Notion is either a tool or a distraction. The difference is structure. Most developer freelancers who use Notion spend more time building their system than using it. They have 40 pages, none of them connected, and they still track client work in a spreadsheet. Here are the five pages that actually matter and what belongs in each one. 1. Client Hub One database. Every client past and present. Properties: status (active, completed, paused, prospect), total billed to date, contact info, project type, and a relation to your project tracker. The goal is to open this page and immediately know who you are working with, what their status is, and how much they have paid you historically. Nothing more complicated than that. 2. Project Tracker One row per project. Properties: client (related to Client Hub), status, start date, deadline, contract value, amount invoiced, amount paid, and a checklist template for standard phases.…