monday.com vs. Notion: Why Notion Isn't a Real Project Management Tool

    monday.com vs. Notion: Why Notion Isn't a Real Project Management Tool

    Till FreitagTill Freitag18. Februar 20265 min Lesezeit
    Till Freitag

    TL;DR: „Notion is a brilliant wiki disguised as a PM tool. For real project management with automations, dependencies, dashboards, and scalability, monday.com is the clear winner."

    — Till Freitag

    Notion has made a name for itself as an all-in-one workspace. Docs, wikis, databases, Kanban boards – all in a beautiful, minimalist interface. For personal notes, knowledge bases, and content planning, Notion is excellent.

    But then something happens: a team grows. Projects get complex. Deadlines must be met. Dependencies emerge. And suddenly Notion hits its limits – because it was never built as a project management tool.

    The Companies at a Glance

    Metric monday.com Notion
    Founded 2012 2013
    Headquarters Tel Aviv, Israel San Francisco, USA
    Employees ~2,200 ~800
    Revenue (2025) ~$1.2B ~$600M ARR
    Customers 225,000+ 100M+ users
    Developers (est.) ~800 ~350
    Public/Private NASDAQ (MNDY) Private
    Valuation ~$15B ~$11B
    Last Funding IPO 2021 ($574M) Series C ($275M, 2021)
    Market Share (est.) ~15% (Work Management) ~8% (Productivity)

    Notion has many users, but most use the tool for free. monday.com is publicly traded and has three times as many paying organizations.

    The Fundamental Difference

    Notion is a flexible document workspace with database capabilities. monday.com is a Work OS – a platform specifically built to manage work, processes, and teams.

    This sounds like marketing speak but shows in daily use:

    Criterion monday.com Notion
    Project Planning ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ – Gantt, Timeline, Workload native ⭐⭐ – Only via workarounds
    Automations ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ – 200+ no-code recipes ⭐⭐ – Only via external tools
    Dependencies ✅ Native with visual display ❌ Not available
    Dashboards & Reporting ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ – Multi-board dashboards ⭐⭐ – Limited database views
    Resource Planning ✅ Workload view ❌ Not available
    Integrations 200+ native + Make/Zapier 70+ native + Zapier
    Usability ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ – Productive immediately ⭐⭐⭐⭐ – Flexible but setup-intensive
    Wiki & Docs ⭐⭐⭐ – WorkDocs (solid) ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ – Core competency
    AI Features ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ – Sidekick, Agents, Vibe Coding ⭐⭐⭐⭐ – Notion AI (good for text)
    Enterprise Readiness ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ – SOC 2, HIPAA, Governance ⭐⭐⭐⭐ – SOC 2 available

    5 Reasons Notion Fails at Project Management

    1. No Real Automations

    This is the biggest dealbreaker. In monday.com, you build an automation in 2 minutes:

    "When status changes to 'Done' → notify manager → move item to archive group → update dashboard"

    In Notion? Not possible. You need Zapier, Make, or an API integration – and even then flexibility is limited. For any team with more than 5 people, this is a massive productivity loss.

    2. No Dependencies and Timelines

    Projects consist of tasks that depend on each other. Task B can only start when Task A is finished. In monday.com, you see this in the Timeline view with visual dependencies – move Task A, and Task B shifts automatically.

    Notion has no native dependency feature. You can create relations between databases, but that's no substitute for real dependency management. No automatic shifting, no critical paths, no milestone tracking.

    3. No Workload Planning

    Who's working on what? Who's overloaded? Who has capacity? monday.com answers this with the Workload view – a visual tool that aggregates effort per person across boards.

    In Notion, you have to manually piece together this information. There's no native resource planning, no capacity view, no effort tracking.

    4. Dashboards: Reports vs. Database Views

    monday.com Dashboards aggregate data from multiple boards into one overview: budgets, timelines, progress, utilization – all at a glance, with 30+ widget types.

    Notion offers database views – tables, Kanban, calendar, gallery. This is useful for individual databases, but it lacks the ability to combine data from different sources into a single dashboard. For management reporting, this is insufficient.

    5. Scaling: The Notion Trap

    Notion works great as long as the team is small and the structure manageable. But as team size grows, this happens:

    • Page chaos: Hundreds of nested pages that no one can find
    • Performance: Large databases become noticeably slower
    • Permissions: Complex permission management across workspace, teamspaces, and pages
    • Onboarding: New team members need days to understand the structure

    monday.com scales by design: Clear board structure, workspaces for departments, role-based permissions, and a concept that works with 500+ users.

    Where Notion Is Better

    Honestly – in some areas, Notion is the better choice:

    • Knowledge Management: Notion is the best wiki tool on the market. Nested pages, database relations, flexible templates – unbeatable for documentation and knowledge management.
    • Content Planning: For editorial calendars and content pipelines, Notion's flexibility is an advantage.
    • Personal Productivity: As a personal second brain, Notion is excellent.
    • Price for Small Teams: The free tier is more generous than monday.com's.

    But…

    As soon as it's about operational work – managing projects, coordinating teams, automating processes – Notion lacks the fundamental tools. It's like the difference between a Swiss army knife and a professional workshop.

    Price Comparison

    Plan monday.com Notion
    Free Up to 2 users Unlimited (limited features)
    Basic/Plus from €9/user/month from $10/user/month
    Standard/Business from €12/user/month from $15/user/month
    Pro/Enterprise from €16/user/month On request
    Enterprise On request On request

    Prices are comparable – but the feature set for project management is dramatically larger with monday.com. With Notion, you pay for a better wiki. With monday.com, for a complete Work OS.

    The Hybrid Solution: monday.com + Notion

    Many teams we advise actually use both tools:

    • Notion for wiki, documentation, and knowledge base
    • monday.com for project management, automations, and operational management

    This works well because the tools have different strengths. They can be connected via Make or Zapier – e.g., when a project is completed in monday.com, a retrospective page is automatically created in Notion.

    Who Should Use What?

    Notion fits if you…

    • Primarily need documentation and knowledge management
    • Have a small team (< 10) with simple projects
    • Focus on content planning and personal productivity
    • Don't have budget for separate tools

    monday.com fits if you…

    • Need real project management with timelines and dependencies
    • Want automations for recurring processes
    • Coordinate multiple teams and departments
    • Need reporting and dashboards for stakeholders
    • Want CRM, development, or support on the same platform

    Our Verdict

    Notion is a brilliant documentation tool disguised as a project management solution. As long as you're just putting tasks in lists and dragging Kanban boards, it works. As soon as you need real project management – with automations, dependencies, dashboards, and scalability – monday.com is the only sensible choice.

    Not because Notion is bad – but because it was built for a different purpose.


    Using Notion for project management and hitting its limits? We help you migrate to monday.com – including data migration and team onboarding. Book your free consultation.

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