ManyRequests is the software that helps you manage clients, payments, projects, and your team in one simple platform. Under your own brand.
It's so good, Andy Dao from Flowspark, a Webflow agency for SaaS startups says:
“The simplicity and robustness of ManyRequest has been a game-changer for our business. Everything is in one place, more organized, and our clients and team members love it.”
And Andy isn't alone.
Emmanuel Rivera, co-founder and CEO of graphic design agency, Grayola, says
“ManyRequests has been the back-bone of our operations since day 1. Our team of designers, project managers, and admins use it on a day-to-day basis and they have enabled us to scale our business.”
And we haven't let this great feedback stop us from improving the software.
But if you ever want that to change, perhaps because you're a small team and our reviewed pricing of $19/month (paid annually) is still too steep, here are six ManyRequests alternatives for client portal and project management.
Sign up for a 14-day free trial to start using the all-in-one portal for your agency.
ManyRequests lets you manage every agency affair in one portal. You can scrap Slack and use our messaging feature (to chat with clients and your team). You can even deactivate your QuickBooks account because ManyRequests automates invoices, payments (through Stripe), and follow-ups all in the white label client portal software.
So if you're looking for alternatives to ManyRequests, check for the following features:
Customizations to create intake forms, so you can collect more information from your clients when they're creating new task requests. One of ManyRequests’ users, magier, a graphic design and Webflow agency, has a perfect illustration of how they use the client portal software here:
It can also show you reviews and rating from clients per service:
Here’s ManyRequests pricing structure (if you choose annual payments):
Sign up for a 14-day free trial (no credit card required).
These are six alternatives to ManyRequests for project management and client portal:
Best for task-heavy teams if you don’t need a client-facing portal
ClickUp calls itself the everything app for work. And technically, it is. It has tasks, Docs, chat, whiteboards, automations, time tracking, customizable dashboards, forms and even some AI features which makes it one of ManyRequests’ competitors.
Others still prefer Notion or Google Docs, but it all depends on whether you need each doc to be connected to your tasks or not. With an efficient project management software like ManyRequests, you probably don’t.
Some say No, especially because, according to the words of Ok-Row-7998, it “feels too clunky. It's trying to be everything, which is always tough to do. Someone else says “The performance can be horrific and buggy,... (and) some things don't auto update (have to reload pages).”
More importantly, someone who considered ClickUp says two weeks in and they’re hating it:
My verdict isn’t that ClickUp can’t do everything it advertised. It’s that it’s trying too hard to do everything but isn't great at everything.
You’ve got a user like u/Available-Mud-4095 saying ClickUp’s their “central hub,” but they still subscribe to 4+ other apps to manage their day-to-day ops.
That said, if all you need is internal task management, ClickUp might be enough.
ManyRequests has a simple UI, and you can easily rebrand it (thanks to the white label client portal) by connecting your domain, brand logo, and colors. You can do everything ClickUp lets you do including chatting with team members and clients without the buggy UI, organize tasks in a simple way, and automate the task creation process.
In ManyRequests, every task is automatically created once the client or the project manager writes details of the new tasks. You can also auto-assign it to your team members, which makes it as efficient as ClickUp, if not more.
And where ClickUp falls short, ManyRequests is better: ManyRequests helps you automatically create invoices, receive payment through the Stripe integration, and even send automated reminders to clients who are defaulting on payment.
Read more: ClickUp vs Notion vs. ManyRequests: a comparison
Best for teams who want to build their own system if you’re okay with the setup time.
For someone who has tried Google Tasks (which is too basic for project management), ClickUp and Jira (which felt too much to handle), Notion is a super flexible platform. The major downside is that you may spend more time building and customizing it than actually using it.
Notion is a platform that can be anything you want it to be. For our context, it lets you build a project management system shaped around your workflow. That flexibility is what draws people in.
Most users start by building task databases. This setup includes pages for individual tasks, projects, clients, or deliverables, each with properties like assignee, due date, priority, and status. These can be viewed via lists, Kanban, or timeline, depending on how the team prefers to work.
People also use Notion for:
These use cases are why a user puts it simply: “In a lot of ways it feels like Notion is doing things our way and not us doing things Notion’s way, if that makes sense.” That mindset is a big reason teams stick with it.
No, not really. And that’s because you need to build everything from scratch. If you get tired of tinkering around to build a system, it’s not for you.
So yes, it can help you collaborate with clients and vendors. “But you end up needing to duplicate and nest identical databases on different pages to manage access levels which has some major downsides related to maintenance and scalability,” says redditor XyloDigital.
So while Notion is good for small teams, it “gets unmanageable pretty quickly as it scales.”
If you love tinkering and want full control, Notion is a powerful option, but expect a learning curve, which ManyRequests doesn’t have. Instead, you spend less time building and more time working. .
Notion can hold its ground for creative agency owners who want a ManyRequests alternative they can customize from the ground up. But if you’re looking for something designed for agency owners, ManyRequests is better in these areas:
Finally, you can automate payments with ManyRequests. You cannot do that with Notion. It’s not even advised as a payment gateway because there may be security and data privacy risks.
In fact, users advise that you should not upload sensitive data or use it “for payment portals, for inventory, for security, for client information, or anything besides basic notes. If another owner sent me a payment or wanted me to sign a contract through Notion, I’m cancelling transaction.”
Read more: Notion vs. ClickUp vs. ManyRequests: a comparison
Best for branded portals with built-in billing (if you don’t mind the high fees)
There are different brands with “copilot” in their branding. Here, I am referring to a direct ManyRequests competitor, copilot.app, an all-in-one client portal and operations platform for services businesses.
At its core, it consolidates client communication, document sharing, contract signing, billing, and task tracking into a single branded workspace that clients can log into.
Copilot actually helps you the same way ManyRequests does, so instead of juggling multiple tools to
you can use Copilot to keep everything in one place.
It also has a client portal so each client gets access to a secure, branded workspace where they can view project updates, upload/download relevant files, send messages, complete onboarding forms, and sign contracts. You can also customize permissions and visibility on a client-by-client basis.
Copilot also supports automated invoicing and recurring payments, with Stripe at the backend. Just like ManyRequests does.
However, many users route billing through their own Stripe setup because Copilot has high transaction fees (more on this soon).
Yes, for many agencies and service businesses. Copilot reduces the number of tools needed to manage client operations. Users who previously used 5–6 tools (one for invoicing, another for project management, another for messaging, etc.) are now able to bring that into a single system.
But Copilot doesn’t work for everyone because it’s expensive.
Case in point, a medium-sized agency owner writes that "Copilot… would cost me nearly $2,500/month more… in user fees and payment processing, and we'd still need additional tools for our creative workflows."
Copilot’s monthly prices are expensive, and what’s more expensive is the credit card fee of 2.9% + $0.30 on every transaction. It’s primarily why the agency owner above needed a Copilot alternative.
Aside from price, there are limitations on customization. For instance, a user on G2 writes that while Copilot is “intuitive, simple, and flexible,” … “we had to download an integration to make a home screen for my client's portal. This seemed odd to me and the option itself was also basic. I would like to see more built-in functionality instead of everything being an integration.”
Matthew, another service business owner also writes that the process to assign tasks is too manual and the client portal doesn’t look professional because of the limitations. In his words:
“I can’t assign tasks to multiple clients at once, which can be time-consuming when I need to send the same task to several people. Also, I’m not able to add a user with the same email address to multiple businesses, which is limiting if a client is involved in more than one entity. Lastly, the contract customization options are a bit limited, making it harder to create professional-looking documents quickly.”
My verdict isn’t that Copilot can’t do what it promises. It can. But for some users, the limitations around pricing, flexibility, customization, and integrations mean it takes some workarounds to fully make it fit.
If you only work with a few high-value clients and don’t mind premium fees, Copilot has a polished, secure portal experience. But you’ll pay significantly more for the same core features that ManyRequests provides by default.
Copilot is a valid ManyRequests alternative, but here are a few things ManyRequests does better:
Best for no-code builders if you can commit to maintaining your Airtable setup.
Softr isn’t a traditional project management tool, but is one of the alternatives to ManyRequests.
It’s a no-code platform that lets you build your internal tools (or workflow) through pre-built templates and blocks on Airtable or Google Sheets. In this image, the builder used the building blocks template to add a list with timeline view on their project management system:
That means that with Softr, you can define the structure of your dashboard, client portal, CRMs, and project management system. But the functionality is only as good as how well you set it up.
Yes. But for many agency owners and freelancers, not really. And here’s why:
If you’re fully no-code, Softr is interesting but harder to maintain. ManyRequests gives the same flexibility without maintenance issues.
While Softr gives your team an impressive level of flexibility, that freedom comes with trade-offs if you're an agency (or freelancer) who needs to move fast.
The biggest friction is that you have to build everything from scratch. You’ll get an interface, but the logic, structure, and Airtable backend are yours to figure out.
For technical founders or teams with time to prototype and test, Softr is empowering. But for many freelancers or small agencies, it becomes a time sink. Especially if what you really want is a plug-and-play client portal and project management system that just works out of the box. And that’s what ManyRequests offers. You can set up your portal in minutes, create a service catalog (to show your three or more service categories), and even onboard clients to your portal within 24 hours.
There’s also the Airtable dependency on Softr. Airtable is powerful, but it’s not built for every use case. If you hit record limits, need granular automation, or want specific views or Gantt charts, you’ll likely need to patch things together with Zapier, Make, or third-party widgets.
Case in point, Astrid, a Notion consultant says Softr becomes complex when you’re building a client portal:
“If you're building something more complex than a basic website – like a member portal or internal tool – you'll often need to set up multiple user groups early on. This quickly increases costs, which might be a concern for smaller projects or startups.”
Maggie M. says the same thing:
“You can’t always set up multi-step user flows without hacks or workarounds. … I ran into several issues when trying to combine modal views with multiple actions (like updating Airtable and redirecting to a confirmation page).”
This doesn’t absolve Softr of its impressive systems. But it’s obvious that the UI building blocks are still limited compared to polished ManyRequests alternatives like Notion or even ClickUp. You can build filtered lists, grids, and forms, but you won’t get drag-and-drop tasks, rich text collaboration, or native timeline views unless you bolt them on with workarounds.
Read more: Don’t build from scratch: 5 Softr alternatives for your agency.
Best for visual task tracking if you’re just starting out and don’t need integrations
Trello is simple, visual, and easy to use, which is why many agencies start with it.
You set up boards for each project, create cards for tasks, drag them around between columns, and maybe plug in a few Power-Ups (an automation feature) if you need extras. It’s great for staying organized in the early days, and for small teams, it gets the job done.
Trello doesn’t scale well when you start needing more than just task tracking. You’ll find yourself stitching together a stack of other tools: spreadsheets for budgeting, Google Docs for client notes, Google Drive for important files, Slack for communication, QuickBooks for invoicing… and suddenly, instead of one streamlined workflow, you’re juggling five different systems.
This is the pain point many agency owners run into. As a Redditor puts it:
ManyRequests is designed to solve these pain points. The average agency owner wants software that lets them structure their services (with their different pricing categories) and have a general overview of how the project's budget is spent by the task/team member, and also automate invoicing, payments, and even reminders to defaulting clients. And ManyRequests is designed exactly for that.
Best for structured internal workflows if you don’t need payment or client portal integrations.
Asana is a smart, polished project management tool beloved for its interface, templates, multiple views, and integrations. It brings clarity and accountability to tasks, especially when you're moving from Trello or spreadsheets.
But a lot of agency owners we interviewed wanted more. Why?
That’s not to say Asana isn’t great at what it does. But for agency owners who need a client-facing portal, integrated payments system, onboarding forms, and project tracking all in one software, ManyRequests fills the gap Asana was not designed to address, which is why 3,000+ agencies trust us:
So when evaluating ManyRequests alternatives, it’s fair to say that each tool shines in its own lane. But if you want a single platform that’s actually designed for creative agencies, ManyRequests is the only choice that combines client onboarding, project tracking, invoicing, and branded portals without integrating five different tools together.
You’ve probably made a choice now. But if you want a tool actually built for creative agencies (not just repurposed from internal project management) ManyRequests is the clear choice. If you’re in doubt, sign up to ManyRequests for a 14-day free trial (no credit card required) and set up your account in seconds. Onboard a few clients and team members to get started.
Yes. All you need to do is to send a link to your service catalog, they choose the service they want, fill the intake form and make payment. They’ll automatically be led to a landing page where you can customize a dashboard of all you want them to see (or know about how to use your branded client portal).
Yes. starting at $19/month (when paid annually), and up to $76/month for the full package, it’s a good deal.
Once you sign up for a free trial or make payment for your first month, you can create a service catalog, add your team members, or even start with customizing your white label client portal to look and feel like your brand’s.
It's easy with ManyRequests:
ManyRequests provides you with all the tools and support you need to implement a client portal successfully, including all the steps above.
ManyRequests integrates with stripe, Monday.com, Calendly, Airtable, Zapier, Looker Studio, Typeform, HubSpot Chat, Loom, Webhooks, and many others.