Height vs Shortcut — Wer gewinnt?
Wähle Height, wenn: Produkt- und Engineering-Teams, die AI in jede Projektaktion eingebaut haben wollen — nicht nachträglich draufgeschraubt
Wähle Shortcut, wenn: Software-Teams, die aus Trello rausgewachsen sind, aber Jira erdrückend finden — der Sweet Spot für 10–100 Engineers
Unsere Einschätzung: Height for simplicity, Shortcut for power users.
| Height | Shortcut | |
|---|---|---|
| Preise | Free for unlimited members with basic features | Team $8.50/user/mo | Free for up to 10 users | Team $8.50/user/mo |
| Funktionen | AI-powered task creation and prioritization, Cross-team project views with filtering, Built-in spreadsheet-like attributes, Smart task suggestions from chat and docs, Real-time collaboration with offline support | Kanban and timeline views built for dev sprints, Deep GitHub, GitLab, and Sentry integrations, Docs and wikis inside the project tool, Iteration planning with velocity tracking, Milestones that group epics across teams |
| Am besten für | Product and engineering teams that want AI baked into every project action — not bolted on | Software teams that outgrew Trello but find Jira suffocating — the sweet spot for 10-100 engineers |
| Lernkurve | Mittel | Mittel |
Der wahre Unterschied
Both offer free tiers, so the real question is what you get when you start paying.
Height stands out with AI-powered task creation and prioritization and Cross-team project views with filtering. Shortcut counters with Kanban and timeline views built for dev sprints and Deep GitHub, GitLab, and Sentry integrations.
Height's Achilles heel: young product with a smaller ecosystem — integrations and templates lag behind asana and linear. Shortcut's: non-technical teams struggle with the developer-centric terminology and workflow assumptions. Pick whichever weakness you can live with.
Fazit
If you value ai-powered task creation and prioritization and produkt- und engineering-teams, die, go with Height. If software-teams, die aus trello matters more, Shortcut is your pick. Neither is a bad choice — but one will fit your workflow better.