How to use Yume Techo Landscape tutorial pages – NozomuNoto

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How to use Yume Techo Landscape tutorial pages

Learn how to use every built-in Yume Techo Landscape tutorial page, including navigation, index, templates, monthly, weekly, daily, yearly, goals, and notes.

On this page
  1. How to use this planner first
  2. What each main area is for
  3. What to start with first
  4. A simple first-week setup
  5. Read deeper page ideas
  6. Built-in tutorial pages and visual guide
  7. Tutorial Page 1/10 - Basic Navigation
  8. Tutorial Page 2/10 - Index Page
  9. Tutorial Page 3/10 - Template Pages
  10. Tutorial Page 4/10 - Monthly Page
  11. Tutorial Page 5/10 - Weekly Page
  12. Tutorial Page 6/10 - Daily Page
  13. Tutorial Page 7/10 - Yearly Page
  14. Tutorial Page 8/10 - Goals Page - Life Planner
  15. Tutorial Page 9/10 - Goal Planner Page
  16. Tutorial Page 10/10 - Notes Index
  17. When the Yume Techo Landscape setup gets tricky
  18. 1. The planner feels too big
  19. 2. A copied template page is hard to find
  20. 3. Calendar pages become crowded
  21. 4. Links do not open when tapped
  22. Where to go next

Use this guide if you use Yume Techo Landscape and want to know how to actually use the planner pages. The screenshots below use Yume Techo Academic 26-27 Landscape as the example. Other Yume Techo versions may look a little different, but the main page-use idea is the same.

This article is the product map: what each page area is for, what to start with first, and where to read deeper examples. For app buttons, imports, page copying, bookmarks, or device issues, use the Device & App guide for your app.

How to use this planner first

  1. Use Index as the home base. Open Index or Table of Contents first, then choose the section you need today.
  2. Put fixed dates on Monthly. Birthdays, bills, deadlines, school dates, appointments, launches, trips, and renewals belong here first.
  3. Use Weekly for the real working plan. Choose what matters this week: appointments, routines, class blocks, work blocks, errands, and the next few actions.
  4. Use Daily only when the day needs more room. Daily pages are helpful for busy days, messy days, study days, or days with many notes.
  5. Use Notes and Template Pages for overflow. Long lists, project details, trackers, references, and ideas do not need to crowd the calendar pages.
  6. Use Life Planner pages for direction. Vision, goals, routines, finance, health, study, work, travel, and reflection pages are for bigger-picture planning, not daily pressure.

What each main area is for

  • Index and Table of Contents: the navigation map for the whole planner.
  • Yearly pages: big dates, school terms, launches, trips, renewals, holidays, and events that affect more than one month.
  • Monthly pages: birthdays, bills, appointments, deadlines, projects, reset days, and month themes.
  • Weekly pages: the real working plan for classes, work shifts, meals, errands, study blocks, content plans, and family logistics.
  • Daily pages: the short list of what actually happens today, especially when the week feels too big.
  • Life Planner and Goal pages: direction, routines, health, money, study, work, travel, and long-term planning that needs more room than a calendar box.
  • Template pages: reusable pages for lists, trackers, projects, notes, challenges, kanban boards, photos, and collections.
  • Notes Index: the place to organize notes so they do not get lost behind calendar pages.

What to start with first

  1. Index: the page you return to when the planner feels too big.
  2. Current Monthly: the page for dates that already exist.
  3. Current Weekly: the page for what needs attention this week.
  4. One Daily page: optional, only when today needs more detail.
  5. One Notes page: the place for messy thoughts, project details, or lists you do not want to lose.
  6. One Template copy: choose only one reusable page to try first, such as a tracker, routine, kanban, study, finance, or project page.

A simple first-week setup

For the first week, use the planner like this: write fixed dates on Monthly, choose one weekly focus, add only the must-do tasks to Weekly, use Daily when the day needs more detail, and put overflow thoughts on one Notes page. At the end of the week, keep what worked and ignore pages that did not help yet.

Read deeper page ideas

This Product Tutorial is the map. The detailed examples live in Tips & Ideas so each topic can be complete without making this article too crowded.

Built-in tutorial pages and visual guide

Use the images below as visual checkpoints. The extra notes explain what to do with the page after you understand what it shows.

Tutorial Page 1/10 - Basic Navigation

Tutorial Page 1/10 - Basic Navigation
Tutorial Page 1/10 - Basic NavigationBasic Navigation from Yume Techo Academic 26-27 Landscape. This page shows the main tabs, hidden panels, product links, contact buttons, and shortcut area.

This page is the quick map for the planner. Use it to understand where the main areas live before filling pages: calendar pages, Life Planner, Template Pages, Notes, support links, and product links.

For everyday use, you do not need every button right away. Start with Index, current Monthly, current Weekly, and one Notes or Template page.

Tutorial Page 2/10 - Index Page

Tutorial Page 2/10 - Index Page
Tutorial Page 2/10 - Index PageIndex Page from Yume Techo Academic 26-27 Landscape. This page points to the calendar, table of contents, planner pages, and section links.

Use Index as the home base. The calendar area is for dates, while the table of contents points to sections such as Life Planner, Finance, Health, Study, Work, Travel, Notes, and Template Pages.

If the planner feels big, return to Index first. It helps you choose the right kind of page instead of scrolling through the whole PDF.

Tutorial Page 3/10 - Template Pages

Tutorial Page 3/10 - Template Pages
Tutorial Page 3/10 - Template PagesTemplate Pages from Yume Techo Academic 26-27 Landscape. This page shows basic templates, essential templates, and how to copy a clean template first.

Template Pages are clean reusable masters. Copy the kind of page you need, then use the copy for a real job: a tracker, routine, project, list, note, kanban board, photo page, challenge, or planning page.

Use basic templates for flexible notes and simple layouts. Use essential templates when you want a page that already has structure.

Tutorial Page 4/10 - Monthly Page

Tutorial Page 4/10 - Monthly Page
Tutorial Page 4/10 - Monthly PageMonthly Page from Yume Techo Academic 26-27 Landscape. This page shows monthly goals, free writing space, and links to yearly, weekly, daily, monthly overview, and One Line A Day pages.

Monthly is the page for seeing the month at a glance. Put fixed dates here first: appointments, birthdays, bills, classes, deadlines, launches, travel, and important reminders.

When a date needs more room, continue the detail on the matching weekly, daily, monthly overview, or One Line A Day page. Monthly should stay readable enough that you can understand the month quickly.

Tutorial Page 5/10 - Weekly Page

Tutorial Page 5/10 - Weekly Page
Tutorial Page 5/10 - Weekly PageWeekly Page from Yume Techo Academic 26-27 Landscape. This page shows links to monthly, yearly, and daily pages plus hour areas for planning or logging the week.

Weekly is the main planning page for the current week. Use it for appointments, class blocks, work blocks, routines, errands, deadlines, and the few next actions that actually matter this week.

Keep Weekly as the simple overview that helps you restart. Put long notes, detailed study plans, project lists, or messy ideas on Notes or Template Pages instead of squeezing everything into the weekly spread.

Tutorial Page 6/10 - Daily Page

Tutorial Page 6/10 - Daily Page
Tutorial Page 6/10 - Daily PageDaily Page from Yume Techo Academic 26-27 Landscape. This page shows daily goals, schedule space, free writing space, links to monthly and weekly pages, and ideas for using the day page.

Daily is for today only. Use it for top priorities, hourly planning, appointments, meals, notes, moods, small wins, self-care, study notes, spending notes, or anything that needs room for one day.

You do not have to use Daily every day. It is helpful on busy days, high-detail days, or days when Weekly is too small. If you miss a day, continue with the next useful page.

Tutorial Page 7/10 - Yearly Page

Tutorial Page 7/10 - Yearly Page
Tutorial Page 7/10 - Yearly PageYearly Page from Yume Techo Academic 26-27 Landscape. This page shows yearly goals, projects, milestones, habits, monthly highlights, and mini calendar links.

Yearly is for patterns across the full year. Use it for school terms, exam seasons, project timelines, launches, holidays, trips, yearly goals, habit patterns, and milestones.

Use the year view to decide which month or week needs attention next. It is helpful when a deadline is far away but still needs a gentle path into your current planning pages.

Tutorial Page 8/10 - Goals Page - Life Planner

Tutorial Page 8/10 - Goals Page - Life Planner
Tutorial Page 8/10 - Goals Page - Life PlannerGoals Page - Life Planner from Yume Techo Academic 26-27 Landscape. This page connects life planner prompts, goal boxes, Routine Planner, and Kanban Board.

Use the Goals Page inside Life Planner when you want a bigger-picture setup. The left side holds reflection prompts and life areas, while the right side gives you goal boxes that can open detailed Goal Planner pages.

This page is good for choosing direction before turning it into tasks. Fill only the parts that help you think clearly, then move one small next action to Weekly.

Tutorial Page 9/10 - Goal Planner Page

Tutorial Page 9/10 - Goal Planner Page
Tutorial Page 9/10 - Goal Planner PageGoal Planner Page from Yume Techo Academic 26-27 Landscape. This page shows goal target, why, motivation, dates, next action, resources, notes, progress, and smaller steps.

Goal Planner is for one goal at a time. Write the goal, why it matters, start date, due date, resources, roadblocks, notes, and progress. The next action box is the most important part because it turns the goal into something you can actually begin.

Use the smaller sections on the right for steps or task groups. When the goal feels too big, choose the next visible action and put that action on Weekly or Daily.

Tutorial Page 10/10 - Notes Index

Tutorial Page 10/10 - Notes Index
Tutorial Page 10/10 - Notes IndexNotes Index from Yume Techo Academic 26-27 Landscape. This page lists note sections and links to individual notes pages inside the Notes tab.

Notes Index is for organizing extra notes so they are not scattered. Write the note title or topic on the index, then keep the actual note on the matching notes page.

This works well for study notes, meeting notes, recipes, receipt notes, reading notes, project ideas, travel notes, budget notes, journaling, or any collection you want to find again later.

When the Yume Techo Landscape setup gets tricky

1. The planner feels too big

What happens: Yume Techo Landscape has calendar pages, Life Planner pages, Goal Planner pages, Notes, templates, hidden panels, and many links, so it can feel like everything needs to be used right away.

What to do: start with only Index, current Monthly Page, current Weekly Page, one optional Daily Page, and one Notes or Template page. Add more only when a real need appears.

2. A copied template page is hard to find

What happens: you copied a clean template, but the original Template Page link still opens the master page, not your custom copy.

What to do: this is normal in many PDF apps. Use bookmarks, favorites, outlines, page thumbnails, or a small personal index page for copied templates.

3. Calendar pages become crowded

What happens: Monthly, Weekly, or Daily pages become full of long notes, project details, and trackers.

What to do: keep calendar pages for dates and next actions. Move long details to Notes, Template Pages, Life Planner pages, or Goal Planner pages.

What happens: tapping a tab, date, or Index item writes marks or does nothing.

What to do: switch your app to read, view, hand, gesture, or navigation mode. If it still does not work, open the app-specific Help Center guide and test the original PDF before editing more pages.

Where to go next

For deeper page examples, open Tips & Ideas. For app buttons, imports, page copying, bookmarks, covers, stickers, or device problems, use the exact Help Center guide below.

Still need help?

Send your order number, product name, device, app, and a screenshot or short screen recording if the issue is visual.