Head to head

Ordinal vs RADAAR

vs

Ordinal (formerly Assembly) is built for one specific job: running social for a group of executives or employees. It drafts, schedules, routes for approval, and automates engagement across many personal accounts, and it's priced for companies, not individuals, from $95 a month.

From
$95 /mo
Free plan

RADAAR is an affordable all-in-one social tool that bundles scheduling, a unified inbox, and monitoring with a grab-bag of extras most rivals don't have: a URL shortener, landing pages, an RSS reader, a task manager, and a shared password vault. Plans start at $9.99 a month.

From
$7 /mo
Free plan

Bottom line

RADAAR is the pick for budget-conscious small businesses and boutique agencies, and it's the cheaper start, from $7 a month. Ordinal fits companies running executive or founder social programs better.

RADAAR starts cheaper, $7 a month against $95 a month for Ordinal. RADAAR adds social listening and social inbox that Ordinal leaves out.

Key differences

Where the two actually diverge, before the full tables.

  • RADAAR starts at $7 a month, Ordinal at $95 a month.
  • Ordinal posts to 6 networks, RADAAR to 10.
  • Only Ordinal reaches Threads.
  • Only RADAAR reaches Pinterest, YouTube, Google Business, Telegram, and WordPress.
  • RADAAR has social listening; Ordinal doesn't.
  • RADAAR has social inbox; Ordinal doesn't.

Features compared

FeatureOrdinalRADAAR
AI captionsYesNot assessed
Basic analyticsYesYes
Advanced reportsNot assessedYes
Bulk uploadNot assessedYes
Evergreen recyclingNoNo
Team rolesYesYes
ApprovalsYesYes
Link in bioNot assessedYes

Platforms compared

NetworkOrdinalRADAAR
InstagramAutoAuto
FacebookAutoAuto
X (Twitter)AutoAuto
LinkedInAutoAuto
TikTokAutoAuto
PinterestNoAuto
YouTubeNoAuto
ThreadsAutoNo
Google BusinessNoAuto
TelegramNoAuto
WordPressNoAuto

Pricing

Headline prices are for a single unit. Here is the real monthly cost as each tool scales, costed on its own unit so the two stay honest.

Ordinalflat pricing

No free plan; 14-day trial.

Cheapest paid plan
$95/mo

Whole-plan price; it doesn't scale per unit.

RADAARflat pricing

No free plan; 14-day trial.

Cheapest paid plan
$7/mo

Whole-plan price; it doesn't scale per unit.

Ordinal

Starter

$95 /mo
Scheduled posts
Unlimited
  • $95/mo
  • Drafting, scheduling, content calendar, approval workflows
  • For teams managing multiple executive accounts

Pro

Popular
$215 /mo
Scheduled posts
Unlimited
  • $215/mo (about $265 with Ordinal MCP)
  • Everything in Starter, plus unlimited seats
  • Account analytics, automated engagement (likes, comments, reposts), unlimited scheduled posts

Enterprise

Custom
Scheduled posts
Unlimited
  • Custom pricing
  • LinkedIn leads data, API access, custom permissions
  • SAML/SSO and prioritised support
  • Flat plans aimed at executive and team social programs, not individual scheduling, which is why the entry is $95 a month. Pro at $215 includes unlimited seats; a Pro plan with Ordinal MCP runs around $265.
  • There's no free plan, only a 14-day trial.
  • Ordinal (formerly Assembly) is built for running many personal/executive accounts together, used by companies like Zapier, Mercury, Clay, and Beehiiv to power their executive social presence.
  • Prices are USD from current listings.

RADAAR

Basic

$9.99 /mo

$7/mo billed annually

Scheduled posts
Unlimited
  • $9.99/mo, ~$7 on annual
  • Scheduling and core management for solo users
  • Unified inbox and URL shortener

Standard

Popular
$29.99 /mo

$21/mo billed annually

Scheduled posts
Unlimited
  • $29.99/mo, ~$21 on annual
  • More accounts and team seats
  • Monitoring, analytics, approval workflows

Professional

$79.99 /mo

$56/mo billed annually

Scheduled posts
Unlimited
  • $79.99/mo, ~$56 on annual
  • For growing teams and small agencies
  • Higher limits across the board

Advanced

$249.99 /mo

$175/mo billed annually

Scheduled posts
Unlimited
  • $249.99/mo, ~$175 on annual
  • For larger teams managing many accounts

Enterprise

$749.99 /mo
Scheduled posts
Unlimited
  • From $749.99/mo
  • Custom integrations, advanced security, dedicated support
  • Flat plans that scale by accounts and team seats, from a cheap $9.99 Basic up to Enterprise. RADAAR markets itself as one of the most affordable all-in-one tools.
  • There's no free plan, only a 14-day trial. Annual billing saves about 30%; non-profits get 50% off.
  • Beyond scheduling it bundles unusual extras: a URL shortener, landing pages, an RSS reader, a stock library, a task manager, and a team password vault.
  • Prices are USD, read off the live pricing page (the page rendered prices client-side, so figures were cross-checked against current third-party listings).

Pros and cons

Ordinal

  • Purpose-built for executive and employee social programs
  • Drafting, approvals, and analytics across many personal accounts
  • Automated engagement to grow those accounts
  • Unlimited seats on Pro; SSO and API on Enterprise
  • Expensive, and priced for companies not individuals
  • Network focus is LinkedIn and X, not visual platforms
  • No free plan, recycling, or full engagement inbox
  • Young product, lightly documented company

RADAAR

  • Very affordable, with a lot bundled in
  • Scheduling, inbox, and monitoring across ten networks
  • Unusual extras: URL shortener, landing pages, RSS, password vault, task manager
  • Approval workflows and client workspaces
  • Smaller, less-known platform
  • Busy, do-everything interface
  • Deeper features and limits sit on pricier tiers
  • No free plan

Ordinal vs RADAAR: FAQ

Is Ordinal or RADAAR cheaper?
RADAAR is cheaper to start, from $7 against $95 for Ordinal. The unit each one charges by differs, so the real bill depends on how many channels or seats you run.
Does Ordinal or RADAAR have a free plan?
Neither has a free plan. You get a free trial to test things, then you pay.
Which is better, Ordinal or RADAAR?
Ordinal is the stronger pick for companies running executive or founder social programs, while RADAAR is the better fit for budget-conscious small businesses and boutique agencies. We don't score them; the right call comes down to how you post.

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