Monday.com can track your content like any other project. Revlis runs it. Viral research, psychology frameworks, and a short-form script engine, built for social media managers, not configured from blank boards.
Built by a social media manager, for social media teams.
Monday.com is a powerful work OS you adapt with boards and automations. Revlis is a social media operating system that ships with the research, frameworks, and scripts already inside.
Every post is engineered around how the brain processes the first 3 seconds, not post more and hope.
Track competitors, search by keyword, or paste any video link to get the hook, structure, and psychology behind why it won.
Strategy, planning, a script Laboratory, and month-over-month iteration. Not a blank board, but an operating system for content.
Designed around the social media workflow by a working SMM, not a generic template you bend into shape.
Grouped by the social media workflow Revlis is built around: strategy, research, planning, creation, and iteration.
This is where the two tools stop being comparable. Monday has none of it.
Strategy and research go in; a directed short-form script comes out.
Monday can hold a strategy doc in an item. Revlis turns strategy into reusable inputs for every script.
Monday is a serious project manager, and this is where it genuinely competes.
Revlis is built for agencies juggling brands, though Monday wins on general team ops.
Monday gives you boards to track work. Revlis does the research, writes the scripts, and plans in layers that speak social.
A task board can hold a card that says “make this.” It can’t tell you why a video won. Revlis breaks every post into the hook, the structure, the psychology, and the funnel stage, so you stop guessing.
Pick an audience, an offer, and an angle. Revlis writes the hook and the full short-form script with audio and visual direction, then lets you iterate until it’s ready to film.
Voice, audiences, offers, and content pillars live in one place. Every tool in Revlis writes from this context automatically. Update it once, and it applies everywhere.
Plan scripts, posts, carousels, and videos in one view, then switch between calendar, kanban, table, and pipeline views. Share read-only review links with clients.
One comparison page per tool. Pick the matchup you’re weighing.
For a social media content workflow, yes. Revlis covers strategy, viral research, planning, scripts, and iteration in one place. Monday can track that work like any other project, but it has no research engine, psychology frameworks, or script generator, so you'd build all of it yourself. For company-wide project management across departments, Monday stays broader.
For social media specifically, yes, because it's purpose-built. Competitor and keyword research, outlier detection, replication blueprints, and a short-form script engine simply don't exist in Monday. Monday is the stronger general project manager, but it has no social media intelligence.
No. Monday tracks tasks, projects, and workflows. It can't pull or analyze TikTok and Instagram performance data, detect outliers, or break a video down by hook, structure, and psychology the way Revlis does.
Yes. Monday has strong calendar, board, and timeline views with automations. But you build the content structure, deliverable pipelines, and social context yourself. Revlis ships a social-specific calendar with strategy layering and client approvals ready to use.
Revlis starts free and has paid plans around $49 and $99/mo, scaling by how many competitors you track. Monday has a limited free tier and per-seat paid plans that rise with team size and features. Compare on value: Revlis bundles social research and frameworks; in Monday you'd build those yourself.
Posting is the easiest part. Let Revlis handle the hard part: the strategy, the research, the psychology.
psychology first, always