The quality of what AI gives you is directly proportional to the context you give it.
And the best place to store, organize, and manage that context is your Notion workspace.
Your Notion already has (or should have) everything AI needs to actually help you. Your goals, finances, projects, offers, SOPs, content, journal entries, etc.
When your Notion is setup the right way, the workspace itself becomes the context for AI.
You don't need to write a 2,000 word prompt explaining who you are, what your business does, and what you're working on. The AI already knows because it lives inside the system where all of that information exists.
Going from prompt engineering to context engineering is the biggest shift you can make in the way you use AI in 2026.
I have 3 second brain systems inside Notion. One for my personal life, one for my content, and one for my business. Each one is structured so that AI can use the information inside to give me outputs that are specific to me, my brand, and my business.
When I ask my personal AI agent for advice, it doesn't give me generic self-help information. It gives me a response based on my personality type, my journal patterns, my goals, and the frameworks I'm actively trying to implement.
When I ask my content AI agent to write a newsletter, it writes in my voice using my philosophy and my ideas because it has my entire content library, my tone of voice guide, and my brand positioning as context.
When my team needs to find an SOP, they ask the business AI agent and it pulls the relevant process from the company brain.
Same AI, but completely different outputs. The only variable is the context it has access to.
Your Notion workspace is not just a productivity tool anymore. It's the operating system that powers your AI. The way you organize your information determines how useful AI is to you.
I just posted a full video showing exactly how all three of these second brain systems work inside Notion, with live examples of the AI agents in action.
Watch the video here:

See you in the video.
Chris "The Systemizer" Punt

