What is Nexus?
Nexus is a collaborative knowledge workspace — a single, structured home for everything your team writes, plans, and knows. It replaces the patchwork of scattered Google Docs, abandoned Notion wikis, and Slack threads that most teams end up with.
The core idea
Everything in Nexus is a node — a document, a folder, or a calendar entry. Nodes live in a tree. You can nest them as deep as you like, move them freely, and find anything through search. There's no separate "file system" vs "database" vs "page" distinction to learn. One model, all the way down.
Who it's for
Nexus is built for teams who want a knowledge base they can actually trust. If your current setup involves:
- Docs that nobody updates because nobody knows they exist
- A Notion workspace that's grown into a maze
- New hires who spend their first weeks just trying to find things
- Important decisions buried in Slack threads
Nexus is designed to solve that. The structure is opinionated enough to stay organized, but flexible enough to fit how your team actually works.
What you can do
- Write — a focused block editor with slash commands, tables, code blocks, callouts, and more
- Organize — nest pages and folders into teamspaces, drag to reorder, link between pages
- Collaborate — real-time editing with live cursors, inline comments, and @mentions
- Plan — attach any page to a date on the built-in content calendar
- Import — bring in existing docs from Notion or paste Markdown directly
What makes it different
Most knowledge tools treat organization as a user problem — you figure out the structure, maintain it, and clean it up when it collapses. Nexus treats structure as a product responsibility. The tree is always visible. Pages have clear homes. The workspace grows with your team instead of against it.