Oria didn’t start as a business idea.
It started with a personal need.
I was constantly trying different productivity apps — task managers, habit trackers, planners — but none of them truly fit how I think or live. They were either too complex, too rigid, or required too much setup just to get started.
So I asked myself a simple question:
What if I build something just for me?
Something minimal. Something fast. Something that respects my flow instead of interrupting it.
That’s how Oria was born.
Instead of chasing trends or copying existing tools, I focused on one principle:
Solve your own problems deeply, and others will relate.
Every feature in Oria came from a real need in my daily life:
I didn’t try to build a “feature-rich app.”
I tried to build a clear mind.
Oria is built around a few core ideas:
Most productivity tools overwhelm users.
Oria focuses on:
No unnecessary features. No clutter.
You shouldn’t need an account just to organize your life.
Oria is:
Your data stays yours.
The best tools disappear into your workflow.
Oria is designed to:
I use Oria every single day.
That means:
It’s not built for users.
It’s built with usage.
This isn’t a “launch and forget” product.
It’s an ongoing process:
Instead of aiming for perfection, I aim for:
Oria helps you:
It’s not just a task manager.
It’s a life structure tool.
If this resonates with you, you can check it out on the App Store:
👉 https://apps.apple.com/us/app/oria-shift-routine-planner/id6759006918
I’ve realized something important during this journey:
Productivity isn’t about doing more.
It’s about building a system that actually fits your life.
Oria is my attempt at that system.
And I’m just getting started.
"The 'Auth-free' and 'Local-first' approach is a bold move in a world of data-harvesting apps. You’ve successfully built a 'clear mind' for yourself, but the hardest part of the 'Indie Journey' is proving that people value that privacy enough to pay for it.
Since you're in the 'continuous refinement' phase, you should bring Oria into the Validation Arena (tokyolore.com).
It’s a $19 sprint where you have 30 days to see if you can turn your 'personal need' into a sustainable project.
The winner of the sprint gets a trip to Tokyo.
Since Oria is about 'planning the future,' there's no better reward than a week in the city that looks like the future.
The prize pool is brand new ($0), so it’s the perfect time to enter.