Notion for Agencies: How to Structure Workspaces That Actually Work
Running an agency comes with countless moving parts – from client onboarding and project tracking to internal communication and SOPs. Tools like Trello, Asana, Clickup or HubSpot offer structured solutions, but they often box you into predefined workflows. Notion gives agencies full control over how they manage knowledge, workflows, and collaboration. Unlike rigid tools, it adapts to your business—not the other way around. – and that’s exactly what makes it powerful for teams that want tailored systems.
In this post, I’ll walk you through how I go about structuring Notion for agencies and service businesses, so you can build a system that actually fits your workflows. Whether you’re in a creative agency, a consulting business, or any client-facing service company—this guide helps you design a workspace that adapts to your exact operations.
Step 1: Define Your Strategic Foundation
Before touching any tool, take a step back and identify your core processes.
Ask yourself:
- What recurring workflows drive your business?
- Where are your current friction points?
- Who is involved in which step?
This step forms the strategic backbone of your system.
🧠 System Smart Move
With clients who have booked a System Smart Build I’ll lead them through this strategic step by identifying value-driving and value-maintaining processes within their business.
Do this with any other tool too. And regardless if you decide for Notion or against, these strategic foundation will help you selecting the right tool.
Step 2: Set Up Your Tool Infrastructure in Notion for Agencies
Not every process belongs in Notion – and that’s okay. Decide:
- Which processes are best mapped in Notion?
- Which tools (e.g. email, CRM, accounting) should remain separate?
- Where do those tools overlap?
🧠 System Smart Move
Document your decision AND document the processes as Standard Operating Procedures (SOPs) to give your team clarity on when to use what. Notion allows you to have a SOP database and a tools database, connect them with each other. This allows you to see which tools are involved in which process and if you ever thinking about switching tools, you’ll see which processes rely on a particular tool.
It’s not obvious at first, but this approach will provide you the crucial information how critical a given tool is to your operations for your business.
Step 3: Build the Data Architecture
Here’s where Notion shines: Break down each process into information buckets – think projects, clients, deliverables, assets – and define how they relate to each other.
Use relations to connect databases to create a scalable, interconnected system that grows with your agency. In Notion for agencies, this allows you to create one single source of truth instead of scattering processes across disconnected tools.
🧠 System Smart Move
I recommend to draw this out on a mindmap, to visualise the data architecture which in turn becomes the “ingredient list” when its time to build it.
Step 4: Apply Smart Access Management
Notion gives you fine-grained access control. Protect your system structure while keeping data entry easy:
- Create a general teamspace with information that everyone needs to see
- Give access only through groups and add member to groups
- Set granular permissions per group
- Centralise core databases
- Use synced blocks for repeatable content, such as a navigation menu
🧠 System Smart Move
A cohesive access strategy in Notion follows a simplified hierarchy: Workspace → Group → Teamspace → Database → Page. To maintain clarity and scalability, avoid setting permissions on a per-person basis. Instead, define user groups—at minimum “Admin,” “Read only,” and “Write only”—and apply these to your teamspaces and databases. Notably, databases support an additional permission level: “Can Edit,” which allows users to update property values but not modify the database structure itself. This layered approach helps you manage complexity as your team and system grow.
At all cost hold back the temptation to give everyone full access.
Step 5: Design Role-Based Dashboards
Data alone doesn’t drive action – context does. That’s why I recommend creating custom dashboards based on roles or workflows.
- A project manager sees tasks, timelines, and deliverables.
- A client-facing lead sees CRM notes and meeting prep.
- A founder sees key metrics and high-level overviews.
Each view should answer the question: What does this person need to see to do their job well?
🧠 System Smart Move
One of the most common pitfalls I see in self-built Notion workspaces is the underuse of dashboards. Rather than offering contextual views, users jump between disconnected databases—tasks, projects, documents—trying to manually reconstruct the bigger picture. But this misses the point: Notion’s true power lies in its dashboards. When designed intentionally, they transform scattered data into meaningful, actionable workflows. It’s a missed opportunity I see far too often.
Step 6: Train Your Team with Loom Videos
Once your system is ready, record short Loom walkthroughs.
Explain:
- Where to find what
- How to execute on major processes (tasks, projects, etc)
- What your workflows look like in action
This saves you time, ensures consistency, and helps onboard new team members with ease.
🧠 System Smart Move
This way you will not only assure high data quality, but also teach users how you expect them to use the system. Additionally, if you put the walkthrough in an onboarding SOP you can assign new users the task of onboarding themselves in Notion, link to the SOP and once they’ve completed the task you might reward them with a small bonus. Gamification is the key here!
Step 7: Offer Ongoing Support
No system runs on autopilot forever. Set up:
- Regular Q&A sessions
- Office hours
- A shared FAQ space in Notion itself
Support makes your system sticky and drives long-term adoption. That’s especially important in Notion for agencies, where change management and enablement are key to long-term success.
🧠 System Smart Move
With clients who have booked a System Smart Build Office Hours and Tech Calls are part of the program. The first weeks are critical to the project success, so providing users a low-threshold way of asking questions, user satifsfaction will remain high.
Step 8: Monitor & Improve
Watch how your team interacts with the system. Are they using it as intended? Are they avoiding certain parts?
Feedback and observation help you:
- Spot inefficiencies
- Refine your dashboards
- Clarify your workflows
This final step turns your Notion setup into a living, evolving system. And it’s often this iterative mindset that distinguishes successful use of Notion for agencies—where systems grow with your team, not against it.
🧠 System Smart Move
I recommend that you watch users live how they interact with the interface. This gives you valuable information on what needs improving. Sometimes frictions feel too little to raise concerns from a users perspective or get lost in the daily grind, but for you as the tool owner, it’ll contain valuable information on how to make things smoother. This not only makes your users happier – it also makes your life easier. (you’ll gain valuable data).
Shall I Use a Notion Template for My Agency?
Templates can be tempting—especially when you’re just getting started. But for agencies with unique workflows, and team-specific needs, templates often fall short. They offer a structure, yes—but usually someone else’s structure, designed for a different context.
My take? Templates are fine for inspiration or to explore layout ideas. But building your system around a template is like tailoring your process to a suit that was made for someone else. Agencies thrive on clarity, process ownership, and smart flexibility. And that starts with designing your own structure from scratch—or better: mapping your exact needs and building from there.
But I won’t stop you from exploring what’s out there. If you want to get a feel for how others approach structure, or just want a starting point to reflect on, check out the official Notion Template Gallery. Just keep in mind that with so many templates available, you might spend hours trying to find one that actually fits your needs. It’s like looking for a needle in a haystack—doable, but time-consuming.
Instead of bending your workflows around someone else’s logic, it’s often more efficient to start from your own context and goals. That path might feel harder at first, but it will get you to a more sustainable result much faster.
Final Thoughts: Notion is an Open System
Unlike rigid tools like Trello or HubSpot, Notion adapts to you. That freedom is powerful – but it also means you’re responsible for building the system right.
So the key question is:
Do you want a system that adapts to your workflows, or are you willing to adapt your workflows to a rigid system?
If it’s the first, Notion might just be your best investment and then there’s always the option to bring Notion as a complementary tool to super-specific tools.
Does it mean, you have to put all your eggs into one basket and only use Notion? No, far from that! Tools like HubSpot or Pipedrive solve a very specific process really well and at scale. But your agency has many more processes that need to be supported — hence we have to look at the processes and make the tools talk to each other.
It’ll always be: People & Processes first, tools second, AI third.
Want Help Using Notion for Service Businesses?
If you want to see what a high-functioning system in Notion for agencies looks like, I offer paid Future Workspace Experience workshops on a pre-built setup.
Or, for more strategic clarity, book a System Fit Session where we map your processes, evaluate tool fit, and define next steps.
Let’s turn Notion for agencies into your tailored operations hub.