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When monday.com Isn't Missing Much - Just One View
The Problem
A growing construction company came to us from the start - we implemented monday.com across their operations from the ground up. Boards were organized, workflows were automated, teams were collaborating, and for the most part, it was working.
But there was one gap they couldn't close: scheduling and resourcing visibility.
They needed a way to see, at a glance, who was assigned to what, across multiple boards, in a single timeline - and to be able to drag, drop, and reassign people and tasks on the fly. monday.com's native views got them close, but not quite there.
Their instinct, understandably, was to start shopping for dedicated scheduling software - a whole new system, a whole new login, a whole new thing for the team to learn, just to get one visualization type they needed.

The Solution
Instead of ripping and replacing, we built them a custom job scheduler app, embedded directly inside monday.com as its own board view.
The app pulls items from multiple boards into a single, unified timeline. From there, the team can:
- Drag and drop people and tasks directly on the timeline to reassign or reschedule
- Group by person using the left panel, so managers can see workload at a glance
- Search for a specific task or team member instantly
- Export the view to Excel whenever they need a snapshot for reporting or offline planning
- Select the People column to instantly see who owns which task
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No new platform. No new login. No retraining the team on a second tool. Just the one view they actually needed, living inside the system they already used every day.
The Bigger Lesson
This project is a good example of something we see constantly:
Companies don't usually need a whole new system - they need one feature.
One visualization type. One workflow gadget. One view that their current platform just doesn't offer out of the box. And because that one thing is missing, the instinct is to go shopping for an entirely separate piece of software to cover it.
We've watched other monday.com partners build this exact kind of thing directly as a feature inside their own product - proof that it's a real, recurring need, not an edge case.
The truth is, in most cases, that one missing piece can be built as a custom app and dropped straight into the platform the team already knows. It's faster to adopt, cheaper to maintain, and it removes the "which system do I check for this" problem entirely.
If there's one takeaway we want people to walk away with, it's this: before you buy a second system, ask whether you actually just need one well-built feature added to the system you already have.
The Investment & Timeline
Projects like this typically run in the $10K–$15K range, depending on how robust the build needs to be and how ready the client's team is to onboard and use it.
Timeline-wise, a project like this is realistically achievable in around two months - start to finish, from scoping through deployment.
Built With a Great Partner
While our team handled the monday.com implementation from day one, the custom scheduler app itself was a team effort with another developer: B-lab, a custom app development team based in Vietnam.
Have a workflow gap that's got you shopping for a whole new system? Talk to us first - there's a good chance one custom app is all it takes.
Related Questions
It's a purpose-built extension that lives inside your existing monday.com account - as a board view, widget, or integration - built to do something the native platform doesn't offer out of the box. It's not a separate product; it's an added capability inside the system you already use.
The native views are great for single-board timelines, but they don't easily let you pull items from multiple boards into one grouped, drag-and-drop scheduling view organized by person. That cross-board, resource-first view was the specific gap this app closed.
No. The app was built to work with the client's existing board structure - it pulls from what's already there rather than requiring a rebuild.
Realistically, around two months from scoping to deployment, depending on scope and how quickly feedback and testing happen on the client side.
It varies by project, but most custom apps in this range fall between $10K–$15K, depending on how robust the build needs to be and how ready the team is to onboard and adopt it.
Minimal. Because it lives inside monday.com and mirrors familiar interactions (drag-and-drop, search, filtering), most teams pick it up quickly without formal training.
The underlying need - a unified, resource-based scheduling view across multiple boards - comes up across industries. The app itself is customized to the workflow, but the concept applies broadly.
Start with a conversation. In most cases, we can tell fairly quickly whether the fix is a custom app inside monday.com or something that genuinely requires a different tool.
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A curated collection of insights, guides, and case studies on workflow design, monday.com implementation, and operational structure.




