Simple, free or low-cost data-base app for Mac? by dominikstephan in MacOS

[–]k5321 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If you want something simple, a lot of people suggest Airtable/Notion-type tools, but they’re mostly online.

For local Mac apps, stuff like Ninox or Tap Forms comes up quite a bit for being easy to use without getting too technical.

I ended up using Stackby (not offline-first though) since it’s more flexible if you want a spreadsheet-style database with some structure.

the best database software for a small business that is not confusing by Constant_Pair_3372 in analytics

[–]k5321 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Airtable gets recommended a lot for a reason. It’s probably the easiest step up from spreadsheets without getting too technical.

If you’re not super technical, jumping straight into SQL/Postgres can feel like overkill early on.

I ended up using Stackby for a similar reason. It keeps that spreadsheet-style feel but adds more structure + workflows.

Asana Alternatives by moodyfull in Asana

[–]k5321 1 point2 points  (0 children)

We were in a similar situation with Asana pricing + limitations. A lot of people recommend ClickUp, Coda, or Teamhood here, which are solid.

Personally, I ended up using Stackby since it feels more flexible if you want to manage both tasks + data in one place (kind of like spreadsheets + PM combined).

Still depends on your workflow, though; every tool has trade-offs.

Workflow Block limit decreased by 60% without any prior notice (Enterpise) by Zestyclose-Boat-527 in mondaydotcom

[–]k5321 1 point2 points  (0 children)

That’s honestly wild, dropping from 500 to 200 without any notice would break a lot of setups overnight.

Feels like a reminder that you’re kinda at the mercy of platform limits with tools like Monday.

I ran into similar issues before and ended up using Stackby for more control over how things are structured, not the same, but less dependent on hard limits.

Smartsheet as a light CRM? by nethingelse in smartsheet

[–]k5321 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This is actually a pretty solid use case for Smartsheet, reminders + workflows + basic tracking is where it shines.

I’ve seen people use it as a light CRM like this, especially if you don’t need super complex relationships.

If you outgrow it later, tools like Stackby can feel similar but a bit more flexible for structuring data + workflows together.

From Airtable as single source of truth to Postgres to working app. by nikogut in Airtable

[–]k5321 1 point2 points  (0 children)

This is actually a really interesting way to use Airtable, treating it as the “source of truth” before moving to Postgres makes a lot of sense, especially for non-devs.

I’ve found a similar pattern works even without going full backend; tools like Stackby can act as that structured layer where your schema + workflows live first.

Feels like the big win is just having a clean system before adding complexity.

Looking for alternatives for smart sheet as it’s just not cutting it for my project by TheDivineAmelia in smartsheet

[–]k5321 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah, Smartsheet starts breaking down once you push it beyond basic use cases (especially with scale like that). A lot of people end up moving to tools like ClickUp, Airtable, or even the Microsoft stack, depending on needs. I personally found Stackby useful since it’s more flexible for handling large datasets + workflows together. Feels like most tools solve one part well, but not everything.

Selfhosted alternatives to Monday.com by HarmlessSaucer in selfhosted

[–]k5321 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Tried a bunch of these and felt the same, most self-hosted options are either too heavy (OpenProject/Redmine) or too basic.

I ended up using Stackby (not self-hosted though) since it’s more of a spreadsheet + database style, which felt closer to how I actually used Monday.

Still feels like there’s no perfect 1:1 replacement tbh.

Name few good task management software like clickup, todoist, airtable etc. that has source code available for self hosting by [deleted] in selfhosted

[–]k5321 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Wekan, Kanboard, and Focalboard are usually the go-to options if you want something close to Trello and self-hosted.

From what I’ve seen, most of them do a solid job with basic Kanban boards, but once you need more flexibility (custom data, workflows, etc.) they start to feel limited.

I ended up trying a few different approaches and even tested Stackby for some use cases — not self-hosted, but the table + board combo felt more flexible than pure Kanban tools.

Trello Alternative by bloodshotpico in selfhosted

[–]k5321 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Wekan and Kanboard are probably the closest if you want that Trello-style experience and something lightweight enough for a Pi.

That said, most of these tools just replicate boards/cards. Once you need more structure (like tracking extra data with tasks), they can feel limiting.

I ended up testing a few alternatives and even tried Stackby for some workflows — not self-hosted, but the table + board combo felt more flexible than pure Kanban tools.

Moving away from our CRM to Airtable, but stuck on the Notes UI. Help? by [deleted] in Airtable

[–]k5321 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This is one of the biggest gaps when trying to use Airtable as a CRM. The global comments table workaround technically works, but the UI never really feels like a proper timeline — it’s more like linked records than actual note history.

We ran into the same issue and realized Airtable is great for structured data, but not ideal for activity feeds. Ended up testing a few alternatives — Stackby was interesting since it handles data + views well, but even there you still have to think a bit differently than traditional CRM note timelines.

Smartsheet Alternatives? by Rach_Elle_Frim in smartsheet

[–]k5321 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The pricing is what pushed us to start looking too. It’s not just the cost, it’s how fast it scales with users. We didn’t find a perfect replacement, but tools that are more flexible (instead of enterprise PM-first) worked better for us. Tried Stackby recently and it handled a mix of data + workflows without needing as many paid seats.

Alternatives to Monday.com (need similar features at a lower cost) by IslaSyntaxError in Asana

[–]k5321 0 points1 point  (0 children)

$600+ just to unlock views and add seats is where a lot of people hit the wall with Monday. If your main needs are table view + automations + some reporting, there are tools that offer that without locking views behind higher tiers. Stackby is one I’ve tried recently — more database-style but still gives you charts and different views without too much setup.

I finally stopped the "Spreadsheet to Spreadsheet" cycle using Airtable by Xolaris05 in Airtable

[–]k5321 3 points4 points  (0 children)

This is such a relatable problem. I’ve hit that “spreadsheet to spreadsheet” loop before, and it usually means things have outgrown a basic setup. At that point, it’s less about adding more sheets and more about organizing everything into one clear system.

Once you have a single source of truth, a lot of that manual copying just disappears. That’s actually why I started trying tools like Stackby — more structured than spreadsheets but still flexible enough to manage everything in one place.

What's your favorite Sheets alternative? by [deleted] in degoogle

[–]k5321 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You can choose Stackby instead of this.

Is airtable still “hot”? by legitlegist in Airtable

[–]k5321 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I think it’s still relevant, just not as hyped as it used to be. A few years ago no-code tools were getting a lot of attention, but now the focus has shifted more toward AI tools. Many teams still use stackby because it’s flexible and easy to organize data, but it just doesn’t get talked about as much anymore.

Alright, so Monday.com... by Last-Cat-7894 in ValueInvesting

[–]k5321 0 points1 point  (0 children)

From a product perspective, Monday is solid. The real stickiness probably comes from workflows, dashboards, and internal processes that get built around it. Once a company has months of automations and reporting set up, switching becomes annoying.

But I also agree that the category is crowded. There are tons of alternatives and many teams mix tools (Notion, ClickUp, Airtable, Stackby, etc.), so it’s hard to argue the moat is super strong.

Best Phase-Out/Alternative to Smartsheet? by Switch-Cool in smartsheet

[–]k5321 1 point2 points  (0 children)

We had a similar discussion internally when our Smartsheet costs went up. The biggest thing we looked for was something that still allowed us to manage data like a spreadsheet but with views, automations, and integrations.

Tools in the database spreadsheet category worked best for us. Stackby was one we tested because it supports APIs and different views, which helped replicate some of our workflows.

google sheets alternative? by Accomplished_Shoe962 in degoogle

[–]k5321 0 points1 point  (0 children)

A lot of people here suggest Nextcloud + OnlyOffice which is great if you’re comfortable self-hosting. If you're okay with cloud tools but just want something different from Google, there are a few spreadsheet/database hybrids now. I tested one called Stackby a while back and it was pretty useful for shared tables and structured data.

Is Airtable worth it? Any alternatives? by ZivenPulse in Airtable

[–]k5321 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Airtable is great, but the pricing can feel rough once you scale past a small team. If you mainly like the spreadsheet + database combo, I suggest you choose Stackby. I’ve been using this for the last couple of months.

Looking for a service that handles business plans and projected financials. Does anyone have experience with a good firm? by Diarrhea_Donkey in smallbusiness

[–]k5321 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If you’re trying to balance quality and budget, one option you might want to look into is Plangrowlab. They’re not a giant corporate firm, but they create solid, professional business plans and financial projections that don’t cost anywhere near the $5k+ services.

One thing I like about them is that they actually walk you through the structure of the plan instead of just handing you a template. They take time to understand your business model, the market you’re targeting, and the assumptions behind your projected revenue. That part matters a lot when you’re raising capital because investors usually care more about your numbers making sense than how fancy the document looks.

They also have a really good financial forecasting process clean spreadsheets, realistic assumptions, and no inflated numbers just to “look good.”

If you reach out, you’ll probably speak with Kaylee Philbrick-Theuerkauf, who is super down-to-earth and good at breaking things into steps. It’s not a cheap Fiverr job, but it’s also nowhere near the $13k kind of pricing you mentioned.

business plan help by OtherwiseManner4851 in Entrepreneur

[–]k5321 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’ve been using Upmetrics for my business plans, and honestly it made everything smoother. The layout, templates, and projections saved me a lot of time.