I replaced 7 daily tasks with NotebookLM — how the mobile app actually saves me time
NotebookLM is great on desktop but it’s even better on your phone
Here at Tom’s Guide our expert editors are committed to bringing you the best news, reviews and guides to help you stay informed and ahead of the curve!
You are now subscribed
Your newsletter sign-up was successful
Want to add more newsletters?
Join the club
Get full access to premium articles, exclusive features and a growing list of member rewards.
I’ve been a fan of NotebookLM — Google’s AI-powered research assistant — for a while. But until recently, I’d only used it on desktop. Over the past week, I started testing it inside the Gemini app —and honestly, I can’t believe I waited this long.
While the desktop version is a powerhouse for deep work, the mobile experience is where it actually changes your daily rhythm. For me, it's been the difference between "I’ll get to that later" and "I understand this right now."
Sometimes I feel like I'm living in an era of "information debt." I'm constantly saving articles I never read, recording meetings that I never revisit or staring at 30-page PDFs with a sense of mounting dread. But having NotebookLM on the go has changed my workflow significantly.
Here are seven ways I’ve been using it to stay afloat, prep faster and finally stop the "panic spiral" of information overload.
Article continues below1. Turn notes into a podcast for your commute
This is the "whoa" feature that everyone is talking about, and for good reason. NotebookLM can generate an Audio Overview — a remarkably human-sounding conversation between two AI hosts who discuss your uploaded sources. I'm no stranger to this feature on desktop and use it frequently, but the app version is arguably better.
The Workflow: I dumped my messy, bulleted brainstorms for a new project into a notebook and hit "Generate."
The Result: I listened to a 10-minute deep dive into my own ideas while waiting in the school pickup line. Hearing your own thoughts reflected back to you helps you spot gaps in logic that you’d never see on a screen. Whether I'm on the treadmill or at my son's soccer game, I can listen right from my phone.
2. Meeting prep in under 5 minutes
We’ve all been there: You’re five minutes away from a call and realize you haven’t fully digested the briefing doc. This is especially true for me when I'm trying to get the kids out the door and on the school bus while simultaneously trying to prepare for my day.
Get instant access to breaking news, the hottest reviews, great deals and helpful tips.
The Move: Open NotebookLM on your phone, drop in the agenda or previous email threads, and ask: “What are the three most important things I need to know for this?”
Why it works: I don't know what it's like to have a personal assistant, but this must be it. Having NotebookLM put everything I need to know into one overview while I'm making peanut butter and jelly sandwiches is a total win. It's like having a savvy chief of staff whispering in your ear, giving you the key points and likely questions before you even open your laptop.
3. Tackle "The scary PDF"
As a parent or professional, receiving a 20-page document (like an IEP or a legal contract) can be overwhelming. My daughter has special needs and the amount of paper work that I have to read and understand for various meetings with the school often feels daunting. I always wonder if I'm asking the right questions and most importantly if I'm understanding all the jargon.
The Use Case: Upload the doc and ask, “Explain this to me like I’m busy. Pull out all the vital talking points and include anything that I might need to raise as a concern."
The Payoff: Ask for a list of action items or "hidden risks." It doesn't just summarize; it helps you navigate the density of the document. Note: NotebookLM is grounded in your sources, so it shows you exactly which page the info came from. Before meetings with the school, I'll listen to the notes in the car on the way over. Total gamechanger.
4. Curate a daily digest
Ready to stop doomscrolling? This is the ulimate hack for that. Now, instead of scrolling through a social media, I’ve started uploading the three "must-read" newsletters or articles I saved during the day.
The Prompt: “Give me a unified summary of these three articles. What are the common trends?”
The Result: It turns a pile of "to-read" tabs into a concise, actionable briefing that actually respects your time. Plus, I get to support my favorite sites and journalists by actually (and finally!) having the time to "read."
5. A study partner that actually quizzes you
Whether you’re learning a new skill for work or helping a student at home, NotebookLM acts like a world-class tutor.
The Strategy: Upload your study materials and ask it to “Create a 5-question quiz based on these notes” or “Explain [Concept X] using a simple analogy.”
Why it sticks: It’s active learning. Instead of just rereading the same paragraph four times, you’re engaging with the material in a dialogue.
6. Move from 'messy brainstorm' to "clear plan'
I use the mobile app to capture voice-to-text notes when I have a random idea. Later, I ask NotebookLM to organize them.
The Prompt: “I’ve uploaded three messy outlines. What’s the best structure for this project, and what am I missing?”
The Result: It provides instant clarity, moving you from the "overwhelmed" phase to the "execution" phase in seconds.
7. The ultimate sanity check
Before I hit send on a sensitive draft or a long article, I run it through NotebookLM alongside my research sources. I'll even do this with email or texts just to give myself a tone check. A few times the AI has told me not to send something and what to do instead.
The Goal: Ask, “What part of my draft is unsupported by the sources?”
My critical thinking stance: While I don't let AI make decisions for me, I have found that having an outside source give me pros and cons or a perspective that I hadn't thought of, definitely helps. In this scenario, it’s about using AI to fact-check your own work and ensure your arguments are as tight as possible.
The takeaway
NotebookLM on mobile might actually be better than the desktop version — simply because it goes wherever you (and your phone) go. It turns small pockets of time into something useful, helping you stay focused and get real work done on the go.
If privacy is a concern, especially with school or work documents, rest assured that Google doesn’t use your personal notebook data to train its broader models. Your information stays yours.
More than anything, it replaces the endless-tab spiral with something far more grounded and useful because it's a private space where your own information finally starts working for you.
Follow Tom's Guide on Google News and add us as a preferred source to get our up-to-date news, analysis, and reviews in your feeds.
More from Tom's Guide

Amanda Caswell is one of today’s leading voices in AI and technology. A celebrated contributor to various news outlets, her sharp insights and relatable storytelling have earned her a loyal readership. Amanda’s work has been recognized with prestigious honors, including outstanding contribution to media.
Known for her ability to bring clarity to even the most complex topics, Amanda seamlessly blends innovation and creativity, inspiring readers to embrace the power of AI and emerging technologies. As a certified prompt engineer, she continues to push the boundaries of how humans and AI can work together.
Beyond her journalism career, Amanda is a long-distance runner and mom of three. She lives in New Jersey.
You must confirm your public display name before commenting
Please logout and then login again, you will then be prompted to enter your display name.
