A coaching or training practice scales in a strange way. The work itself — the session, the program, the conversation — doesn't get more efficient. The hour you spend with a client takes an hour. What scales is everything around the session: the prep, the follow-up, the program design, the patterns you notice across the people you work with, the artifacts you reuse.

This guide is about putting that surrounding work into one vault so the prep gets faster, the follow-up gets done, and the patterns across your client base become legible. The hour with the client stays an hour. Everything around it shrinks.

## What a coaching practice's notes are actually for

The notes do four jobs:

- **Hold the relationship** — what each client is working on, what you've discussed, what they committed to, what you noticed.
- **Prep the next session** — the agenda, the open threads, the questions that didn't get answered last time.
- **Design and refine programs** — exercises, drills, worksheets, frameworks, the templates you reach for repeatedly.
- **Surface patterns** — what's recurring across multiple clients, what's working, what's not.

The first three are familiar — every coach with a notebook does some version of them. The fourth is where a vault with an agent becomes a different tool from a notebook. You can ask the agent things you couldn't ask a notebook. The same per-client shape works for any project-based practitioner — see [AI notes for client work](/guides/creatives-content/ai-notes-for-client-work/) for the broader freelancer-and-consultant version.

## A page per client — the long-running record

Open a "Clients" section. One page per client. The page holds the basics — what they came in for, the goals you agreed on, their context — and then dated entries from each session below.

Each session entry is small. Three lines is enough: what we worked on, what they committed to, what I want to follow up on. If you do longer formal session notes, they go on the page too. If you record sessions and have permission to keep the audio, it drops onto the page and transcribes with speaker labels — useful for going back to a moment and remembering exactly what was said versus what you remember was said.

Before the next session, open the client's page and skim. Or ask the agent: "Summarize where we are with Jordan — what we've been working on, what they committed to last time, what I should follow up on." You walk into the session with the right context already organized in your head.

For a client you've worked with for two years, the page is long. The agent makes it queryable. "Pull every time Jordan and I have talked about boundaries with their team. What patterns am I seeing?" That's intelligence you couldn't surface from memory and would never extract by hand.

## Session prep that takes ten minutes, not forty

The shape that works for prep: a fixed structure on the client's page or on a per-session sub-page. Last session's commitments. Open threads. Today's intended focus. Two or three questions you want to ask. Anything new the client sent in advance.

The agent fills in most of that on demand. "For the session with Emily tomorrow at 10, pull her last three session notes, list any commitments she made that haven't been followed up on, and surface any pattern I might have missed." You get a draft prep doc in fifteen seconds. You edit it down to the three things that actually matter for the hour. You're prepped without having burned forty minutes.

For new clients, the prep is different — you're orienting yourself rather than continuing a thread. Drop in their intake form, any pre-work they sent, anything you've gathered about their context. PDFs auto-convert to markdown via docstrange so the agent can search and quote from them. Ask: "Read everything on this client's page and pull the three things I should be most curious about in the first session." You start with a real read of who you're meeting.

## Programs and exercises — the reusable layer

Most coaches accumulate a working library of exercises, frameworks, drills, worksheets, and templates. That library lives in scattered Word docs for most coaches. It works much better as a "Library" section in the vault.

Each exercise or framework is one page. The page describes the exercise, when to use it, the variations you've tried, and notes from clients who've done it. Over time, the page accumulates real evidence about what works.

When you're designing a program for a new client, ask the agent: "Pull every exercise in my library tagged for procrastination work. Show me which ones have the strongest notes from clients about traction." You get a curated shortlist instead of paging through your archive. The program design step takes minutes instead of an evening.

For programs you run as packages — a six-week intensive, a quarterly retreat, a structured assessment — a template page lives in the library and you copy it for each new run. Each instance becomes its own page with the participant or cohort's specifics, while the template stays clean for next time.

## Follow-up: the part that secretly builds the practice

Most coaches lose more value to follow-up failure than to anything else. The note you said you'd send. The article you mentioned. The check-in three days later. The next-session reminder. None of those are hard. All of them require a system that catches the commitment.

The vault helps because the commitment lives in the same place as the session notes. After a session, type the commitment as a line on the client's page or in a follow-ups database. An inline database via the `:::database:::` directive on a "Follow-ups" page works well — a row per commitment with client, due date, status.

The agent can give you the morning view. "Show me every open follow-up due today or earlier. Group by client." You see a short list. You handle the three that take a minute, schedule the two that need a real reply. The follow-up debt that quietly erodes practices stays small because you actually saw it.

For drafting follow-ups, the agent works from your actual session notes. "Draft a follow-up email to Jordan referencing what we talked about yesterday and the article I said I'd send. Keep it warm and short." You edit, send. The thing that would have sat for a week gets done in two minutes. The general drafting workflow — including templates and your "sent" archive — lives in [drafting emails, proposals, and newsletters inside your notes app](/guides/creatives-content/draft-emails-proposals-in-notes/).

## Patterns across your client base

The reason a vault is different from a notebook is the cross-client view. With every client's notes in plain markdown, you can ask the agent questions that span the whole practice.

"Read every client's notes from the last three months. What themes are recurring across multiple clients?" You learn that four of your clients are dealing with team-restructuring stress at the same time — a sign of something happening in the world they're all navigating, and a possible group offering or written piece. That insight is invisible to a coach reading one notebook at a time.

"Which exercises in my library have the strongest evidence of working across multiple clients? Which have I used but never followed up on?" You learn what's actually paying off in the work. The library gets pruned and sharpened over time, instead of just accumulating.

"Pull every commitment any client has made in the last month that hasn't been followed up on by them, based on subsequent session notes." You see who's slipping, gently. You can decide whether to bring it up next session.

This is the work that wasn't possible before. A notebook per client doesn't give you cross-client intelligence. A vault that holds them all and an agent that can read across them does.

## Group programs and cohort dynamics

If you run group programs — cohorts, masterminds, team trainings — the notes get more layered. A cohort page sits above the individual member pages. Group session notes go on the cohort page. Individual notes about each member go on their own pages. The cohort-design layer is its own thing — see [AI notes for course creators](/guides/creatives-content/course-creators-curriculum-design/) when the program is curricular and not just a meeting cadence.

The agent can read across both layers. "For tomorrow's cohort session, pull what we covered last week, list every individual member's stated focus area, and flag any member who hasn't engaged in the last two sessions." You walk in seeing the whole group dynamic in your head, plus the specifics of who needs what.

For programs that run multiple times, the cohort template makes each new cohort easier to spin up. The previous cohorts are searchable. "What did the spring cohort wrestle with most in week three? Pull the relevant session notes." Each cohort improves on the last because you can actually see what happened.

## The practice you stay in

The system only pays off if you actually use it. The habit that makes it stick is small: five minutes of prep before each session, three minutes of notes after each session, ten minutes once a week to scan follow-ups and process anything new. Over a year, those small entries become the most useful documents in the practice — the only honest record of what you've actually done with the people you work with.

The agent doesn't coach. It doesn't replace the conversation, the listening, or the judgment. It does the chores around the work — finding the thread, drafting the follow-up, surfacing the pattern, prepping the session. The substance stays yours. The administrative weight goes down. That's how a one-coach practice runs more clients without becoming less attentive.

Try Docapybara free — [sign up](/accounts/signup/), drop in notes from your last three client sessions, and ask the agent what patterns it sees.