Setting Up Status Properties to Separate Your Workflow Stages
When you work with multiple ideas, drafts, reviews, and published posts inside a single Notion database, every item needs a clear position. Without a consistent way to mark each stage, it becomes easy to lose track of which page needs attention next. A status property fixes that problem by giving each entry a visible label so you can quickly separate the content that needs work from the content that is finished. The right starting point is to add a Select or Status property to the database. A Status property comes with predefined colors and a built‑in order that makes scanning simpler.
Choose a straightforward name like “Stage” or “Status,” then create options for each phase you really use—Idea, Draft, In Review, and Published. Set the options in a logical sequence so the earliest phase is first and the finished option is last.

Choosing Stage Labels That Match How You Actually Work
The label choices need to reflect the way your writing actually moves forward. If brainstorming often leaves entries sitting untouched, an Idea label helps you sweep up old material later. When the review takes several rounds, a single In Review status may not track where changes are applied. Splitting that into “Review Needed” and “Review Complete” tells you at a glance whether feedback has been integrated without diving inside the page.
Labels should not overlap or hint at the same phase. Having both “Draft” and “Editing” alongside each other creates friction about which phase goes first. Stick to one clear label per phase and use the property sorting to follow real progression. New stages can always be added later without breaking the existing pages, so start simple and adjust the lineup when the system demands it.

Using Filters and Views to Focus on One Stage at a Time
Once your status property is ready, build a separate database view for each key stage. A filter that shows only pages marked as Draft lets you finish content, while the same filter switched to In Review shows only entries waiting on feedback. This approach stops your main list from lumping published posts with old jotted ideas. Name each view by its stage, such as “Ideas Board” or “Review Queue,” and switch between them without losing your place.
Grouping the database by the status property shows all stages in one view as collapsible sections. Combined with sorting by last edited date, grouping helps you spot stalled items that have been sitting in “Draft” for too long. This habit turns your status property into a practical management tool rather than just a label.

Checking for Common Status Mistakes Before They Cause Confusion
Checking for these patterns takes only a few minutes. If an item has been in “Draft” for weeks without changes, decide whether to move it forward or move it back to “Idea” for later review. Keeping the status property honest saves you from scrolling through a cluttered database and wondering which items are actually ready to publish.
| Issue | Where to Check | Next Action |
|---|---|---|
| Item left on an old stage after publishing | Published view or recently edited items | Update the status to “Published” and archive if needed |
| Same item assigned to two stages by mistake | Database grouped by status property | Remove the duplicate entry or merge notes into one page |
| Stage label changed but items were not updated | Filter for the old label name | Batch-select those items and apply the correct new label |