Manus AI has released a new connector for Notion that automates the shift from static document pages to live, interactive workflows. The tool, available now, lets users build automated dashboards, conduct trend research, and generate client proposals directly from Notion content.
From Static to Dynamic
The connector acts as a bridge between Notion’s familiar note-taking interface and Manus AI’s workflow engine. Instead of manually updating pages or exporting data to other tools, users can set up triggers that turn a list of tasks into a real-time dashboard or a collection of research notes into an ongoing trend analysis.
Manus AI didn’t specify which Notion features are supported first, but early documentation points to table views, databases, and linked pages as the main entry points. The company says the connector is designed for teams that already rely on Notion for project management and want to add automation without leaving the app.
Automating Client Proposals
One use case highlighted by the developer is client proposal generation. A team could maintain a Notion database of case studies, pricing, and deliverables. With the connector, that static database becomes a live workflow that assembles proposals on demand, pulling in the latest data and formatting it for presentation.
Trend research is another example. Researchers often collect articles, notes, and observations in Notion. The connector can take those entries, run them through Manus AI’s analysis, and produce a continuously updated dashboard of emerging patterns — no manual rechecking required.
Who Stands to Benefit
Productivity and operations teams are the obvious audience. Notion is widely used in startups, agencies, and remote teams for everything from OKR tracking to content calendars. The connector removes a repetitive step: copying data from Notion into a separate analytics or automation tool.
The announcement didn’t include pricing or whether the connector works with Notion’s free tier. Manus AI said it will release more details in the coming weeks, including a tutorial for setting up the first workflow.



