YouTube planning gets messy because a video is not one artifact. It is an idea, a promise to the viewer, research, examples, title options, thumbnail angles, outline, script notes, filming checklist, edit notes, description, and follow-up ideas. If those pieces live in different apps, each video starts from fog.

Docapybara gives you a vault for the whole planning trail. You can keep research notes, transcripts, PDFs, voice memos, outlines, and publishing checklists together, then ask Capy to help turn the material into a focused plan without losing the original context.

## Start with the viewer question

Before title brainstorming, write the viewer question. What is the person trying to understand, decide, build, fix, or feel less confused about? A video idea like "AI notes" is too broad. A viewer question like "How do I plan a week from messy notes without rebuilding my system?" gives the video a job.

Put the question at the top of the video page. Under it, add the promise, the audience, and the reason you can help. This keeps the outline from becoming a list of everything you know.

For adjacent content workflows, [content calendar from notes](/guides/creatives-content/content-calendar-from-notes/) and [personal brand content engine](/guides/creatives-content/personal-brand-content-engine/) are useful companions.

## Keep research and angle in the same page

Research often sprawls. A few links, a competitor video, a transcript, a product note, a viewer comment, a personal story. Put the useful parts under the video page or as linked child pages. If you use PDFs or long docs, upload them so Capy can search the converted markdown.

Then ask for an angle pass: "Read the research notes and suggest three possible angles, each with what evidence supports it." This is better than asking for a generic outline because it starts from your actual material.

Keep rejected angles too, briefly. They may become future videos, or they may remind you why the chosen angle is sharper.

## Use voice memos for the first explanation

Many creators can explain a video before they can outline it. Record a rough voice memo where you talk through the idea as if explaining it to one viewer. Let the transcript land on the page.

Ask Capy to pull the strongest claims, examples, and transitions from the transcript. You can then outline from your natural explanation instead of forcing the idea into script format too early.

If voice is a major part of your capture flow, [voice recording as primary note-taking](/guides/personal-life/voice-recording-primary-note-taking/) and [repurpose voice notes into content](/guides/creatives-content/repurpose-voice-notes-content/) go deeper on that habit.

## Build the outline around beats

A useful video outline is not just headings. It is beats: hook, setup, first useful point, example, contrast, second point, demo, recap, next step. Write the beats in the page, then let the details sit underneath.

Capy can help turn source notes into beats: "Create a video outline with a clear hook, three sections, examples from the linked notes, and a concise ending. Do not add facts that are not in the notes." Review the result for pacing and taste.

Keep title and thumbnail ideas near the outline, not in a separate note. The promise of the video should match the actual content you are planning.

## Track production details without overbuilding

Once an idea moves toward filming, use a small inline database via the `:::database:::` directive. Columns might include video, status, filming needs, edit notes, publish target, and next action. For a single video page, a checklist may be enough. For a channel, the database helps you scan the pipeline.

Keep production notes specific: b-roll to capture, screen recordings needed, examples to show, mistakes to avoid, files to gather. A vague note like "film intro" is less useful than "film intro after screen recording so the first line matches the demo."

This is a creative workflow, not a factory. The database should reduce forgotten details, not turn every idea into homework.

## Save edit notes for the next video

After filming or editing, write down what you learned. The intro was too long. The demo needed a closer crop. The example worked. The thumbnail promise was slightly off. These notes are valuable only if they are findable next time.

Ask Capy before planning a similar video: "Find edit notes from previous videos about demos and pacing." You get the lessons back while they can still change the plan.

This habit overlaps with [lessons learned after projects](/guides/founders-ceos/lessons-learned-after-projects/) and [write better with AI notes](/guides/creatives-content/write-better-with-ai-notes/). The medium differs, but the memory problem is the same.

## Turn one video into a small content system

A finished video can produce follow-up ideas, newsletter sections, short clips, support docs, or a better prompt. Keep a "repurpose" section on the video page with what is actually worth reusing. Don't force every video to become ten things. Some videos are just videos.

Capy can help identify reusable pieces: "From this outline and transcript, suggest three short posts and one follow-up video, using only ideas that are already present." Review for fit before publishing anywhere.

For product mechanics and setup, [the docs](/docs/) are the safest place to check current capabilities. If you are deciding whether to bring a larger content archive into the vault, see [pricing](/pricing/).

Try Docapybara free at [signup](/accounts/signup/). Create one video page, add your rough research and a voice memo, then ask Capy for an outline grounded in what you already have.