today vs Sunsama: two daily planning philosophies compared

today
Calm daily planner
Time blocks, focus, commitments, reflection
vs
Sunsama
a daily planner app that integrates with Todoist, Asana, GitHub, and other tools to pull tasks into a guided daily planning ritual

What Sunsama and today share

Sunsama and today share a philosophical foundation: daily planning is a practice worth building a specific tool for. Both emphasize intentional daily planning over ad-hoc reactive work, both include end-of-day reflection, and both integrate with external calendars. The difference is scope: Sunsama is a comprehensive daily planning command center with integrations to dozens of task tools (Todoist, Asana, GitHub, Linear, etc.), guided daily planning rituals, time estimates on tasks, and a focused work mode. Today is a single-purpose, quiet daily planner — no integrations with task tools, no time estimation system, no guided ritual prompts.

What Sunsama does better than today

Sunsama's task integrations are its most compelling feature: you can pull tasks from Todoist, GitHub issues, Asana, and other tools directly into your daily plan, time-estimate each item, and work through them in a Kanban-like interface. For users already embedded in multiple task tools, this integration layer is valuable — it creates a single daily command center rather than requiring context switches between tools. Sunsama's guided daily planning ritual (a structured walk-through of yesterday's tasks and tomorrow's plan) also provides scaffolding that helps users establish the planning habit more quickly.

What today does better than Sunsama

Today is quieter by design. Sunsama's comprehensiveness — all those integrations, the guided rituals, the time estimation system — comes with cognitive overhead. Today's stripped-back interface takes less time to operate and produces less friction for users who don't need integration with multiple task tools. Today's energy tracking, friction logging, and focus session tracking with outcome linkage are dimensions Sunsama doesn't cover. For users who want to understand how their days actually went (not just what tasks they completed), today's multi-dimensional daily data is more revealing.

Pricing and who each tool serves

Sunsama costs $20/month or $16/month annually. Today has a free tier. The price difference is significant for individual users. Sunsama's pricing is most justified for professionals embedded in multiple task tools (Jira + Todoist + Asana) who need a single daily aggregation layer. Today's pricing is appropriate for users who want a focused, intention-setting daily planner without the complexity of tool integration. Users who find Sunsama's feature set more than they need often describe a desire for a simpler version — today is effectively that.

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