We Test It: Evernote Smart Notebooks by Moleskine Evernote and Moleskine joined forces on searchable smart notebooks, but our writer is sticking with her old-school paper versions for now.

By Jenna Schnuer

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

Each month, Field Test columnist and contributing editor Jenna Schnuer tries out gadgets and services designed to simplify life on the road.

There are only a few apps to which I'm absolutely devoted and atop that list sits Evernote. It's my go-to for everything from taking (and storing) notes for articles and books, to jotting down gift ideas for my nieces. I keep my to-do lists for personal and work on Evernote and the app is front and center on both of my computers, my phone and my iPad. I'm more than just a little attached.

On the paper side of life, I have a similar love for Moleskine notebooks. (Yes, I'm a bit of a writer cliché on that front but so are most of my friends.) They're so pretty. The notebooks. Not my friends. Some of my friends. Anyway, whatever.

So how to make the two work together? The two companies teamed up last year to introduce an Evernote-specific line of notebooks. Well, I started eyeballing them—but just eyeballing them. Regular Moleskine notebooks are already a pricey $18.95 and even devotees like myself search them out on sale. Was the bump up to $29.95 for the Evernote Smart Notebook worth it? Would that really make the paper-to-digital flow that much better?

The product's promise: The notebook pages feature special dotted lines (choice of ruled or grid) that, when photographed using the camera in the Evernote smartphone app, optimize the image and increase the quality of search on your handwritten notes. "Cleaner page captures mean it can be easier for us to do the handwriting recognition on the backend," says a spokeswoman. Also, the notebooks come with "smart stickers" that, during the photo-to-Evernote process, automatically tell Evernote where it should file the notes. You can assign each of the six category stickers to a specific notebook. Each notebook comes with two or three months of premium Evernote membership, a $5 per month value. Already a premium subscriber? You'll receive points good for extending your subscription or other services.

Our reality: I'm going back to regular Moleskines. Before the launch of the Evernote Smart Notebook, I'd snapped photos of regular Moleskine notebook pages for use with Evernote (either by scanning or by taking a smartphone photo). The handwriting recognition already worked well enough. Not perfect. But well enough. No big complaints. When using the Smart Notebooks, I didn't see much of a difference in the quality of the results on searching my handwritten notes photographed from a regular Moleskine notebook page (or, even, any old blank page) than using the Evernote version.

And the stickers? I have loads more notebooks than there are available Smart Stickers. I'll never just have an "ideas" notebook; I have a "culture ideas," "Alaska ideas," "book ideas," and on and on. Unfortunately, there's no plan to add more sticker types, according to a spokeswoman.

It's not a bad product, it's just … fine. That said, the Evernote version doesn't offer enough of a bump up in utility in order to justify the price. In the meantime, I can cobble together fine all on my own. Evernote and Moleskine are still my magic brands, however, and I'm still hopeful that Evernote's new alliance with Post-it® Notes is going to change my life. Hey, it could happen…

Jenna Schnuer writes (mostly) about business and travel and is a contributing editor for Entrepreneur.

Want to be an Entrepreneur Leadership Network contributor? Apply now to join.

Side Hustle

'I Was Called Crazy': This 27-Year-Old's Side Hustle Hit $30,000 a Month in Under a Year — Now It's Worth Millions

Changing regulations forced Angel Rodriguez's jet ski rental company to shut down, and the young entrepreneur had to figure out his next move — fast.

Business News

These Are the Most In-Demand Jobs for 2025, According to a New Report

From software developer to registered nurse, these jobs have the highest number of predicted openings.

Growing a Business

4 Advanced Marketing Tactics for Small Businesses That Actually Work

Small businesses can adopt advanced marketing strategies to stand out and achieve sustainable growth. Techniques like personalization, content clusters and virtual events help build stronger customer connections and deliver real results.

Science & Technology

Want to Make Money With AI? Here Are Easy Steps to Unlock Explosive Profits in 2025

Learn to turn Google AI Studio into a profit-boosting machine with this three-step framework. Train AI to analyze data, uncover sales opportunities and maximize profits.

Business News

'How Vulnerable Senior Investors Are': Morgan Stanley Was Ordered to Pay $843,000 to an Elderly Widow Who Was Scammed Out of Millions (and Not By Them)

The scheme involved multiple criminals who pretended to be technical support staffers, employees at the bank, and even government workers.