Hola, Product Hunt! 👋 I'm Olive, an Airtable enthusiast and Airtable App developer.
Between work, chores, and side-hustles, it’s easy to get overwhelmed by all the Stuff that needs doing every day. That’s why I created Stuff to Do, an all-in-one task manager 📦
Stuff to Do was built on proven productivity methods - Getting Things Done by David Allen to manage tasks, and the MoSCoW Prioritization Method for triaging to-dos.
It's designed for frictionless task creation, detailed organization, and simple yet powerful prioritization.
How it works ↓
🟡 Capture it: Create new tasks from mobile or desktop, or jot down a quick note
🟣 Clarify it: Make subtasks to process to-dos into bite-sized, actionable steps
🟢 Organize it: Schedule, tag, categorize, and prioritize your tasks with ease
⚫ Review it: Analyze which task types take up the bulk of your time to boost productivity
✔️ Engage it: Get stuff done and view your growing list of ta-das (completed to-dos)
🌜 Or if you can't do it, snooze it!
🌟 I have a special offer for the Product Hunt community! Use discount code HUNTSTUFF for 55% off 🏷️
Thank you for taking a look at my launch! I hope my app helps you to stress less ✨
First? No really, this is a great idea and fantastic implementation. I have been playing around it for a bit and I can see it helping me bring some order into my chaos.
Congrats @olive_haus . Everything about your app is amazing. The idea, colors, design, copy, etc. "Turn your to-dos into ta-das" is probably the single best tagline I've seen in years.
Your app would be super useful for a busy engineer like me, but I'm not an Airtable user. What would you say to non-Airtable users to overcome their inertia and start exploring Airtable?
@jgani First off, thank you for such a fantastic question and for your kind words Jonni! 🙏
I think there are two reasons that Airtable would appeal to an engineer: data analysis and customized operations. I've used Airtable in my own agency for nearly 3 years to manage my operations (marketing, sales, accounting etc) and to build custom interfaces to streamline operations. Then, with the way data relates in Airtable's database, I run analyses.
Let me give you an example: when I consult with clients on Airtable, it tends to be those who work in professional services like real estate, accounting, legal, insurance, etc. I built a custom database and interface for an insurance agency - specifically, for their client services. They could manage insurance requests, email and text correspondence, and service tickets all in one place.
I then built forms, custom and repeatable task lists, and other custom interfaces to make repetitive tasks simpler and quicker, maximizing efficiency. With all this data from client services, I could run reports to see what tasks were taking up the most time in the agency, such as which specific groups of clients were taking up the most time or which types of service requests were the most time-consuming. And with Airtable, it's actually dead-simple to create these custom interfaces and run the analysis. It's built to be accessible as a no-code tool with the added potential and depth of low-code.
I hope that wasn't too long-winded! But it's personally why I use Airtable and why I also cannot see another tool filling that gap 💎
@jgani I used to use Google Sheets too, I get it! Here's a link to test the app for free and get a better feel for Airtable if you're interested https://bit.ly/try-stuff
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