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Productivity

Put an AI agent to work inside Notion

Connect Notion in one click and hand off the upkeep: an autonomous agent that writes and updates pages, queries your databases, keeps the wiki current, and turns scattered work into structured records. You set the autonomy, it does the work.

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In short

Fleece AI connects to Notion through managed OAuth and lets autonomous agents create and update pages, append blocks, query and filter databases, update properties, follow relations, and add comments. Agents combine Notion with 3,000+ other apps — Slack, Gmail, GitHub, Google Calendar — so a decision in a meeting becomes an action-item page, a Slack answer becomes a wiki entry, and a database change becomes a digest, all under the approval rules you set.

At a glance

CategoryProductivity
AvailabilityStarter plan and up — included in the 7-day trial
Connects to3,000+ apps via managed OAuth
SetupConnect your tools — no code required
AutonomySuggest-only to fully autonomous, with approval gates
Pricing7-day trial (€1 card check, credited back), then paid plans

By Loïc Jané · Updated June 9, 2026

What a Fleece agent does with Notion

Notion is where your team's knowledge is supposed to live — pages and nested subpages, databases with typed properties and relations, project trackers, meeting notes, a company wiki, and templates that promise consistency. The problem is upkeep: the wiki drifts out of date, the tracker lags behind reality, and half the useful answers stay buried in Slack threads instead of the docs. A Fleece agent sits on top of that workspace and keeps it honest. It reads the pages and databases you point it at, understands their structure, and acts: it writes, updates, files, links, or summarizes, according to the instructions you give it in plain language.

Under the hood, the connection runs through managed OAuth — you authorize Notion once, and Fleece handles tokens, scopes, and refresh securely. The agent can create pages from templates, append and edit blocks, query databases with filters and sorts, read and update property values, follow relations between records, and add comments to flag work for a human. Event triggers let it react in real time when a page changes, a database row is added, or a property flips to a given status — no polling, no delay — and scheduled flows let it run a weekly digest or a nightly tidy-up on its own.

What makes this different from Notion's own buttons and database automations is judgment and reach. A Notion automation can move a row when a property changes; it cannot read a Slack thread, decide the answer is worth keeping, write it into the right wiki page, and link it back to the source. Because Fleece agents work as a hierarchy — a lead agent delegating to specialized child agents — one Notion-facing agent can hand research to one agent, data work to another, and email to a third, then record the outcome as a clean page. The result is a workspace that maintains itself instead of one more surface someone has to keep tidy.

What the agent can do in Notion

Write and update pages

Creates pages from your templates, appends and edits blocks, and updates existing docs so records stay current without manual copy-paste.

Query databases

Filters and sorts databases by property, follows relations, and reads exactly the rows it needs to answer a question or build a report.

Keep the wiki current

Turns answers and decisions from other tools into wiki entries, updates stale pages, and links related records so knowledge stays findable.

Work into structure

Converts meeting notes and threads into action-item pages and tracker rows with owners, due dates, and links back to the source.

Real-time triggers

Reacts the moment a page changes, a row is added, or a property flips status, through event-based triggers rather than polling.

Approval gates

Anything sensitive — publishing a page, editing a shared wiki, bulk database changes — pauses for your one-click sign-off before it happens.

Integrations

Automations teams run on Notion

These are concrete setups you can describe to a Fleece agent in plain language. Each one combines Notion with other connected apps.

1

Meetings: notes that become decisions and tasks

After each recurring meeting, the agent takes the transcript or notes, produces a decisions-and-action-items summary, and writes it as a page in the project database with owners and due dates set as properties. It posts the summary to the relevant Slack channel and adds the follow-up dates to Google Calendar, so nothing lives only in someone's head.

2

Knowledge: a wiki that maintains itself

When a good answer lands in a Slack support or engineering channel, the agent recognizes it, drafts a wiki entry in the right Notion section, links it to related pages through relations, and replies in Slack with the new link. Over time the company wiki fills itself from the questions people actually ask instead of waiting for someone to document.

3

Projects: a tracker synced with GitHub

The agent keeps a Notion project database in step with GitHub issues: when an issue is opened, labeled, or closed, it creates or updates the matching row, sets the status property, and follows the relation to the parent epic. Engineers work in GitHub, stakeholders read Notion, and the two stay aligned without a manual sync meeting.

4

Reporting: a weekly digest of what changed

On a schedule, the agent queries the databases that matter — roadmap, hiring, sales pipeline — collects what changed that week by reading property history, and writes a concise digest page. It then sends that digest to the team through Slack and Gmail, so the update reaches people where they already are instead of hoping they open the database.

How to connect Notion to Fleece AI

1

Create your Fleece account

Sign up and start the 7-day trial. You land in a workspace where agents, flows, and integrations live together.

2

Connect Notion via managed OAuth

Pick Notion from the integrations catalog and authorize it in one click. Fleece manages tokens and scopes for you; you can revoke access at any time from Notion or from Fleece.

3

Describe the job in plain language

Create an agent and tell it what to maintain and how — "turn our meeting notes into action-item pages in the Projects database and post the summary to #team". No flowchart building required.

4

Set autonomy and approval gates

Choose what the agent may do on its own and what waits for your sign-off. Publishing pages and bulk database edits can pause for one-click approval.

5

Run it on triggers or a schedule

Let the agent react to Notion changes in real time, or schedule recurring flows — a weekly digest, a nightly tidy-up — that run without you.

Notion

Notion works better with the rest of your stack

Notion automations get powerful when they cross app boundaries. Pair Notion with Slack to turn channel answers into wiki entries and push digests where the team works, with Gmail to file important threads as pages and send weekly reports, with GitHub to keep a project tracker in step with issues, or with Google Calendar to schedule the follow-ups an agent creates from meeting notes — all through the same agent, all under the same approval rules. Fleece connects to 3,000+ apps, so the stack you already use is almost certainly covered.

Explore all 3,000+ integrations

Frequently asked questions

Put Notion on autopilot

Connect Notion in one click, describe the job in plain language, and let an autonomous agent keep your pages and databases current. 7-day trial, cancel anytime.

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