Task app that breaks chores into micro-steps for ADHD brains
Executive dysfunction transforms something as simple as "do the dishes" into a cognitive maze. The dishes sit right there in the sink. The person is fully aware they need to be cleaned. Yet the entry point remains completely obscured. Should the drying rack get emptied first? Does the counter need clearing? Where's the sponge? The task itself isn't difficult. Getting started is. Conventional chore apps reduce everything to a checkbox. For the roughly 15 million adults who have ADHD, that checkbox is precisely the obstacle — not the answer. TinyWin deconstructs household chores into micro-steps specifically designed around executive dysfunction. Type in "clean the kitchen" and the app generates an ordered sequence: wipe down the counter, fill the basin, scrub five items, pause and rest. Every individual step is bite-sized enough that starting feels effortless. The app monitors which step durations actually work, identifies the times of day with highest completion rates, and flags where tasks tend to stall out. Future sequences get recalibrated accordingly. Someone who thrives on Saturday mornings receives Saturday morning nudges. Someone who operates in ten-minute bursts gets ten-minute chunks. Launch as a mobile app. No smart home connections, no voice assistant hooks, no partner syncing in version one. The MVP requires three things: a task input field, a micro-step generator, and a push notification scheduler. Distribution happens exclusively via r/ADHD, partnerships with neurodivergent creators, and executive dysfunction groups on Facebook. The first 500 users get 60 days free. Their behavioral data becomes the product's foundational dataset. Pricing sits at $5 per month for individuals. Household plans run $12 per month. Neurodivergent communities and ADHD-focused YouTube creators represent where early adopters already congregate. Growth follows the same neurological thread: meal planning, medication reminders, self-care scaffolding, and partner communication tools. Most productivity apps fault neurodivergent users when they struggle. TinyWin adapts to how the brain actually operates. The steps stay tiny. The patterns accumulate. The victories cultivate a kind of confidence that no checkbox could ever deliver.