AI-native automation

Automate work acrossGoogle Calendar and Notionby AI screensharing.

Pick any amount of tools and Caddi automates them end-to-end. No workflow builder, just show Caddi.

Google CalendarProductivity
NotionProductivity

See it on your stack

See Caddi run Google Calendar and Notion together.

  • Brighton Jones
  • The Planning Center
  • Beveridge & Diamond
  • Palace
  • Portner & Shure
  • Knight Law Group

What Caddi is and how it works

An AI teammate that runs your back-office loops.

  • Doesn't break. Caddi reads intent, so when fields move or UIs change, your loop keeps running.
  • Screenshare to set up, chat to improve. Show Caddi once on a screenshare. Tweak it later by chat — no workflow builder to re-architect.

SOC 2 attested · Human-in-the-loop · Full audit trail · 70+ tools across legal, finance, and operations

One continuous loop.

  1. 01Measure

    Caddi watches how the work gets done today.

  2. 02Create

    You screenshare it once. The loop ships.

  3. 03Improve

    Caddi flags upgrades to existing loops and new automations to deploy.

Practical ways to use Google Calendar and Notion together

  • 01

    Create database entry in Notion when new event in Google Calendar.

    Caddi watches Google Calendar for new event and create database entry in Notion — no copy-paste, no missed records.

  • 02

    Create event in Google Calendar when new database entry in Notion.

    Caddi watches Notion for new database entry and create event in Google Calendar so the two systems stay in lockstep.

  • 03

    Update entry in Notion from Google Calendar events.

    When event updated happens in Google Calendar, Caddi update entry in Notion with the right context attached.

Actions Caddi can take across Google Calendar and Notion

  • Google Calendar

    New event

    Triggers when a new event is added to a calendar.

  • Google Calendar

    Event updated

    Triggers when an existing event is modified.

  • Google Calendar

    Event starting soon

    Triggers shortly before an event begins.

  • Google Calendar

    Create event

    Add a new event with attendees, location, and reminders.

  • Google Calendar

    Update event

    Modify an existing event's time, attendees, or details.

  • Google Calendar

    Delete event

    Cancel an event and optionally notify attendees.

  • Google Calendar

    Find event

    Search the calendar by query and date range.

  • Notion

    New database entry

    Triggers when a new page is added to a database.

  • Notion

    Database entry updated

    Triggers when an entry's properties change.

  • Notion

    Create database entry

    Add a new page to a database with property values.

  • Notion

    Update entry

    Modify properties on an existing database entry.

  • Notion

    Append block

    Add content blocks to an existing page.

  • Notion

    Create page

    Spin up a new standalone Notion page.

Common questions

How does Caddi connect Google Calendar and Notion?

Google Calendar and Notion just run together. All it takes is showing us how you use them — one screenshare, no workflow builder to wire up. Caddi turns the demo into a verified loop and runs it against Google Calendar and Notion end-to-end.

Do I need engineering help?

No. Whoever does the work today shows it once on a call. Caddi builds the loop. No code, no IT ticket.

Is my data safe?

Yes. Caddi is SOC 2 attested. The AI watches and builds the automation, but once the loop ships it runs deterministically — no model in the loop at runtime.

Can Caddi connect Google Calendar and Notion to other tools too?

Yes. Most Caddi loops span 3–6 tools. Once the first Google Calendar + Notion loop is live, Caddi suggests other tools and other workflows to fold in.

How fast can it go live?

Typical first loops ship within a week of the screenshare. The Caddi team reviews every loop before it runs in production.

Ready to automate Google Calendar and Notion?

Drop your work email and we'll show you Caddi running end-to-end against Google Calendar, Notion, and the rest of your stack.