I built 6 Notion templates for different audiences. Each one replaces multiple tools with interconnected databases.
1. Developer Productivity Hub ($12.99)
10 connected pages replacing Jira + GitHub Issues + random text files:
- Dashboard — active projects, deadlines, stats at a glance
- Project Tracker — kanban with priority, tech stack, GitHub links
- Bug Tracker — severity color-coding, reproduction steps, resolution
- Code Snippets Library — searchable by language and tags
- Learning Log — topics, resources, progress tracking
- Interview Prep — questions, companies, status pipeline
2. Freelancer Business OS ($19.99)
12 pages replacing your CRM + invoicing + time tracker:
- Client CRM, Project Pipeline (6-stage kanban)
- Invoice Tracker, Proposal Templates, Time Tracker
- Revenue Dashboard, Contract Templates
3. Student Planner ($8.99)
10 pages with GPA calculator:
- Course Tracker, Assignment Tracker, Exam Schedule
- Study Planner with pomodoro, Notes Library
- Reading List, Semester Goals
4. Content Creator OS ($14.99)
10 pages for managing your content machine:
- Content Calendar (Idea → Draft → Published)
- Ideas Vault with scoring
- Blog Manager, Social Media Planner
- Newsletter Tracker, Analytics Dashboard
5. Startup Founder OS ($24.99)
12 pages for early-stage founders:
- OKR Tracker, Product Roadmap
- Customer CRM, Investor Pipeline
- Metrics Dashboard (MRR, churn, CAC, LTV)
- Sprint Planner, Hiring Pipeline
6. Project Manager Pro ($16.99)
10 pages for tech leads:
- Sprint Board, Team Directory
- Risk Register, Release Tracker
- Standup Notes, Retrospective Archive
- Resource Planner, Decision Log
Why Notion?
Every database links to every other. A bug links to its project. An assignment links to its course. A sprint task links to its release.
This means you can answer questions like 'what bugs are open for Project X?' or 'what decisions affected this release?' instantly.
All templates: github.com/rog0x
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