Claap vs Notion
Side-by-side trajectory, velocity, and editorial themes.
Claap climbs from meeting analytics into deal and company reporting for revenue teams.
Claap shipped Deal Report and Company Report this week, attaching its conversation-intelligence data to higher-level revenue objects rather than individual meetings. Earlier in the cycle, the workspace got tighter admin controls (Members page, customization, cleaner CRM data flows), an automations engine refresh, three new VOIP integrations (lemlist, Allo, Ringover), and a Gong integration that lets Gong recordings flow into Claap. Claap AI was rebuilt under the 2.0 label.
The product is moving up the revenue-team stack: from 'record and recap a meeting' to 'tell us the full deal story across all conversations.' Reports keyed to deal and company entities mark that shift — revenue teams care about pipeline-level rollups, not call-level transcripts. Recent integrations (Gong, VOIP, CRM data hygiene) all extend Claap's data graph rather than its UI surface, which fits the same arc.
Expect Claap to push reports as a primary surface — likely forecasting, win/loss analysis, and rep coaching dashboards that consume the same Deal Report data. The Gong integration suggests Claap is willing to be the analytics layer on top of larger revenue-data graphs, not just the source of truth.
Notion turns itself into the orchestration layer where other agents run.
Notion has shipped a full developer platform — Workers as a hosted runtime, External Agents API for Claude/Codex/Decagon, a CLI, inbound webhooks, and an Agent SDK. The Custom Agents beta has produced more than a million agents in two months, and the latest releases are about turning that surge into something enterprises will actually deploy: per-agent credit limits, workspace caps, admin dashboards, and a Library directory. Doc editing has become the visible surface; the engine being built underneath is agent and data plumbing.
The trajectory is from doc-and-database app to connective tissue between agents, SaaS APIs, and team workflows. Each recent release pushes in the same direction — agents become more discoverable (Directory), more reviewable before they act (Plan Mode), more governable at scale (admin controls), and more capable of reaching outside Notion (Agent SDK, webhooks). The strategic bet is that whoever owns the orchestration substrate matters more than whoever ships the smartest model.
Expect Workers to convert from free-beta to credit-metered on August 11, 2026, with pricing pressure landing on agent-SaaS startups whose value is mostly API stitching. The External Agents API and Agent SDK should move from waitlist to GA next, alongside deeper Slack/MS Teams surfaces where Notion agents run without users ever opening Notion.
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