Oh boy
I really love learning languages but I've been told my way of doing it isn't for everyone lol. I'm native-level in French and English, with basics in German, Japanese, Korean, Latin, mandarin Chinese and Welsh.
I really like learning basic grammatical structure first. It's really rewarding for me to be able to get to the point where I can say stuff like "I like fish" or "I go to the store" because once I can do that I can just learn a bunch of words and communicate even though I sound like I'm 5. So yeah if you also work like that i'd work on getting all the basics you need for simple sentences on lock (so sentence order, basic present tense verb conjugation and anything particular to the language in terms of prepositions, pronouns and articles) and then just learn a bunch of words you use a lot.
Once that's down, it's a really good memory tool to do a simple journaling exercise once a day where you write about your day directly in the language you're learning (~100 words is good, no need to make it massive), and only googling for specific vocabulary, no Google translate, find an online dictionary. You'll not only practice writing but also working out ways to use the tools you do have to communicate, not just feeling frustrated you can't say what you want the way you would say it in your native language.