I think you're wrong about Coda pricing. You pay only for the doc maker, the person who creates documents, and not for every team member. You can have 100 users who can edit and fully use the documents in Coda and only one person who creates them and you'd pay only 10$ for that. So Coda is actually cheaper than the rest.
I use Coda for everything that needs more calculations (Notion is very limited with the formulas). Unfortunately, in the free version you are limited to 50 blocks and you reach that quite quickly. That's why I do everything else in Notion. Clickup is a bit too buggy and slow for me... I look at it from time to time and usually find new bugs that I report... but I don't use it otherwise. Btw. how do you get a black background in Notion instead of the grey in darkmode?
I am in the process of deciding which platform to use with my team. We are on ClickUp for now and I love it for so many reasons, but I miss a bit the clean aesthetic of Notion. On the other hand I would lose too much time on notion building the system instead of actually get things done. Coda looks really cool and the perfect playground for a power user, but again...I fear I would spend too much time refining the system instead of actually working. I have high hopes for ClickUp 3.0. If they can manage to cleanup the cluttered and buggy UI, it can really become a productivity power house.
@@tryderrick months later I am using a mix of Notion for personal tasks and Coda for team work. Coda is the real deal! So powerful I still have to find the ceiling, while Notion and mostly ClickUp fall apart pretty quickly with a large number of data.
On the other hand, Coda is actually cheaper given that you may not need everyone to have 'doc maker' permission (but still be able to edit documents). In theory you could have a 100 man org with just one doc maker (not ideal) for as low as 10-30 bucks a month.
What app do you think is best?
Notion
I think you're wrong about Coda pricing. You pay only for the doc maker, the person who creates documents, and not for every team member. You can have 100 users who can edit and fully use the documents in Coda and only one person who creates them and you'd pay only 10$ for that. So Coda is actually cheaper than the rest.
Interesting. I could totally be wrong then
Yeah Coda pricing if you have just a bunch of doc makers is pretty cheap.
I use Coda for everything that needs more calculations (Notion is very limited with the formulas). Unfortunately, in the free version you are limited to 50 blocks and you reach that quite quickly. That's why I do everything else in Notion.
Clickup is a bit too buggy and slow for me... I look at it from time to time and usually find new bugs that I report... but I don't use it otherwise.
Btw. how do you get a black background in Notion instead of the grey in darkmode?
Thanks for this feedback!
I am in the process of deciding which platform to use with my team. We are on ClickUp for now and I love it for so many reasons, but I miss a bit the clean aesthetic of Notion. On the other hand I would lose too much time on notion building the system instead of actually get things done. Coda looks really cool and the perfect playground for a power user, but again...I fear I would spend too much time refining the system instead of actually working. I have high hopes for ClickUp 3.0. If they can manage to cleanup the cluttered and buggy UI, it can really become a productivity power house.
I hope they do well with ClickUp 3.0 as well!
These are my exact problems!
@@tryderrick months later I am using a mix of Notion for personal tasks and Coda for team work. Coda is the real deal! So powerful I still have to find the ceiling, while Notion and mostly ClickUp fall apart pretty quickly with a large number of data.
Keep up!, excellent preview ... thank you
Thanks!
On the other hand, Coda is actually cheaper given that you may not need everyone to have 'doc maker' permission (but still be able to edit documents). In theory you could have a 100 man org with just one doc maker (not ideal) for as low as 10-30 bucks a month.
thanks for the insight here!