A practical guide to keeping your critical information safe for the people who matter
Create a working document—just a simple file you can update easily. Keep it on your own device, where all your usual security applies. When you've filled it with the useful information you want to pass on, copy the text and paste it into your IfGone vault. Consider the vault copy a backup of your working document.
Whenever something changes—a password, an instruction, a bill you now handle differently—update your working document first. Then copy the new version and replace the old text in your vault.
You can only update a vault slot every 30 days. That might be less often than you update your working document. No problem. Just set an email reminder for that slot, and IfGone will nudge you when it's time to refresh the vault copy.
It's not pleasant to imagine, but ask yourself: what wouldn't get done if you weren't able to do it? That's your top priority.
Pretend the person reading this knows almost nothing about the thing you're describing. That's usually closer to the truth than you think.
Use headers, titles, and clear groupings. It makes the reader's job easier—and the more you help them, the more likely they get the outcome you want.
Each vault slot holds over 10 million characters, so don't worry about space. Write as much detail as you need.
One helpful approach: organise information the way it exists in the real world. For your house, group notes by rooms or floors.
You don't need to store your IfGone private key inside your IfGone vault. But if you have multiple vaults, you could include other vault's digital keys in one with a paper or metal printed physical QR code.
Use our document builder to create a starter template with well-organised categories. Select the topics that apply to your life and we'll generate a skeleton document you can fill in.
Give me a sample to get started