Comparison
ReqBrief vs a Notion Intake Form: Which Gets You a Real Brief?
A Notion template looks organised. But it is still a page of fields the client has to fill in alone.
Lots of agencies run client intake from Notion — a tidy template with headings for goals, audience, budget and timeline. It keeps everything in one workspace, which is genuinely useful once a project is underway.
The catch is the same as any template: it is passive. The client opens a page of empty fields and has to translate vague ideas into structured answers with no guidance. ReqBrief does the interviewing for you and drops a finished brief at the end — which you can paste straight back into Notion if that is where your projects live.
ReqBrief vs Notion, side by side
| ReqBrief | Notion | |
|---|---|---|
| Core format | Adaptive AI interview | Static template page |
| Guidance for the client | Asks and explains one question at a time | Empty fields, no prompting |
| Follow-up on vague answers | Automatic | Manual, by you, later |
| Output | Structured brief, ready to paste anywhere | Whatever the client typed |
| Works alongside Notion | Yes — export/paste the brief in | It is Notion |
| Best at | Getting the requirements out of the client | Organising work once you have them |
When Notion is the better choice
- You want everything to live natively inside your Notion workspace.
- Your clients are comfortable writing structured answers unprompted.
- You are organising an already-defined project, not extracting requirements.
Where ReqBrief wins
- Clients leave half your template blank or answer vaguely.
- You want the brief written for you, then stored in Notion.
- You would rather not chase follow-up answers after the form comes back.
- You want the intake to adapt per client instead of one fixed page.
The bottom line
Notion is excellent for organising work. It is not built to interview a client. Use ReqBrief to get the requirements out of the client, then keep them in Notion if that is your home base — the two work well together.
FAQ
Can I use ReqBrief and Notion together?
Yes. Many users run the ReqBrief interview to produce the brief, then paste or export it into their Notion project workspace. ReqBrief handles the extraction; Notion handles the ongoing organisation.
Why is a Notion intake template not enough?
A template is passive — it relies on the client to structure their own thoughts into your fields. That is exactly where vague, incomplete answers come from. ReqBrief actively interviews the client and follows up where answers are thin.
Keep exploring
Other comparisons
ReqBrief vs PDF/email questionnaire
The emailed questionnaire is the status quo at most agencies. It is also the thing clients most often ignore.
ReqBrief vs Jotform
Jotform can build almost any form. The question is whether a form — however capable — ever gets you a brief you can scope from.
ReqBrief vs Tally
Tally is a lovely free form builder. But a free form is still a form — and a form is not a brief.
ReqBrief for your team
Related reading
Project Brief Example: 3 Complete, Filled-Out Briefs You Can Copy
See what a real project brief looks like: three complete, filled-out examples (bakery site, booking platform, internal tool) you can copy and adapt today.
How to Prevent Scope Creep: 5 Causes and How to Stop Each
Scope creep starts in a vague brief, not mid-project. Learn the 5 most common causes of scope creep and the exact fixes that stop each before work begins.
Stop chasing clients for requirements
Create a project, send a link, and let ReqBrief interview your client and write the brief.
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