas of life, and several pocket pages to hold extra information or greeting cards that I wanted to keep on hand.

Then as digital took over my contacts and calendars, my personalized planner slimmed down, simplified, and yet, continued to be a powerful work horse to help me get things done.

Now, I’ve even moved my goal planner to a PDF annotation app so that I have it wherever I go, no paper required. Digital planning is the way for me in this season.

Whatever style of personal planner you choose, it can be a game changer to helping you set goals and make them happen.

planner with post-its, pens, and markers open on a black table, showing the weekly to do page.

Why Use a Planner

There are some people who are decidedly not planner people, but there are others of us who thrive on writing things down, keeping a notebook, and get absolutely giddy over free printables and personalized planner pages. 

Here’s why:

A personal planner can save you time. If you know where you need to be and what needs doing over the next weeks and months, you can plan ahead and make sure you aren’t a day late. It’s a valuable tool for future thinking.

It can save you money. If you’re meeting appointments and deadlines as well as planning ahead for events, you’ll never be late or have to pay extra at the bakery because you forgot the school bake sale was today. It’s great for tracking expenses, bills, and smart financial goals.

It can help you reach those goals. If you don’t know where you want to go long term, you won’t be able to take the small steps now that are needed to get there. A personal planner can help you map out those things.

a planner page turned into a vision board.

Tips for Success

How can YOU make a personal planner that works for you? One that rocks your world in all the good ways? Follow these tips for success in making a DIY planner:

1. Determine what YOUR needs are.

What are the things that YOU need to keep track of on a day-to-day basis? Jot down a quick list so that you have a blueprint for putting together your planner. 

Some basic things to consider in a personalized planner include:

calendar on 2-page spread blank printable.

2. Find planning pages that suit your style.

There are loads of printable, printed, and digital planners out there. I’ve got several free printables available to newsletter subscribers if you want to check those out. You can also create your own planning pages in Canva or on your computer. 

Since 2015, I’ve used the planning pages in The Print & Go Planner. It’s got a clean black-and-white look that you can customize with your own colored pens, stickers, sticky tabs, and Post-it notes. Or you can load the PDF into a digital annotation app like Good Notes and embellish it with digital stickers and markets.

Money-Saving Tip –> For a variety of FREE printable planning pages, be sure to subscribe to the Life as Mom newsletter. You’ll get immediate access to our free printables library.

student planner open to weekly time blocking page.

3. Decide how you will hold it all together.

Your planner can be paper or digital or a combination of the two.

In the early years, I cobbled all my planning pages together into 3-ring binders, but I found that after a few weeks, my personal planner fell out of use. I didn’t know how much I dislike writing in a binder.

I love spiral bound books, though, and I discovered a trick! You can have an office store bind your pages with a coil binding. Voila! A SPIRAL-BOUND, personalized planner.

That was a huge game-changer. I realized that the spiral-bound format made it super-portable and easy to use. I could fold it back on itself to save space on the counter and to make writing more comfortable. 

You can upload a digital file to Staples and they do a beautiful job printing and binding personal planners each year. Order it on 28-pound paper so that ink doesn’t leak through and let them do the printing so that all the pages go in the right direction.

If you choose to print the pages yourself, it’s definitely going to cost less money. You can even insert laminated pages or dividers to make your personal planner ultra-customized.

Because I have hundreds of people using the Print & Go Planner, I’ve learned how much printing costs can vary across the globe. If you want to try the printed version of our planner, you can order it shipped to your home. 

list of books read in 2020 written in planner

4. Embellish with colored tabs, stickers, and Post-it notes.

Printing your personal planner in black and white is significantly cheaper than printing in color, whether you print at home or have the copy shop do it. 

Additionally, black and white is so much more versatile! You can easily add color with tabs, stickers, markers, and Post-it notes and change those colors in a heartbeat, based on your mood or the season.

Your personal planner can be as sassy and decorated or as sleek and streamlined as you like it! Even if you go digital, you can create digital stickers in Canva to add to your personalized planner.

planner in an iPad on the goodnotes app.

5. Use it.

What truly makes a personal planner “rock” is its usability. If you’re not using it every day, it’s not awesome. A great, quick read on this topic is Mystie Winckler’s How to Use a Planner Without Wasting Time.

For me, one of the stumbling blocks was to switch to a spiral binding and later to digital planning. The second has been to make my planner a regular part of my year, month, my week, and each morning and evening.

Here’s how I use it:

  • I spend some dedicated time at the end of each year to create my vision pages and to do a self-assessment.
  • At the start of each month, I fill out my Month at a Glance sheet with goals for the month. 
  • Each weekend I create a new time budget and meal plan for the coming week. 
  • I write out my weekly goals as well, pulling from my monthly and yearly pages.
  • Each evening I fill out the top left square with my to-do’s for the next day. 
  • I consult my schedule, meal plan, and to-do’s each morning over coffee and throughout the day.
  • Since I use my planner digitally, it syncs to my phone, tablet, and computer so I can easily check it no matter where I am.

Using my planner regularly helps me get stuff done — and helps me feel like my head is on straight. 

Find out how to make your planner serve YOU and you’ll have a personal planner that rocks.

If you haven’t already done so, check out the Print & Go Planner and see if a personal planner can help YOU organize your “life as mom.” It’s been a game changer for me to organize life in general to save time and money.

Once you’ve set up your own planner, consider setting up a Student Planner to Help Your Child Build Good Habits.

planner on bed open to new page next to journal, mug of tea, and bowl of yogurt and berries.

FAQs

What does a personal planner do? 

A personal planner serves as a place to record your goals and overall vision for life as well as to map out a path to accomplish the things you want. Research shows that written, stated goals are more effective and help people achieve them more quickly.

Which daily planner is the best? 

The best daily planner is the one that you will actually use. Think about your personal habits. Do you like digital or paper? Do you like to write or prefer to type? Try a few different methods to see what will work best for your life in this season.

How do I remember to use my planner?

Once you spend the time to set up a personal planner, it’s important to put it to good use. To make personal planning more of a habit, you can make sure to take it wherever you go, schedule planning time at a regular time each month, week, and day, and store it where you will see it every morning and every night.

planner with tabs open to weekly page.

More Good Ideas for Planning

What do you think?

I’d be honored if you chimed in the comments section. What do you think?

This post was originally published on August 17, 2011. It has been updated for content and clarity.

Similar Posts

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

67 Comments

  1. Wow, just found your site via SimpleMom. I love these planner ideas. I have tried so many things … Just started “homeschooling” my kindergartener (long way to got) and it is great to read all your advice. Thanks and greetings from Germany!

  2. I wanted to add that I use a thin tip permanent marker to write on my sheet protectors / laminates. It won’t smudge or wipe off but removes easily with a bit of rubbing alcohol on a towel or paper towel. It’s completely kid proofed my binder. 🙂

    1. So, I tried the thin sharpie on the laminated paper and it rubbed off. I checked with Katie (above) and she is using sheet protectors. So, there is a difference. I’ve had a hard time finding something that works. I just realized that Jessica uses WET erase. Not dry erase. (I totally mis-read that.) Big difference. Now, I’m off to try that. I’m sure it will work better.
      By the way, I bound my own calender with the laminated pages and so far I love it. Thanks for the great idea!

      1. Yes, big difference. The thing I’m finding is that unless the wet erase is totally dry, it will smear. So, keep that in mind. It’s also not proven that great to have two laminated pages back to back because they can share their ink.

  3. I think, like you said, the most important thing is to make it your own. If it’s the latest thing, the best seller, the prettiest, etc. …that doesn’t matter if it doesn’t work for you. I prefer a week at a time, with loose leaf sheets, that is expandable. When I USE my planner right, it helps to ease so much tension.

  4. I’m still a beginner, using a binder, modifying as I go. I use plastic inserts so I can slip in important papers and keep with me, on the go. Maybe in another 6 months I’ll have it figured out and go spiral, but for now, the 1 1/2″ binder with plastic inserts works well.

    🙂 Allie

  5. Lamination??!!!! Why didn’t I think of that last year when I made my notebook???? It ended up being so bulky I barely used it and finally trashed it. I had such high hopes for it……maybe I’ll try again….

  6. Thanks so much for this fabulous idea. I put mine together and my goal is to use. It only cost me 3.99 at Staples to get it bound. Thanks again.

  7. BRILLIANT!! Beyond that I am speechless at the thought of being able to make my own customized planner/calendar/binder. Why didn’t I think of paying for the spiral binding?!

  8. They now make notebinders. They are the perfect solution. You can even reuse them. Cost about $10.

  9. Oops! That should read above, the magnetic pad is my *daily* planner. Chores, grocery, ordering list etc. When I’m done I just rip the page off and start anew.

  10. I found one at Target last year with pockets and all, a three ring binder for under $3.00. I never used it though, I gave it to one of my duaghters. Planners are just not my style, one nice little file works best for me for articles and such. My homeschooler planner that I fill in daily as I go is the planner from Rod and Staff publications. I can slip most anything as far as homeschool subjects into the subject spaces I label, Rod and Staff leaves the subject spaces for you the teacher to fill. A nice little planner for school and the price is right. The best planner I have is a dollar store magnetic pad on the fridge.

    That’s just me… It works though…And it’s do-able for me. : )