(no title)
leanzubrezki | 4 years ago
The most common user story is:
1) User uses Notion for personal use or is part of a business or organization workspace.
2) Already has databases in the workspace for different purposes, projects, tasks, leads, expenses, backlog, sprints, HR candidates, employees, etc. Notion has a list of customers and use cases that it is quite insightful here -> https://www.notion.so/customers
3) Now the journey separates in different stories:
- Have a copy of Notion databases as backup.
- Use Notion databases data as input to other services, and uses Sheets as the middle men.
- Do business intelligence from Notion databases, you can use Google Data Studio for example.
- Have charts from their Notion databases and embed them back in Notion.
- Show summarized information and statistics from Notion databases in a page.
- Share data from a database without giving access or sharing the entire database or page.
- Get third party data into Sheets and then from there to Notion.
- Use Sheets formulas that are not available in Notion, like GOOGLEFINANCE, IMPORTXML to scrape data, etc and have that data available in Notion.
So most of the time if not all, is having Google Sheets as a middle point to then enable the usage of not only Sheets features, but also all the integrations that are built around it. The value of Notion2Sheets is unlocking that.Something to keep in mind, there are 2 hard limits:
Sheets -> 100 request in 100 seconds per user.
Notion -> 3 request in 1 second per workspace.
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