Productivity Tools & Methods — 2026-05-08
Notion's Custom Agents have exited their free trial period as of May 3, 2026, moving to a credits-based pricing model — a significant shift for teams relying on autonomous AI workflows. This week also saw a fresh comparison of knowledge management tools, with Atlas workspace positioning itself as a cited-AI alternative to Notion and Obsidian. For method lovers, the Eisenhower Matrix continues to dominate expert recommendations for separating urgent from important work.
Productivity Tools & Methods — 2026-05-08
Tool Updates
Notion Custom Agents Go Paid
Notion's Custom Agents feature — which lets users define autonomous jobs that run continuously in the background, triggered by schedules or events across Notion, Slack, Mail, Calendar, and connected tools — ended its free trial period on May 3, 2026. The feature is now billed at a credits-based rate of $10 per 1,000 credits.

Custom Agents are fully autonomous: you define a job, set a trigger or schedule, and they run continuously without manual prompting. For teams that adopted agents during the free trial window, this week marks the first billing cycle under the new model.
Atlas Workspace Enters the Notion vs. Obsidian Conversation
A comparison published approximately three days ago positions Atlas workspace as a third option in the perennial Notion-vs-Obsidian debate, specifically touting its "cited AI synthesis" as a differentiator. The piece summarizes the landscape as: Notion ($10/mo) wins for teams needing collaborative databases; Obsidian (free) wins for plain-text power users who prioritize local data ownership; Atlas wins for users who want AI-generated answers with source citations built in.
Obsidian Changelog Active
Obsidian continues to maintain its public changelog at obsidian.md/changelog for desktop and mobile updates. No specific version details were available in this week's research results, but the changelog remains the canonical source for release notes.
Method
The Eisenhower Matrix: Separating Urgent from Important
Productivity experts consistently name the Eisenhower Matrix as one of the most reliable frameworks for task prioritization. As of April–May 2026, it remains a top recommendation across multiple productivity guides.
The matrix divides tasks into four quadrants based on two axes — urgency and importance:
| Urgent | Not Urgent | |
|---|---|---|
| Important | Do immediately (Q1) | Schedule it (Q2) |
| Not Important | Delegate (Q3) | Eliminate (Q4) |
The critical insight, emphasized by productivity experts writing in April 2026, is that consistently dedicating time to Quadrant 2 activities — strategic planning, skill development, and health — is what separates high performers from those who are perpetually reactive. Most people spend the majority of their time in Q1 (firefighting) and Q3 (responding to others' urgencies), while Q2 is where compounding gains happen.

How to apply it this week:
- List every task on your plate.
- Ask two questions per task: Is it urgent? Is it important?
- Assign each task to a quadrant.
- Block calendar time specifically for Q2 items before the week fills up with Q1 demands.
The matrix pairs well with time blocking — scheduling Q2 work as protected calendar appointments — which is another technique featured prominently in 2026 productivity guides.
Weekly Hack
Audit your Notion agent spend before the first credits bill arrives.
If your team adopted Notion Custom Agents during the free trial (which ended May 3, 2026), check your workspace's agent activity log now. Identify which agents ran most frequently and whether they delivered measurable value. Disable or consolidate low-value agents before your first credits-based billing cycle hits. At $10 per 1,000 credits, high-frequency automations can accumulate costs quickly — a quick audit this week can prevent bill shock next month.
This content was collected, curated, and summarized entirely by AI — including how and what to gather. It may contain inaccuracies. Crew does not guarantee the accuracy of any information presented here. Always verify facts on your own before acting on them. Crew assumes no legal liability for any consequences arising from reliance on this content.