Launch HN: Akiflow (YC S20) – Bring your tasks and calendars together
For people who like to plan their time, it is tough to be realistic about what work you can get done without a calendar showing you how much time you can invest in your tasks. But it is hard to organize this because there is so much context-switching due to tasks coming from different apps—not to mention "unstructured" sources like email, notes taken during a meeting, a message on Slack, etc..
I’m that type of user—for me, my calendar has always been the ‘primary source of truth’. But the user experience was terrible. I had to keep to-do lists on the side of another app and manually turn my tasks into events to see them in the calendar. Tasks were scattered across messaging apps (emails, Slack), project management platforms, video calls, the web, etc., forcing me to jump between tabs, tasks and tools. I had to manually turn emails or Slack messages into tasks on Asana and always remember to push new tasks into my task lists.
We originally started Akiflow with a narrower idea: a command bar, similar to Alfred, to create tasks on Asana, Trello, etc.. or add events on the calendar. After a while, we learned that what our users really wanted was to have everything in one place. Once we understood that, it was obvious that we should pivot to building that one tool: a tasks+calendars app focused on making people faster.
How it works: most people start their day by checking outstanding conversations on their emails or Slack from mobile or desktop. There are two types of conversations—those that can be answered right away (in which case just do it!), and those that generate a task. The latter are what you save into Akiflow. Once you’re done processing your emails, Slack, etc., you open Akiflow where you find all your tasks coming from your various conversations and tools.
Once in Akiflow, you can organize each task quickly—you see all your to-dos and can drag and drop them into your calendar between events already scheduled. Alternatively, you can snooze a task for later if you need more time, or snooze it for someday if it isn't actionable yet.
Now you have a complete list of your tasks for today and can hunker down to work. As your day goes on, Akiflow sends notifications on what you should be working on, based on your calendar events and tasks. We make this easy—for example, when it is time for a call, you can join right away with a click or a shortcut.
We have integrations (via APIs) with multiple sources of to-dos (Gmail, Slack, Todoist, Notion, Asana, Trello, ClickUp, and anything else via Zapier and IFTTT) to consolidate tasks in a single inbox. We added a lot of keyboard shortcuts and a command bar (we had this ready from Akiflow #1) and built a desktop application that manages all this information and helps schedule it.
The calendar works offline and supports both events and tasks; it's built for time blocking and gives a comprehensive view of your day, week or month with features that make everyday actions much faster (join a call, share calendar availability, meet with, review your days). We integrate with your Google Calendar with a two-way sync, and we support working entirely offline. We also have a mobile app currently in beta to add and manage tasks on the go.
The desktop application is built using Electron and React. We use some native node modules to use a local SQLite database to store all the information and provide offline support. Our desktop app is in sync with our cloud, so multiple desktop clients will be kept in sync.
If you're interested in trying the product, we have a free 7 days trial available; after that, we have a basic SAAS pricing model (https://akiflow.com/pricing/).
We woul...
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[ 6.4 ms ] story [ 138 ms ] threadIt is a major roadblock for many of us stuck to that product.
In general it goes (GitHub if you're a dev tool, Apple if you're mobile), Google, MSFT, other SSO, in that order.
We are getting more and more requests for developers' tools! In the meantime, you can already connect Jira via Zapier. We already created some templates for you to use and you can find them in Settings > Integrations > Add via Zapier or use these links: https://zapier.com/apps/jira/integrations/akiflow https://zapier.com/apps/jira-software/integrations/akiflow https://zapier.com/apps/jira-service-desk/integrations/akifl...
Thanks for innovating in a crowded space :)!
"""
I've done a lot of research into this calendar/tasks/notes space, how does this compare to
- Sunsama [0]
- Daybridge
- Routine [1]
- Agenda
- NotePlan
- Cron
- TickTick
and the hundreds of others out there?
I've also seen a lot of apps like this shut down over the years, such as Sunrise [2], Woven [3] and more. Personally speaking, I even hesitate to continue on my own app as well because it seems the market is saturated with the same exact idea and style, but it seems that users aren't really that attached to one company for it to generate enough revenue to keep building.
[0] https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=24990238
[1] https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=26565629
[2] https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=11676448
[3] https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=26882680
"""
[0] https://getartemis.app
[1] https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=32312413#32313370
It would be great if you could send us a message in the intercom chat so we can check what's going on.
I'd pay for it myself, but I wouldn't be able to integrate with anything - eg our O365 tenant will be fully locked down.
Or perhaps there is something like a legacy IT team that has to review every app that wants to connect to the internal O365 tenant (or similar). That process sometimes takes forever and the resulting friction grinds my motivation to keep exploring to near-zero.
I'm coming from a start-up in the cybersecurity space that uses O365 but is overall reluctant to link other products to O365. So, we can instead use whatever lives within Microsoft's garden of products available in Teams (for example) but not link most 3rd-party apps like this one.
Business Teams planner: assign tasks to others, sync with other task tracking apps
or Family planner: shopping lists, financial planner etc.
or continue on a personal planner route
What is your opinion of this XKCD?
https://xkcd.com/927/
Currently, we don't believe that any of the apps in this space is clearly taking over the competition, and so we think that there is still the opportunity of finding the right way of doing it.
It seems unfortunate that the free plan is really just a 7 day trial, unless I misunderstood
I didn't try Amie personally, but I agree that importing tasks automatically via integration is one of our differentiators. We put a lot of effort into creating a strong task management tool and we have a set of features to enhance planning. For example, we added rituals to plan our day, folders, labels, and sections to organize your tasks. On top of that, we offer a full calendar experience optimized for time blocking with features like "meet with", share availability, multiple time zones and customizable views
Thank you - it's quite unfortunate that there isn't a "free plan"
I used to use an app called Acapela[2] for a while, but they went out of business.
I am mostly interested in Slack integration and it seems that you nailed it. Pricing for your product ($15) is double than Slack itself ($7.25), but I will be happy to pay the price if it solves my problem of scheduling work that falls in through Slack.
[1] https://brandonkboswell.com/blog/Optimizing-the-iPhone-for-p...
[2] https://acapela.com/
Large enterprises have little incentive to invest in additional calendaring functionality, and the market for individuals who are this passionate about keeping a schedule cannot be very big. If it's even 'medium-sized' (for some arbitrary definition of that), the CAC must be crazy because people aren't typically seeking out products like this, and competition in the app stores (and ad prices) are fierce.
Is the game plan here to rapidly get enough traction to exit to a major player in productivity/calendaring? Feels like a tuck-in. I can't imagine how this becomes a huge business, but I'm genuinely curious to hear what the strategy and target audience might look like.
Regarding the CAC, so far the vast majority of our growth was organic we invested very little in paid advertising.
Since pandemic there are a ton of real companies making actual money and willing to pay for things (!!!) who are using M365. Something like 85% of companies, in fact.
I so often see products starting with e.g. Google Docs integration or dev tools integration, and feel as though, okay, you're scratching your particular itch, but please won't you pop up from SV/HN/dev bubble and let companies with money all across middle business America give it to you?
Start by adding "Sign in with Microsoft" and support the Work/School accounts not just personal. Boom, you just expanded your reach by becoming frictionless to the 85% of the market you were not previously catering to.
Also consider answering the Teams integration and Microsoft TODO object integration threads. They're sorted in your planned columns, with not a peep in over a year.
PS. Don't forget Sign In with Apple. If there is a group as apt to toss money at you for productivity as people with Gmail, it's people with iPhones and Macs.
TL;DR, your login should look like this:
https://www.xsplit.com/user/auth
PS. Yes, that example has SSO, and no, it's not that hard to add support for now that Google and Azure both have wizards, not just startups using Okta. In fact, if you get rid of the little email icon, tada, you no longer have to store people's passwords at all, and can say important-sounding things about taking people's security seriously.
PPS. Great product idea, and slick implementation so far. Countless people I know want this. They'll need you to support their IdP though.
We didn't do it so far because our main problem was product-market fit, and increasing the addressable market was secondary.
I agree with everything you said, and thanks for the suggestions!
But, how do you compare to Motion (https://www.usemotion.com/). I've been super curious about using a product like this. The other one I considered was Sunsama. (https://www.sunsama.com/). Would love your thoughts here.
A lot of our users have been using either Sunsama or Motion and I'm sure that some of our users moved to them after trying Akiflow. We have many differences in terms of features, UI and UX. For example, Motion puts a lot of focus on ai powered scheduling while we are more focused on making sure the users can plan their time "intentionally".
One thing I learned building Akiflow is that productivity is extremely personal and there's no right or wrong. I'd encourage to give a try to all and see what works
This is so spot on! We're having similar learnings with eesel [1] too. Work is far too scattered across apps. Thanks for sharing your journey so far and congrats on the launch!
[1] https://eesel.app
Even then, requiring incredibly invasive permissions for a productivity app is unreasonable. Just limit the features that "need" those things instead.
Unfortunately a fully functioning calendar is key to our product and we decided not to limit features at the moment. We'll consider a "lighter" approach in the future
Downloaded the app and got to the Oauth Google Cal part of onboarding and bailed. Sad, too, because I already timeblock daily using paper. This seems like an easy buy for me if it does what it says on the tin. But not with a perms model like that.
Is there a roadmap alongside this product that shows at what stage this product plans to seperate itself from the; ticktick’s, sunsamas, and motions of the world?
I feel when selecting apps like these now a day the real question is almost where do you want to put your money? Future support and development seems to be my main concern since, almost all of their features are mutually inclusive of one another despite a small few, esp with zapper integrations. Does anyone see something I’m not?
We think that our solution to productivity makes us quite different from the other tools in the market: Consolidation + Time Blocking. Happy to share more about this
Regarding our roadmap, we are still working on nailing the individual experience, before we look at how team member can interact with each others in a more productive way
I see a lot of mouse clicking and dragging in the demo video. A truly productivity-focused tool should be heavily keyboard-shortcut based. Just my opinion :) Or are there Kb shortcuts that I am missing?
-> https://www.notion.so/akiflow/Keyboard-Shortcuts-d523d9377fc...