KnodeGraph Integrations

Bring documents into KnodeGraph from the tools you already use. Each integration below covers a specific source surface — what it ingests, how the workflow runs, and the limitations to know up front. The integrations are export-and-ingest today, with live API sync on the roadmap for the major sources. Pro tier handles 50K nodes per graph; the free tier is enough to evaluate any single integration end to end.

Notion

Turn your Notion workspace into a queryable knowledge graph — people, projects, decisions, links.

Read more →

Obsidian

Pull entities, relationships, and themes out of your Obsidian vault into a real knowledge graph.

Read more →

Google Docs

Bring meeting notes, project briefs, and research docs from Drive into a single knowledge graph.

Read more →

PDF

Drop a folder of PDFs and get an interactive graph of every entity and relationship inside.

Read more →

How KnodeGraph fits into a broader knowledge stack

KnodeGraph is not trying to replace Notion, Obsidian, Google Docs, or your PDF library. Those tools handle authoring, capture, and team collaboration well. The gap they share is structural analysis: none of them tell you which decisions a person owned across the last quarter, which contracts share unusual clause language, or how three apparently unrelated research papers connect through a common method. A knowledge graph closes that gap, and KnodeGraph builds the graph from the source material these tools already hold.

The four integrations on this page cover the document surfaces most teams actually use. Notion holds project context, decisions, and meeting notes. Obsidian holds personal knowledge, research notes, and zettelkasten-style atomic ideas. Google Docs holds collaborative drafts, briefs, and reports. PDF is the universal file format for everything else — papers, contracts, regulatory filings, books. Most workflows end up touching two or three of these surfaces; KnodeGraph ingests them all into a single project graph so entities deduplicate automatically across sources.

Live API sync to Notion and Google Drive is on the next-major-release roadmap. Today every integration is export-then-ingest, refreshed on a manual cadence. For most strategic-graph use cases, weekly granularity is plenty — nothing in the workflow is operational. The sync gap matters more for highly active workspaces; for stable corpora, a one-time ingest plus quarterly refresh is the most common pattern in practice.

Frequently Asked Questions

Which integration should I start with?

Start with whichever tool already holds the bulk of the documents you want to graph. PDF is the universal entry point — most knowledge work eventually flows through PDF. Notion and Obsidian users with substantial vaults usually find immediate value re-mapping their existing notes. Google Docs is the right starting point for teams whose institutional knowledge lives in Drive.

Does KnodeGraph sync live with these tools?

Not yet — current integrations are export-and-ingest, with refresh on a manual cadence (typically weekly). Live API sync for Notion and Google Drive is on the roadmap for the next major release. For most strategic-graph use cases, weekly granularity is plenty; nothing in the workflow is operational.

Can I use multiple integrations in one graph?

Yes — and many users do. A typical pattern is a Notion vault for internal strategy plus a folder of PDF research reports plus a CSV export from CRM. KnodeGraph treats each source as documents in the same project graph; entities deduplicate by name (with the option to merge variants manually).

How big can my source corpus be?

Pro tier supports up to 50K nodes per graph. In practice that's 1-3K source documents post-extraction (each document yields ~20-100 entities depending on density). For larger corpora, split by topic or business unit into separate graphs and cross-link via shared exports. The free tier handles small evaluation projects up to 100 nodes.

Ready to Try KnodeGraph?

Start free with 3 graphs and 100 nodes. Upgrade to Pro for AI extraction, unlimited graphs, and 50K nodes.

Get Started Free