An accountability coach in your texts
Answer honestly. You'll get a no-nonsense, step-by-step plan — and a coach who texts you every day until it's finished.
Good. The goal is named — that was step zero.
Your plan is being drawn up. We onboard in small groups, so watch your texts: it arrives as soon as your spot opens.
Subtraction, not discipline
Split attention finishes nothing. The coach holds you to one goal — only one — until it's done.
New ideas feel like progress. They aren't. Text them to the coach and he parks them for later, so your mind can let go.
A single time-boxed hour on the right step outworks a scattered day. You'll block one every morning.
Finishing isn't a personality trait.
It's a framework.
Why this exists
I wasn't lazy. I was ambitious — and stuck. Video games ate my evenings, and "productive" side quests ate my weekends without moving anything real.
What changed wasn't discipline. It was subtraction. I stopped multitasking. I learned to ignore the shiny object. I time-boxed one hour for the one thing, and left myself breadcrumbs so tomorrow always had an obvious first move.
Small changes, applied consistently. That's the whole trick — and it's the framework this coach runs on.
How it works
A few sharp questions. No forms for the sake of forms.
Concise, verb-first steps — each with a definition of done and a date. You'll see your estimated finish before you commit.
3–4 a day: morning direction, a focus hour, an evening review. Reply DONE or STUCK. Until it's finished.
The coach, verbatim
Day 12. Step 4 of 9: outline the landing page. You said 9am — one hour, one thing. Reply DONE or STUCK when the hour ends.
STUCK
Stuck is information. Name the smallest piece you could finish in 20 minutes and start there. The rest follows.
DONE. outline's rough but it exists
Rough and existing beats perfect and imagined. Tomorrow, step 5. Rest.
One eye. One goal.
$29/month after a free 7-day trial. No card to start. Cancel any time — with a text.
Name your goal