A running tools list makes you fast to answer and easy to match. It quietly wins you work.
"A client asked what tools I use. I blanked, then remembered three more after the call ended."
A small miss that costs real jobs
The short answer: keep a running list of the tools you know so that when a client or a job asks, you answer fully and fast, from a record instead of from memory. I keep mine in my work notes for exactly this reason.
A tools list does three quiet things. It makes you fast and confident when asked. It helps you match yourself to jobs that name a tool you have. And it shows you, at a glance, which one new tool would open the most doors next. The list is small to keep and large in what it returns.
Group your tools simply: the ones you use for the work (email tools, design tools, project boards), and the everyday ones (Google Workspace, communication apps). Mark any you are still learning. A current, honest tools list is a fast, honest answer waiting to be given.
Hold steady, BFF Team. We keep going together.
– Lala