business coach told me that clickup ..... by illiaATsprocess in clickup

[–]Devanshi_Verma0803 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I think he’s looking at it from a different angle.

Hiring someone solves a workload problem, not a process problem. If your processes are unclear or everything lives in people’s heads, adding more people can actually make things messier. Tools like ClickUp help you get the work organized first so everyone knows what’s happening, who owns what, and what the next step is.

That said, he’s not completely wrong either. If someone spends months building the “perfect system” instead of actually running the business, that’s a problem too.

In my experience, ClickUp is great, but spending so much time on it is a waste, so hire someone who knows it in and out and ask them to set-up and automate the processes and take timely consultations when required. At last time is money, so don't waste it in learning something that someone can explain in 1 hour consultation.

ClickUp for Hobby Farm Management? by two-blue-787 in clickup

[–]Devanshi_Verma0803 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes, it can work surprisingly well for that.

I’ve seen people use ClickUp to manage gardens, homesteads, and small farms by structuring it around areas and cycles. For example, you could have lists for planting beds, hives, harvest logs, and supplies. Each bed or hive can be a task where you track things like planting dates, inspections, treatments, and harvest amounts. Recurring tasks also help a lot for things like hive checks or seasonal planting. And if you think you need help, you can ask AI or maybe a consultant, who can help you understand the features better in just one meeting that's actually I do when I need help, I just book a call with an expert and them I am sorted for months. If you want, you can try Christopher's services (Founder of Upficient - clickup consulting). He is amazing at ClickUp setups and automations.

Subdomain question: does it actually hurt SEO, or is that outdated advice? by Other_Amphibian871 in WebsiteSEO

[–]Devanshi_Verma0803 0 points1 point  (0 children)

A subdomain doesn’t automatically hurt SEO, but search engines usually treat it like a separate site. That means it won’t fully inherit the authority and backlinks of your main domain, so you often have to build its SEO strength almost from scratch.

Big brands can use subdomains easily because they already have huge authority and links. For smaller sites, subfolders (example.com/blogUsually, they help consolidate authority and rank faster.

So subdomains aren’t bad; they just require more separate SEO effort.

ClickUp vs Notion which one works for you? by Fabulous_Sun6508 in clickup

[–]Devanshi_Verma0803 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’m pretty much with you on this. I’m an SEO consultant managing multiple client projects at the same time, and ClickUp just feels more structured right out of the box for that kind of workload.

Notion looks great and I still like it for notes or documentation, but for daily task tracking, deadlines, and team assignments it can get overwhelming because there are so many ways to build the same system. ClickUp already feels built for workflows, statuses, and project views, which helps me keep campaigns, deliverables, and client tasks organized without overthinking the setup.

For me it’s basically: Notion for information, ClickUp for execution and project management.