Do not work from a messy browser. If your browser is disorganized, even your skills can look amateur.
"What browser am I using? Just the one that was already there when I bought the computer."
Common question from new BFF learners
That is the computer's default browser. It was not a choice you made. Using it is like still driving the practice car from driving school. Nothing is wrong with starting there, but it will slow you down. Today we will set up your browser so it stops stealing your attention.
Wrong question: "What is the most popular browser?"
Better question: "How do I set up my browser so it becomes a productivity tool, not a distraction?"
You will never go wrong if you master Google Chrome. But the lesson is not only about Chrome. The lesson is the system for using a browser well. If you build the same discipline in Edge, Arc, or Brave, that is fine. The discipline matters more than the brand.
| Discipline | Why it matters | Tool / setting |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Multiple profiles | Your work browser and personal browser should be separate. No Lazada notifications while you are on Zoom with a client. | Chrome Profiles or Arc Spaces |
| 2. Bookmark hierarchy | When you have client dashboards, project boards, and communication tools, they should be one click away. You should not have to hunt for them. | Bookmarks bar + folders |
| 3. Tab groups | Twenty tabs can be normal. Fifty tabs is messy. Group tabs by project. When the work is done, close the whole group. | Chrome Tab Groups (right-click → Add to group) |
| 4. Password manager | You cannot rely on "I will remember everything." Use a password manager. The free Bitwarden plan is enough to start. | Bitwarden / 1Password |
| 5. Ad-blocker + tracker blocker | If your client sees a pop-up ad during screen share, it does not look professional. Block them. | uBlock Origin |
| 6. Screenshot + recording tools | When you are explaining a bug or a process, a screenshot or short video is ten times clearer than text. | Loom + Awesome Screenshot |
Chrome loves memory. On my computer, it can use 3.2 GB when I have 30 tabs open. If your laptop only has 8 GB of RAM, as discussed in Lesson 01, that may be why it feels slow. Use Chrome's Memory Saver feature, or consider Arc if tab management is your biggest problem.
Sometimes my browser still reaches 40 tabs. But now there is a system: tab groups by project, color-coded, and every Friday afternoon I close every tab I did not touch that week. The "bookmark this and close it" muscle takes about two weeks to build. After that, it becomes automatic.
When you share your screen with a client, they see everything your browser shows. The text notification. The old Lazada cart. The bookmark you did not mean to show. Open a clean work-only profile before any screen share. "Sorry" will not erase that impression.
One more thing: do not save client passwords in the default Chrome password manager if you share your computer. Use a real password manager with master password protection.
Audit checklist:
Multiple clients = multiple workflows. Browser is your operating system.
BPO trained on locked-down corporate browsers. Now needs to setup their own.
Browser is where the client reviews work. Speed + visual fidelity matters.
Used to managing browser tabs across Shopify, Mailchimp, IG, FB Ads, supplier portals.
Already organized. Now scale that discipline up.
You already have Chrome. You may already have 50 tabs. What you need now is a reset and a system.
For every archetype: your browser is your office. You spend more time here than in almost any other app. The 30 minutes you spend setting it up now can return 10 or more hours per month in productivity. That is not an exaggeration.
Post this in BFF Facebook Group (Work At Home Geek):
Hold steady, BFF Team. We keep going together.
– Lala