AirOps vs Whalesync in 2026: AI-cited content creation vs two-way data sync
AirOps writes and tracks AEO content across ChatGPT, Perplexity, Gemini, and Google starting at free. Whalesync keeps Airtable, Webflow, Notion, and other no-code apps in sync in both directions starting at $5 a month. Both sit under Content Engineering, but they solve unrelated problems.
AirOps tracks AI search citations across ChatGPT, Perplexity, Gemini, and Google AI answers, and uses AI agents to draft and refresh the content itself. Whalesync has no AI visibility tracking of any kind.
Whalesync is built around true two-way sync: a change made in Airtable or Webflow flows to the other side automatically, in real time. AirOps has no data synchronization feature.
AirOps has a genuinely functional free Solo plan with real citation tracking included. Whalesync has no free tier at any price point.
Whalesync starts at $5 a month for 1,000 synced records. AirOps's cheapest paid plan is $199 a month for Pro, once the free Solo tier stops being enough.
AirOps automatically triggers a content refresh when citation tracking shows a page losing AI visibility. Whalesync has no content-creation or refresh capability; it only moves and reconciles existing data.
Whalesync connects Airtable, Webflow, Notion, Google Sheets, HubSpot, and other no-code apps. AirOps does not sync data with any of these platforms.
AirOps and Whalesync both show up in the Content Engineering category, but a team searching for one is rarely looking for the other. AirOps is an AEO platform: AI agents draft and refresh content built to earn citations in ChatGPT, Perplexity, Gemini, and Google AI answers, and the platform tracks whether that content actually gets cited over time. Whalesync has nothing to do with AI visibility. It is a no-code data sync engine that keeps records consistent in both directions between apps like Airtable, Webflow, Notion, and Google Sheets, so an editor working directly in the CMS does not get their change silently overwritten the next time the source database syncs. If your content team wants to know whether AI search is sending traffic to your category and improve what gets cited, AirOps is built for that job. If the actual problem is a database and a CMS falling out of sync because two different people edit from two different sides, Whalesync solves that and AirOps has no feature that touches it.
The tools at a glance
AirOps
AI-powered content creation and AEO optimization with citation tracking across ChatGPT, Perplexity, and Gemini
AirOps runs a content-and-tracking loop in one product: configurable AI agents draft and refresh content shaped for AI citation, direct answers, structured comparisons, FAQ pages, and the platform tracks whether that content actually earns visibility across ChatGPT, Perplexity, Gemini, and Google. When a tracked page starts losing visibility, an automated refresh workflow can trigger a rewrite without someone manually noticing the drop first.
The free Solo plan is the part that makes AirOps worth a look even before committing budget. It ships with real tracking across all four engines, plus basic content agents and competitor intelligence, so a team can validate whether AI search is worth investing in before paying anything. Offsite content management extends the same tracking to guest posts and partner pages, which matters because AI models frequently cite pages that are not your own homepage.
What AirOps does not do is touch anything outside its own content workflow. There is no data-sync layer, no white-label delivery for agencies managing client brands, and the AI agents take some setup time before they produce usable output. It is a tool for creating and measuring your own content, not for keeping databases or CMS platforms aligned with each other.
| Feature | Solo Free | Pro $199/mo | Enterprise Contact |
|---|---|---|---|
| AI models tracked | 4 | 4 | 4 |
| Content creation agents | Limited | Full | Full |
| Offsite content management | ✗ | ✓ | ✓ |
| Content refresh automation | ✗ | ✓ | ✓ |
| API access | ✗ | ✓ | ✓ |
Whalesync
True two-way data sync between Airtable, Webflow, Notion, Google Sheets, and more, without writing code
Whalesync exists to fix one specific failure mode: one-directional integration tools like Zapier push data one way, and the moment someone edits the destination directly, that edit gets overwritten on the next sync. Whalesync treats both sides of a connection as valid sources of truth, so a change in Airtable flows to Webflow and a change made directly in Webflow flows back to Airtable, without either side losing work.
Updates propagate in real time rather than on a polling schedule, and when a sync fails or two records conflict, Whalesync surfaces the error with enough context to fix it instead of failing silently. Record matching and filtering let a team sync only a subset of a table, which matters once a base has thousands of rows and only the published ones should appear downstream.
The scope is deliberately narrow. Whalesync only does sync, not general automation with branching logic, and it has no content-creation or AI-tracking feature of any kind. There is no free tier: the Personal plan caps at 1,000 records and a single connection, and Starter at $20/month is still capped at 5,000 records and 3 syncs. For a small operation running one Airtable-to-Webflow connection it is cheap and dependable; for several large synced tables the cost climbs quickly.
| Feature | Personal $5/month | Starter $20/month |
|---|---|---|
| Records synced | 1,000 | 5,000 |
| Two-way sync | ✓ | ✓ |
| Real-time updates | ✓ | ✓ |
| Error alerting | ✓ | ✓ |
| Number of syncs | 1 | 3 |
Head-to-head feature comparison
| Feature | ||
|---|---|---|
| Primary function | AI content creation and AI search citation tracking | Bidirectional data sync between no-code apps |
| AI search citation tracking | Yes (ChatGPT, Perplexity, Gemini, Google AI answers) | Not applicable, does not track AI models or citations |
| AI content creation | Yes (configurable AI agents) | No |
| Content refresh automation | Yes (Pro and Enterprise) | Not applicable, no content to refresh |
| Two-way data sync | No | Yes |
| Real-time updates | Not applicable, no sync connections to update in real time | Yes |
| Connected apps / AI platforms tracked | 4 AI platforms tracked (ChatGPT, Perplexity, Gemini, Google) | Airtable, Webflow, Notion, Google Sheets, HubSpot, and others |
| Error alerting | No | Yes |
| Free tier | Yes (Solo plan) | No |
| API access | No (Solo), Yes (Pro and Enterprise) | Not documented on either published plan |
| Starting price | Free (Solo), $199/mo (Pro) | $5/month |
Considering AI Peekaboo alongside AirOps and Whalesync?

AirOps tracks real AI citations but has no white-label option for agencies, and Whalesync does not touch AI visibility at all, it only keeps data in sync between apps. AI Peekaboo ships a read and write API and white-label guest links on every plan from $50/month, plus a Looker Studio connector, so agencies get dedicated AI visibility monitoring without stitching an AEO content tool and a sync tool together to fill the gap.
Read the AI Peekaboo review →Which should you choose?
AirOps and Whalesync rarely compete for the same budget line because they operate on different layers of a content stack entirely. AirOps is about producing content and measuring whether AI models cite it. Whalesync is about keeping the underlying data consistent across the tools that content lives in before it ever gets to an AI model. A team publishing from a synced Airtable-to-Webflow pipeline could reasonably run both: Whalesync to keep the database and site aligned, AirOps to create and track the content that ends up on that site.
Bottom line
Choose AirOps if your problem is content: you need AI-shaped pages written and you want to know whether they are actually getting cited, and the free Solo plan is enough to find out before spending anything. Choose Whalesync if your problem is data: your Airtable base and your live site keep drifting apart because two different people edit from two different ends, and you need that fixed for $5 a month. These are not competing purchases, and treating them as substitutes for each other misses what each one is actually built to do.
Frequently asked questions
Can Whalesync track AI search citations the way AirOps does?
Whalesync has no AI visibility or citation tracking feature at all; it is a data synchronization tool, not a content or search tool. AirOps is the one built for tracking whether your content gets cited across ChatGPT, Perplexity, Gemini, and Google, using AI agents to draft and refresh the content itself.
Is AirOps or Whalesync cheaper for a small team just getting started?
AirOps is free to start on the Solo plan, with real citation tracking across four AI engines included at no cost. Whalesync has no free tier at all; its cheapest option is the $5-per-month Personal plan, capped at 1,000 synced records and a single connection.
Does AirOps have a two-way sync feature like Whalesync?
AirOps has no data synchronization capability, it does not connect to or sync records with apps like Airtable or Webflow. Two-way sync is Whalesync's core feature, and it is the tool to reach for if a database and a CMS need to stay aligned in both directions.
Which tool fixes a CMS that keeps getting overwritten by editors working directly in the live site?
This is exactly what Whalesync is built for. It treats both the source database and the live CMS as valid sources of truth, so an edit made directly in Webflow flows back to Airtable instead of being wiped out on the next sync. AirOps has no equivalent feature since it does not sync data between platforms at all.
Do I need both AirOps and Whalesync, or does one cover the other?
They solve different problems and can be used together rather than as alternatives. Whalesync keeps a content database and a live CMS consistent as both get edited; AirOps creates and tracks the AI-cited content that ends up published in that CMS. A team with a synced Airtable-to-Webflow pipeline could reasonably run both without redundancy.
Does Whalesync offer API access for custom workflows?
Whalesync does not document API access as a feature on either its Personal or Starter plan, so teams needing programmatic control over syncing should confirm directly with the vendor before assuming it exists. AirOps does offer API access, but only on the Pro plan and above at $199 per month.

