Shortlist by bottleneck
Side projects usually stall for one of four reasons: the plan is fuzzy, the calendar is full, research disappears, or small tasks pile up. Start with the tool that fixes the first bottleneck in your week.
| Bottleneck | Tool to review first | Why it fits | Affiliate action |
|---|---|---|---|
| Planning and project structure | Taskade | Good fit when you want AI-assisted outlines, tasks, notes, and lightweight project spaces in one place. | Check Taskade |
| Finding time after work | Reclaim.ai | Best fit when your task list exists, but your calendar never makes room for execution. | Check Reclaim.ai |
| Turning reading into output | Readwise | Useful when articles, books, newsletters, and highlights should become notes, briefs, or ideas later. | Check Readwise |
| Mac app stack without app-by-app buying | Setapp | Strong fit for Mac users who want a curated productivity app bundle instead of separate purchases. | Check Setapp |
| Simple task capture | Todoist | Good when you need quick capture, recurring tasks, and a small weekly review habit. | Check Todoist |
A lean side-project stack
Plan
Taskade
Use it to turn rough project ideas into milestones, task lists, and repeatable weekly plans.
Schedule
Reclaim.ai
Use it when you need calendar blocks for deep work, recurring habits, and project follow-through.
Capture
Readwise
Use it when your project depends on research, saved articles, book notes, and reusable highlights.
The best starter stack is usually one planning tool, one scheduling habit, and one capture system. Add a fourth tool only when it removes an obvious recurring problem.
What to pay for first
Do not buy every productivity subscription at once. Use the first week to identify the point where your current system fails, then pay for the tool that directly removes that friction.
| If this happens every week | Pay for this first | Wait on this |
|---|---|---|
| You start with a vague idea and waste the first session deciding what to do. | Taskade or a simple project workspace. | Advanced calendar automation. |
| You know the next action, but your calendar fills before you touch it. | Reclaim.ai or another time-blocking system. | Another notes app. |
| You collect useful reading but cannot find it when writing or planning. | Readwise or a knowledge capture workflow. | More AI chat tools. |
| You use a Mac and keep buying small utilities one by one. | Setapp if the included apps replace multiple separate purchases. | A second all-in-one workspace. |
When AI tools are the wrong fix
An AI productivity tool will not fix a project that has no clear audience, no shipping habit, or no weekly time budget. If that is the real problem, start with one recurring work block and a visible next action before adding software.
- Use Focusmate or another accountability system if starting is the real blocker.
- Use the Notion vs Obsidian comparison if your decision is mainly about long-term notes.
- Use the remote-worker AI tools guide if you need a broader writing, meeting, and research stack.
FAQ
What is the best AI productivity tool for a side project?
The best tool depends on the bottleneck. Use Taskade for planning and project structure, Reclaim.ai for calendar protection, Readwise for research capture, and Setapp if you use a Mac and want a broader app bundle.
Should side-project builders use an AI workspace or a task manager?
Use an AI workspace when the project needs outlines, notes, brainstorming, and flexible structure. Use a task manager when the main problem is fast capture, recurring tasks, and weekly follow-through.
How many productivity tools should a side-project builder start with?
Start with one planning tool, one scheduling habit, and one capture system. Add another tool only when it removes a repeated problem that your current stack cannot solve.
When is it worth paying for AI productivity tools?
Pay when the tool directly protects time, reduces repeated setup work, or turns research and planning into output. Do not pay only because the tool has more features.
Pages to add next
This guide should become the hub for a monetizable side-project productivity cluster. The next pages should go deeper on the tools most likely to convert for a new site.
- Taskade review for side projects.
- Reclaim.ai review for remote workers.
- Readwise review for knowledge workers.
- Setapp review for laptop-first workers.
Plan, schedule, capture, then add utilities. That order keeps the tool stack from becoming the project.