Most people who try to "keep in touch better" fail because they treat it as a willpower problem. They make a New Year's resolution to be a better friend. They download a relationship-tracking app, get overwhelmed by the data entry, and quit by February. The truth is that staying in touch with the dozens of people you actually care about is a context-management problem, not a willpower problem. You don't forget your old college roommate's birthday because you don't care; you forget because you're carrying too much in your head and the system you're using to remember things is built for groceries, not relationships.

This guide is about a calmer setup. Not a relationship app. Not a CRM. The notes app you already use, structured to actually hold the context, with an agent that surfaces who you should reach out to and what to mention when you do.

## Why most relationship trackers fail

The pattern is consistent. The tracker asks for too much data up front. Birthday, where you met, last contact date, relationship strength, things they care about, family details, work context. You spend an hour entering data for ten people, run out of energy, and the next twenty people don't get added. The tool's value depends on having all your relationships in it; the data-entry tax is too high to actually do that.

The second failure is the surfacing problem. Even if you do enter the data, the tool doesn't tell you anything useful unless you open it and ask. Nobody opens a relationship tracker on a Tuesday morning to ask "who should I reach out to today?" So the data sits there, untouched, until you stop opening the app entirely.

The fix is to use the notes app you're already in for other reasons, structure it minimally, and let an agent do the surfacing. The full version of this applied to a sales-and-accounts context is in [How to Build a Personal CRM Without a CRM Tool](/guides/sales-accounts/personal-crm-without-crm/), and the broader client-context flow is in [How Account Managers Keep Client Context From Slipping](/guides/sales-accounts/account-managers-ai-notes-client-context/).

## One page per person, kept simple

The shape that scales is a top-level page per person you want to stay in touch with. Sub-pages or sections only when needed. Keep the data model small.

A typical person page:

- **Sarah Chen**
  - How we know each other (one paragraph)
  - Last contact (date + a one-line note about what was going on)
  - What they're working on / dealing with right now
  - Family / personal context (kids' names, partner, where they live)
  - Things they care about (interests, causes, hobbies)
  - Conversation threads (open invitations, things you said you'd do, anything pending)

Five sections. Twenty minutes per person to set up the most important ten or fifteen. You don't have to enter everyone you've ever met. Start with the people whose absence you'd actually notice.

## The capture habit, ninety seconds at a time

The whole system depends on a small capture habit. After any meaningful interaction — a call, a text exchange, a coffee, a chance encounter — spend ninety seconds updating the person's page. Not a journal entry. A short note about what's going on with them, what you talked about, anything new you learned.

The agent helps if the call was recorded. After a call: "Read the transcript. Pull anything new about Sarah's life — work, family, projects, things she's dealing with. Suggest additions to her page." A short list comes back; you confirm.

For interactions that aren't on a call — a text exchange, an in-person coffee, a Slack DM — a thirty-second voice memo into your vault captures the moments before they evaporate. The voice gets transcribed; you tidy it up later. The full client-profile workflow this descends from is detailed in [How to Build Client Profiles That Make You Look Psychic](/guides/sales-accounts/client-profiles-look-psychic/).

## Letting the agent do the surfacing

The most underused move in relationship maintenance is asking the agent to surface who needs attention. Most people don't think to ask.

Once a week, ask: "Across all my people pages, who haven't I been in touch with in over 90 days? Who has a birthday coming up in the next 30 days? Who has an open thread I said I'd do something about?" A short list comes back. Five minutes of triage; you reach out to two or three people that day; the relationships stay current without it feeling like a chore.

The same surfacing works on any time horizon. "Who haven't I seen in person in over a year?" "Whose career change am I aware of but haven't congratulated?" "Who's dealing with something hard right now that I should check in on?" The agent reads the pages and surfaces the answers; you act.

The action-item discipline that the open-threads section descends from is in [How to Capture Action Items So They Actually Get Done](/guides/meetings-people/action-items-actually-get-done/).

## What to mention when you do reach out

The hardest part of "I should reach out" is figuring out what to actually say. The agent helps here too.

Before reaching out: "Read Sarah's page. Tell me what's most likely top of mind for her right now and one or two specific things I could mention or ask about." A short brief comes back. You write the message in your own voice, but you're starting from real context instead of a generic "hey, how are you?"

The message lands differently because it's specific. You ask about the project she mentioned struggling with last month. You acknowledge the work milestone she hit. You reference the trip her family took. The relationship deepens because the attention is real, not performed.

The same shape, applied to written-form follow-up after a meeting, is detailed in [How to Write Follow-Up Emails from Meeting Notes in Seconds](/guides/sales-accounts/follow-up-emails-from-notes/).

## Birthdays, anniversaries, and the small attentions

The small attentions are what most relationships actually run on. Remembering a birthday. Acknowledging a work anniversary. Noticing when someone hits a milestone. None of these require willpower if the system surfaces them.

Once a month, ask: "Across all my people pages, who has a birthday or work anniversary in the next 30 days? Who has a kid starting a new school or a partner with a milestone?" A short list comes back; you can text or send a card or note something to remember.

These touches feel disproportionately meaningful because most people stopped expecting them. A handwritten birthday card from someone you haven't seen in two years lands harder than a Facebook auto-prompt. The system makes them possible at scale.

## The yearly review of who's drifting

Once a year — late December for most people — do a yearly relationship pass. Ask the agent: "Across all my people pages, who haven't I been in touch with in over 12 months? Whose page hasn't been updated in over a year?" A list comes back. For each person, you decide: do I want to actively rebuild this connection, or has the relationship genuinely faded and I should be honest about that?

For the ones you want to rebuild, you have an action: a call to make, a coffee to schedule, a letter to write. For the ones that have faded, you can either archive the page or let it sit — no judgment, just honesty about where things actually are.

The same kind of yearly pass applied to client relationships is in [How to Manage 30+ Client Relationships Without a CRM](/guides/sales-accounts/manage-30-clients-without-crm/).

## Across many people — and a calmer way to be in touch

A single person page is useful. The compound benefit kicks in when you have fifty of them and the agent can read across them.

"Across all my people, who works in healthcare and might know someone for a question I have?" "Whose career history would be relevant to introduce to someone I just met?" "Who lives in the city I'm visiting next month?" The agent reads the pages and surfaces relevant introductions, conversation prompts, or planning ideas.

The relational network you've built over years becomes navigable. The friend-of-a-friend connection that you'd otherwise never make becomes findable.

Worth being clear about limits. This isn't a substitute for actually caring about the people you write down — it's a way to honor the caring when your memory and your attention are stretched. It isn't a substitute for being present in the actual interaction — the page just helps you walk in prepared. It isn't surveillance — the page holds only what you and they have voluntarily shared with each other.

What it is: a system that remembers what you couldn't and surfaces it when you need it. The relationships that matter feel attended to because they are.

Staying in touch with the people who matter is going to be a lot of attention whether your tools are good or not. But the part that wears people down — the forgetting, the overwhelm, the New Year's resolution that doesn't survive February — is fixable.

[Try Docapybara free](/accounts/signup/). Pick five people whose absence you'd notice — write a short page for each — and ask the agent who hasn't been heard from in a while.