Calendars, clients, contracts, invoicing, analytics, and an AI partner that actually gets your brand — one workspace instead of the twelve tabs you have open right now.
You're already paying for a dozen apps to run your creative business. Koza is the one place they all converge — calendars, files, messages, scheduling, payments. Open one tab instead of twelve.
Twelve tools. Twelve subscriptions. Twelve tabs.
One Koza.
Koza was built by people who've spent years duct-taping HoneyBook, Notion, Later, Trello, and Canva together to run their work. We knew what we wanted in a single tool. Nobody made it. So we did.
Whether you're a manager handling a few clients, an agency running twenty, or a café owner who hates Canva — Koza scales to you. Same tool. Different doors. A friendly AI named Oza in all of them.
The full toolkit, in one place — so you can stop paying for five tools and start running a real business.
Plan, draft, and schedule across every client. Feed previews built in.
Each client gets their own door — to approve, view, and chat.
Forms, signatures, and intake — no more email scavenger hunts.
Send invoices, collect retainers, track everything in one place.
Plain-English reports clients actually understand.
Every client's colors, fonts, and voice — always one click away.
Plan content shoots, gather references, share with the team.
Conversations live where the work does — not in your inbox.
Repeating tasks, follow-ups, reminders — set once, run always.
I'm the AI inside Koza. I read your analytics, draft your captions, plan your week, send invoices, automate workflows, and help small businesses who've never marketed a thing in their lives sound like they have a team.
Most creatives juggle $120+/mo in tools. Pick one plan, cancel the rest.
For creators testing the waters.
For freelancers and small creative businesses.
For agencies and creative teams.
All plans include a 14-day free trial. No credit card required.
Annual billing saves 20% — Pro $24/mo, Studio $63/mo.
Calm, useful, founder-led. A tool that respects your taste — and quietly looks like it.