The Notion alternative built for agency operations
Notion is one of the best tools ever built for agency knowledge management — SOPs, meeting notes, brand guidelines, client briefings. It wasn’t built to run your operations. Project management in a docs tool means databases that are only as current as the last manual update, no live capacity data, no real-time margin visibility, and no connection between approved leave and the project plan. Supervisible is the operations layer Notion was never designed to be.
Keep Notion for your knowledge. Use Supervisible for your operations — projects, capacity, client management, time off, and project financials, all connected and always live.
What Notion gets right — and what it was never designed to do
Notion is genuinely excellent. The block editor is one of the best in any software category. The database system is remarkably flexible. And for documentation — the thing Notion was actually built for — it remains the best tool available. The problem for agencies isn’t what Notion does well. It’s what agencies start asking Notion to do once they’ve already built their knowledge base inside it.
Best documentation tool available
SOPs, meeting notes, brand guidelines, client briefings, onboarding docs — Notion handles all of this better than any alternative. The block editor is exceptional, and the wiki structure is purpose-built for this job.
Genuinely flexible
Notion’s database system can model almost any structure. Teams that want to build their own operational system have done it inside Notion. It’s flexible enough that many agencies genuinely believe they’ve solved the project management problem — until the data goes stale.
Strong AI for knowledge work
Notion AI is genuinely useful for drafting, summarizing, and surfacing knowledge. For agencies that spend a lot of time in written content — briefs, reports, documentation — it adds real value.
The Notion paradox: agencies that use it for project management always end up with another tool anyway
Here’s what happens at most agencies that try to run operations in Notion: they build increasingly complex, interlinked databases for clients, projects, team members, and tasks. It looks great. Then the client count grows, a project slips, and someone needs to know who has capacity for new work. Notion can’t answer that. So a spreadsheet appears. Then a separate time tracker. Then a capacity tool. Then a financial dashboard.
Instead of one tool doing everything, they have Notion plus everything else.
Agencies that use Notion for project management almost always end up with a stack of additional tools — a spreadsheet for budgets, a separate tool for capacity, another for time tracking. Instead of one tool doing everything, they have Notion plus everything else. Supervisible isn’t another band-aid. It’s the operations layer that replaces the entire additional stack.
Notion databases are as current as the last person who edited a row
When you staff someone on a project, their capacity in Notion stays exactly as it was until someone edits a cell. When you approve a vacation request, no project timeline adjusts. When a project goes over budget, no alert fires. Notion databases reflect what someone entered, not what’s actually happening — and operational data that’s always one manual update behind isn’t operational data.
Workload guide →No capacity planning — who’s assigned isn’t who’s available
Notion can show you a list of who is assigned to which project. It cannot show you who has 30% of their week free for new work, who is already overallocated by 20 hours, or what happens to the team’s availability when a retainer gets extended. Capacity planning requires hours data that updates live across all projects simultaneously — not a database property that someone remembers to change.
Capacity guide →No project profitability — the numbers still live in a spreadsheet
Revenue, labor cost, and margin don’t calculate themselves from Notion databases. You can display numbers in a table — you can’t derive margin from staffing data, billing rates, and project revenue automatically. The result is a financial picture that lives in a spreadsheet or accounting tool, updated when someone remembers to update it, usually after the month has already closed.
Vacation tracker →Supervisible is the operations layer Notion leaves open — connected, live, and built for agencies.
See how →What agency operations need that a docs tool can’t provide
Operations and documentation are different jobs. Operations require live data — information that updates automatically when work is staffed, approved, or delivered. Here’s what that means for the specific things agencies need to run.
Live capacity data — updated when work is assigned, not when someone edits a cell
When you staff someone on a project, their available hours should drop in real time — across all their other active projects simultaneously. Capacity planning for an agency requires automatic updates from staffing decisions, not manual database maintenance.
Capacity guide →Project margin — calculated from staffing, visible before the invoice
Revenue vs. labor cost per project, derived from staffing allocation and billing rates. Not a number you manually enter. Not something you calculate in a spreadsheet after the project closes. A live financial view available from the moment you start staffing a project.
Time off connected to the project plan — automatically
When a vacation is approved, that person’s available hours should drop across all their active projects without any manual action. Notion has no time-off management. Approved leave lives in a Google Calendar that never talks to any operational view.
A native client layer — not a database you maintain by hand
Client records that connect to projects, capacity, and financials automatically. AI-enriched profiles that pull logos and metadata without manual maintenance. The client layer that makes every operational decision aware of the client context — without duplicating data across Notion databases.
No timesheets — capacity from staffing, not logged entries
Notion has no time tracking at all. Most tools that offer capacity and financial features require the team to log time. Supervisible derives both from how work is staffed — no time log, no daily entry, no data that’s three days behind because nobody remembered to update it.
Supervisible: the operations layer Notion was never built to be
Supervisible was built by Meaningful — a 25-person agency that kept their documentation in Notion and needed something completely different for their operations. What they built is the layer Notion leaves open: live capacity, connected time off, project margin, and client management — all automatic, no spreadsheet required.
Live staffing-based capacity
A workload grid showing every team member’s allocation in hours, updated the moment work is assigned. See who has room for new work before you commit to it — not after.
Workload guide →Project margin — live, automatic
Revenue vs. labor cost per project, calculated from hours, roles, and rates. No spreadsheet, no month-end export. The financial view that makes the profitability question answerable in real time.
Time off connected to capacity
Native leave management. Approved time off automatically reduces available hours in the workload view and project plan. The connection Notion’s Google Calendar integration never makes.
Vacation tracker →Native client management
A client list with AI-enriched profiles — logos, categories, website data — and full project history per client. Not a Notion database you manually maintain. The client layer connected to every project, staffing decision, and financial calculation.
Connected project management
Projects with timelines, staffing assignments, actual hours tracked against plans, and a status feed — all connected to capacity and margin. Not a Notion database that knows nothing about who has room or what margin remains.
No timesheets. Up and running in under a day.
All operational data from staffing allocation — not manual entries. Notion stays exactly as it is. Supervisible covers the operations layer. Both tools doing what they’re best at, without any overlap.
Notion vs Supervisible: different tools for different jobs
This isn’t a “which is better” comparison — it’s a “which is right for which job” one. Notion and Supervisible solve different problems. The question is whether you’re using each tool for the job it was built for.
| Job to be done | Notion | Supervisible |
|---|---|---|
| Documentation — SOPs, meeting notes, wikis | Excellent — the best tool for this job | Not designed for long-form documentation |
| Knowledge management and onboarding | Excellent — block editor and database system built for this | Not the right tool for knowledge bases |
| Team capacity planning | Not available — databases show assignments, not live hours or utilization % | Built in — staffing-based capacity updated live |
| Project profitability tracking | Not available — requires manual calculation and spreadsheet integration | Live labor margin — revenue vs. cost from staffing allocation |
| Multi-client project management | Possible but manual — databases require updates; no automatic capacity or margin connection | Native — all active projects, clients, and capacity in one connected view |
| Time off management | No native tracking — lives in external tools, never auto-updates project plans | Built in — approved leave auto-adjusts project availability |
| Client management | Requires manually maintained database — no AI enrichment, no native billing structure | Native client list with AI-enriched profiles, project history, billing entities |
| Invoicing and project financials | Not available natively — requires third-party integration | Native invoicing with sequences and payment tracking |
| Timesheets required | No time tracking at all | Never — everything from staffing allocation |
| Setup time for agency operations | Weeks — building linked database systems before operations work at all | Under a day — agency structure built in |
Keep Notion for your docs. Let Supervisible run your operations.
Book a demo →Built by an agency. Running agencies.
Meaningful built Supervisible because they needed the operations layer — the thing that keeps their knowledge in Notion and gives live capacity, profitability, and project data to the people making decisions.
“Since we started using Supervisible to track project profitability, we’ve improved our margins by about 40%. We used to guess — now we know exactly which projects make money and which don’t.”
Orlando Osorio
CEO — Meaningful, growth marketing agency (the team that built Supervisible)
“Supervisible has become my go-to tool for assessing my team’s capacity to take on new projects. It provides valuable insights into our workload and helps me make informed decisions about project assignments.”
Francisco Hernandez
COO — Moonshot Partners, software development agency
“What I love about this is that it gives me an incredible overview in real time. I was already doing this manually — now I can see exactly where I need to go and what’s happening.”
Ron Custodio
Co-founder & COO — Base Agency, global creative agency
50+
agencies use Supervisible
40%
profitability improvement
< 1 day
average setup time
Notion alternative FAQ
Should agencies use Notion for project management?
Notion works well for light project tracking — keeping a list of active projects, assigning owners, and storing project documentation in one place. For agency-specific operational needs — live capacity planning across multiple projects, project profitability without a spreadsheet, time off automatically connected to the project plan — Notion requires manual workarounds that don’t scale. Most agencies that try to run operations in Notion end up adding a separate tool for capacity, financials, or both. Supervisible is built to be that tool.
Is Supervisible a replacement for Notion?
No — and this is the key distinction from the other comparison pages. Supervisible replaces Notion’s project management layer, not its documentation layer. Notion stays for SOPs, meeting notes, brand guidelines, and knowledge management — everything it’s genuinely excellent at. Supervisible handles projects, capacity, time off, client management, and project financials. The two work well together, doing what each was built for.
Can I use Notion and Supervisible together?
Yes — and this is how most agencies set it up. Notion for documentation and knowledge management. Supervisible for project management, capacity planning, time off, and project financials. They cover different ground without competing. Your SOPs stay in Notion. Your capacity plan, margin view, and project timeline live in Supervisible.
What does Supervisible have that Notion doesn’t?
Five things that operational agency management requires: live staffing-based capacity (updated automatically when work is assigned — not a database field someone has to remember to edit), project margin from staffing allocation (revenue vs. cost, no spreadsheet), native time-off management connected to project capacity, client management with AI-enriched profiles, and invoicing tied to project financials. None of these are possible in Notion without manual workarounds that break as soon as the team grows.
Why doesn’t Notion work for agency capacity planning?
Notion databases reflect what someone manually enters — not what’s actually happening in real time. When you staff someone on a project, their available hours don’t update anywhere in Notion automatically. When you approve time off, no project timeline adjusts. Real capacity planning requires data that updates live as staffing decisions are made. Notion’s database model was designed for knowledge management, not live operational data.
Does Supervisible require timesheets that Notion doesn’t have?
No. Notion has no time tracking at all. Supervisible derives capacity and profitability from staffing allocation — who is assigned to what project, at what percentage of their available hours, for how long. Your team never logs a single hour. The operational data is always current because it’s based on what’s planned and staffed, not on daily time entries that may or may not get filled in.
How long does it take to set up Supervisible alongside Notion?
Under a day. Notion’s documentation stays exactly where it is — Supervisible doesn’t touch it. Supervisible’s agency structure is built in: clients, projects, team capacity, time off, and financials are native concepts, not databases you configure. Most agencies are running active projects in Supervisible by the end of their first day, with their knowledge base intact in Notion.
Your SOPs belong in Notion.
Your capacity plan doesn’t.
Book a 15-minute demo. We’ll show you Supervisible running alongside Notion — the operations layer that handles capacity, margin, time off, and client projects in one live view.