NotebookLM has become the go-to research tool for millions of professionals and students, but most users only scratch the surface of what it can do. These 15 tips will help you get dramatically more value from every session.
1. Name Your Sources Descriptively
When you import a source, NotebookLM uses the filename or title. Rename ambiguous sources immediately — "ChatGPT conversation" becomes useless after a week. Use a format like "Claude — Competitive Analysis of Pricing Models — March 2026."
2. Use Notebook Toolkit to Capture Before You Lose It
The number one mistake researchers make is planning to save something later. Use Notebook Toolkit to capture sources the moment you encounter them. AI chat histories, social media posts, and web articles can disappear or change.
3. Create Separate Notebooks by Project Phase
Instead of one massive notebook per project, create separate notebooks for different phases: "Research," "Interviews," "Drafts," and "Final Sources." This keeps queries more focused and results more relevant.
4. Ask NotebookLM to Find Contradictions
One of the most powerful queries: "Do any of my sources contradict each other on [topic]?" NotebookLM will surface tensions in your research that manual review would miss.
5. Use the Audio Overview for Commute Review
Generate an audio overview of your notebook before a commute or workout. It works surprisingly well for reviewing where your research currently stands and sparking new connections.
6. Combine Sources From Multiple AI Models
Capture the same question answered by ChatGPT, Claude, and Gemini using Notebook Toolkit. Then ask NotebookLM "What do these sources agree and disagree on?" The synthesis is often better than any single model's answer.
7. Save YouTube Transcripts, Not Just Notes
Notebook Toolkit can save YouTube video content to NotebookLM. Full transcripts are more useful than notes because you can query the exact language used by speakers.
8. Query With Follow-Up Questions
Don't stop at the first answer. NotebookLM retains context within a session. Ask "Can you expand on the third point?" or "Which source most strongly supports that?" to drill deeper.
9. Export Chat to Build Documentation
After a productive NotebookLM session, capture the chat itself using Notebook Toolkit. The Q&A format makes excellent documentation, FAQs, or meeting prep material.
10. Add Web Pages as Sources Directly
Any webpage can become a NotebookLM source via Notebook Toolkit. Save competitor documentation, academic papers, news articles, and industry reports while you browse.
11. Use Brief Source Annotations
When importing a source through Notebook Toolkit, add a one-sentence note about why you saved it. These notes become searchable in NotebookLM and help you recall context weeks later.
12. Create a "Miscellaneous" Catch-All Notebook
Not every source belongs to a current project. Keep a catch-all notebook for interesting findings. Review it monthly and move relevant items to active project notebooks.
13. Use NotebookLM's Study Guide Feature for Exams
Students: after loading your course materials, ask NotebookLM to generate a study guide. It identifies the key concepts, themes, and likely exam topics from across all your sources.
14. Batch Import Related Sources Together
When starting a new research project, use Notebook Toolkit's bulk capture to import all related sources at once. Starting with a critical mass of material gives NotebookLM more to work with from the first query.
15. Share Notebooks Strategically
NotebookLM supports shared notebooks. For team research, have each member capture sources using Notebook Toolkit throughout the week, then combine them into a shared notebook for the weekly synthesis session.