Sure. My workflow is not anything fancy, but the beauty of Scrivener is the ability to use it in a variety of ways. I am a mindmapper, so I usually sketch things in Scrivener’s sister software Scapple. I then drag the mindmap into Scrivener, and each circle in my mindmap becomes an index card. I can make notes on these index cards and order them sequentially. Each index card represents a line in your outline. If you switch the order of the index cards, or rename one, this will be reflected in your outline. I generally order ideas/thoughts in the index card view, then switch to the outline view to organize into larger categories, etc. Each index card not only corresponds with a line on your outline, it also corresponds with a document. So if you have 5 index cards labeled A, B, C, D, and E, you will also have 5 lines in your outline named the same, and 5 documents within your Scrivener file each named A, B, C, D, E. A switch in any of the three views will sync to the other.
The beauty of this is the ability to break a large writing project into multiple levels. I use a ridiculous amount of them, and as they begin to become polished, I group them back together.
When your document is done, you can Compile it into a range of formats.
There are also options to label different documents with icons and colors. You can group documents together in particular ways and save them (sort of like tagging.) You can take snapshots of your current draft so you can go back at any point and look at it. You can drag images into documents. You can link to things.
It might look confusing at first, but it’s fun to play around with, and you will understand it easily enough. It is no more complex than OF in my opinion. I’ve used it for 4 years or so, and I am still learning neat things about it.
Good luck!