For agency clients evaluating Asana

Why your agency is right to choose Kodokyo over Asana

Asana is a horizontal project tool designed to run any team's work. An agency's work is specific: client engagements, approvals, billable hours, scope documents, a portal for you. Kodokyo is built vertically for that — with 40 agentic tools and 8 autonomous systems taking the boring parts off everyone's plate.

Credit where it's due

Asana is a genuinely good horizontal project tool. The Work Graph model is clever, the template library is broad, and adoption inside client-side marketing and ops teams is so widespread it's almost the default. If the question is “what should 10,000 employees at a Fortune 500 use to coordinate,” Asana is a fine answer.

But an agency isn't coordinating a function — it's delivering a product to a client. The shape of that work is different: scope documents, approvals, billable time, a clean portal for the client, decisions that need to survive the project. Horizontal breadth means no vertical depth for the bits that actually matter week to week.

Kodokyo starts from a different premise: an agency is doing work for a client, and most of the drudgery between the two of you is work AI can now actually do. The features are shaped around that relationship.

AI-native, not AI-bolted-on

40 agentic AI tools execute work on your behalf — not just summarize it.

Most AI in project tools writes status updates. Kodokyo's AI takes actions. It creates tasks, sends email, books meetings, drafts invoices, moves files, links threads to projects, and records decisions — with guardrails and approvals where they matter.

Ask

“When is Kevin free Thursday?”

It checks the calendar and proposes slots.

Say

“Send Acme's invoice for this sprint.”

It drafts from billable hours and sends from your Gmail.

Type in chat

“We decided to use Postgres.”

A Decision Record is drafted and queryable forever.

8 autonomous systems running in the background

Chief of Staff

Background agent drafts daily updates, catches stalled tasks, suggests reassignments. Every action is a proposal your agency approves.

Ghost Tasks

Listens to chat for actionable intent and drafts tasks with assignee, priority, and reasoning. Approve or dismiss from the inbox on your dashboard.

Meeting Intelligence

A Recall.ai bot auto-joins your Meet, Zoom, and Teams calls, transcribes via Deepgram, and turns decisions and action items into tasks.

Predictive Bottleneck Engine

Continuously detects silent blockers (>3 days untouched), critical-path risk, overloaded assignees, and >30% velocity drops.

Starter Kits

When a task is done, AI packages the summary, files, and approach so the next person can pick it up without a handover meeting.

Decision Engine

Scans chat for decisions, drafts formal decision records, and makes them queryable forever.

Catch-up Digests

After a week off, one click produces a relevance-ranked recap of what happened on your project while you were away.

Personal Productivity OS

Learns peak focus windows from time-tracking patterns and can auto-decline meetings that break deep work.

A partial list of agentic tools: create_task, invite_member, send_email, create_calendar_event, find_meeting_slot, generate_invoice_draft, draft_sow, draft_proposal, search_drive_files, create_drive_folder, trash_drive_file, draft_email, link_email_thread_to_project, generate_catch_up_digest, propose_ghost_task, search_decisions, analyze_proposed_meeting, generate_client_briefing.

For the technical half of your agency

Your developers never leave their editor.

Kodokyo ships a Model Context Protocol (MCP) server. The agency's developers connect once, then work directly against your project from inside their IDE — pulling the task list, reading your bug reports with screenshots attached, creating tasks, and updating status without ever tab-switching into a PM tool. Task IDs like TASK-42 are sequential per organisation, so they reference cleanly in commits and pull requests.

Works natively with

Claude CodeCursorVS CodeWindsurfAntigravity

Any MCP-compatible editor works. API keys are SHA-256 hashed and tier-gated: read-only on Growth, full read + write on Business.

21 MCP tools available in-editor

list-clientslist-projectslist-memberssearchlist-tasksget-tasklist-feedbackget-feedbacksearch-drivelist-drive-folderdownload-drive-filecreate-taskupdate-taskupdate-task-statusdelete-taskadd-task-comment

The practical version of this

You submit a bug through the Kodokyo feedback widget on your staging site. The screenshot, the annotation you drew, the browser version, the console errors — all of it attaches to a task automatically. The developer's AI assistant pulls that task into the editor, fixes the code, updates the task status to “in review.” You see it move on your board. No tool hop, no copy-paste, no lost context.

Google Workspace, wired in at the OS level

The AI can actually use your Workspace — not just read it.

Most tools that “integrate with Google” mean a one-way sync of files or events. Kodokyo uses a two-tier model: an org-level Workspace account covers the whole team, with optional per-user personal accounts on top. On Business, a 15-minute admin setup enables Domain-Wide Delegation, so the AI can act across every user's Calendar and Drive without per-user OAuth prompts. Service account keys are encrypted at rest with AES-256-GCM.

Drive

Search and browse your org Drive, create Docs / Sheets / Slides, copy files, make folders, and move to trash (30-day recoverable — never permanently deletes).

Calendar

Find mutual meeting slots across multiple calendars, analyse a proposed meeting for conflicts, and create events with Meet links attached.

Gmail

Draft and send email from the org account, search personal Gmail with full operator support, and link email threads to the project they belong to.

Meeting bot

A Recall.ai bot runs every 2 minutes, scans the next 10 minutes of calendar, and auto-joins any Meet, Zoom, or Teams event — no one has to invite it.

Side by side, for your project

The comparison that matters isn't feature count — it's whether the tool is shaped like the work your agency is doing for you.

Concern
Asana
Kodokyo
Built specifically for agency-client work
Horizontal, tool for any team
Primary use case
AI built in vs bolted on
Asana Intelligence, rolled out 2024
Designed AI-native from day one
Number of agentic AI tools
Handful of writing / summarisation helpers
40 tools that execute real work
Autonomous AI systems (Chief of Staff, etc.)
Not available
8 systems running continuously
Ghost Tasks from chat intent
Tasks are typed in by hand
AI drafts, you approve
Decision Engine (formal decision records)
Comments and status updates, no structured recall
Auto-detected, queryable forever
Native client portal
Workaround via guest seats on a project
Built-in, zero config, AI scoped to client
Agency's internal work stays internal
Depends on careful project and privacy setup
Separated by design
MCP server + IDE integration
Not available
21 tools in Claude Code, Cursor, VS Code, Windsurf, Antigravity
Save from anywhere on the web (browser extension)
Not available
Chrome extension: right-click any page to bookmark or create a task
Google Workspace Domain-Wide Delegation
Per-user OAuth only
15-min admin setup on Business plan
Cross-calendar free/busy search across a team
Not available; see teammates' calendars manually
Built in, AI-callable
Meeting bot that auto-joins Meet / Zoom / Teams
Use Fireflies / Otter separately
Recall.ai bot, every 2 min sweep
Ask-the-Meeting chat + transcript search
Not available
Per-meeting chat + cross-meeting search in Cmd+K
Real-time multi-cursor editing on docs
No real docs surface
Yjs CRDT, same tech as Notion / Linear
Visual bug reporting / feedback widget
Use Marker.io or similar
Built-in screenshot + annotate + AI triage
Proposals, SOWs, invoices in-product
Use Bonsai / HoneyBook
Native, AI-drafted from billable time
Native huddles (audio / video / screen share)
Use Zoom or Meet separately
LiveKit, recorded and transcribed
Time tracking
Built-in on higher tiers; basic
AI-estimated time, auto-logged on completion, retainer tracking with live progress bars
Help docs the AI can cite without hallucinating
Guide articles; AI retrieval is limited
~60 articles, AI answers with citations
Setup time before first real use
Templates exist; Work Graph still takes configuration
Minutes; defaults are the point
Extra tools you still need alongside
Slack, Notion, Loom, Fireflies, Marker.io, Bonsai, a client portal
None for core delivery
Resource planner (visual staffing)
Not available; buy Float.com or Runn separately
Built in — capacity bars, week nav, task drill-down
Pricing transparency
Tiered per-user; AI features on higher plans
One plan, AI included
Enterprise SSO (OIDC / SAML)
Enterprise plan only, add-on cost
Built in on Business plan, OIDC + SAML
AI daily audio briefing
Not available
2-min spoken summary via OpenAI TTS, playable on dashboard
Voice input (speak instead of type)
Not available
Hold-to-speak mic in AI chat and messaging, Web Speech API
Live web scraping for client research
Not available
AI scrapes client websites for grounded briefing documents

Where Asana supports something via plugin, guest seats, or setup, we've said so rather than marked it off.

What your agency gets to deliver

Choosing the tool shapes the experience you have working together.

A clean client view

You see deliverables, decisions, timelines, and feedback — nothing else. The native client portal uses token-based access so you don't need another login, and the AI scoped to your portal never reveals internal discussions or agrees to scope and timeline changes. Separation is the default, not something the project manager has to remember to configure.

Ghost Tasks and auto-recaps

The AI writes status updates, drafts Ghost Tasks from chat (the agency approves each one), sends auto-emailed meeting recaps to whomever opts in, and generates a 2-minute spoken audio briefing of your day you can listen to on the commute. The blank page is gone — that's hours every week back on your actual work.

Client infrastructure and retainer tracking

Hosting, DNS, domain registrar — linked to admin panels for 30+ providers. Per-client billing items with retainer hour tracking: the AI estimates time on every task, auto-logs it on completion, and the retainer progress bar updates in real time — green under 80%, amber approaching the cap, red when you're over. No spreadsheets, no forgotten timers.

Living documents and decisions

The scope doc is a Living Document with real-time multi-cursor editing. The Decision Engine catches “we decided to…” in chat and drafts a formal record, queryable forever. Nobody digs through email threads to remember what was agreed in week three.

Ask-the-Meeting, and never re-watch a call

Every meeting has its own chat — ask “what did we decide about the homepage hero?” and the AI answers from the transcript, with a shareable soundbite link to the exact moment. Cross-meeting search lives in Cmd+K. Speaker analytics flag monologues over 120 seconds.

The math

A typical agency uses six to nine different tools to deliver your project. Each one has its own bill, its own login, its own silo of your data. Kodokyo replaces all of them — which for you means one bill (theirs), one source of truth, and no “which tool was that in?”

Team chat (Slack)
Project management (Asana, Jira, Trello, Linear)
Docs and wiki (Notion, Confluence)
Meeting notes (Fireflies, Otter, Fathom)
Visual feedback (Marker.io, BugHerd)
Time tracking with AI estimation (Harvest, Toggl)
Proposals and invoices (Bonsai, HoneyBook)
Client portal (SuperOkay, Clinked)
Web clipping (Evernote Clipper, Notion Clipper)
Loom-style video (Loom)
Resource planning (Float.com, Runn, Teamwork)
Browser extension (Evernote Clipper, Notion Clipper)

Fair questions

We're already in Asana — how hard is migration?
Usually a few hours of work the agency owns, not you. Projects, tasks, sections, assignees, due dates, attachments, and comments all carry across. Asana's CSV export plus its API make this clean. You keep going from where you left off.
We've already started in Asana. Is it too late?
No. The cost of switching mid-engagement is almost always less than the cost of finishing in a tool that's shaped wrong for the work. A Friday-afternoon migration is usually all it takes.
Will I have to learn yet another tool?
No. You only see the client portal, which is intentionally simple: deliverables, a timeline, a feedback view, and a place to approve things. That's the whole interface for you. Your agency lives in the richer side.
What if we want our developers to work from their IDE?
They can. Kodokyo ships an MCP server with 21 tools that works natively in Claude Code, Cursor, VS Code, Windsurf, and Antigravity. Your devs pull tasks, read your bug reports with annotated screenshots attached, update status, and reference sequential task IDs (TASK-42) in commits — all without leaving their editor. API keys are SHA-256 hashed and tier-gated.
Is our data secure?
Yes. Data is encrypted at rest and in transit, hosted on Vercel and Google Cloud, and owned by your agency's workspace. Google service account keys are AES-256-GCM encrypted. SOC 2 Type II is on the roadmap. Full audit logs.
What if we want to leave?
Full export is available at any time — tasks, docs, messages, files, time entries. No lock-in, no data hostage. You can walk with everything.

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The best tool for the project is the one built for the kind of work you're actually doing together.