
Vector ToDo
PM tool for business and personal use
About
Vector ToDo — The Task Manager That Works With Your AI
Vector ToDo is a fast, offline-first task manager built for people who actually ship things. Whether you're a solo founder juggling a dozen projects or a team lead coordinating work across time zones, Vector ToDo gives you the structure to stay focused — without the complexity that slows you down.
Clean by design, powerful under the hood
Most task managers either feel like sticky notes or like enterprise software from 2012. Vector ToDo is neither. You get projects, areas, Kanban boards, smart sections, labels, notes, and subtasks — all in an interface that loads instantly and never gets in your way. Everything is keyboard-navigable, everything syncs in real time, and everything works offline.
AI-native from day one
Vector ToDo is the only task manager with native MCP integration for both Claude and ChatGPT in YOUR AI APP. That means your AI assistant can read your task list, create new tasks, move things between projects, and update priorities — all through natural conversation, with no copy-pasting or tab-switching.
Use case: You're in a Claude conversation planning a product launch. You say "add these 8 tasks to my Launch project and assign deadlines" — and they appear in Vector ToDo instantly. No manual entry.
Use case: You ask ChatGPT "what's overdue on my work projects?" — it reads your actual tasks and gives you a real answer.
Built for real workflows, not demos
Smart Workflows — GTD-inspired capture and process. Inbox, someday, waiting-for lists built in. Kanban Boards — drag-and-drop with custom sections per project. Calendar & Booking — attach due dates, view tasks in a calendar, share booking links with your team. Team Workspaces — invite members, assign tasks, track who owns what. Time Tracking — start a timer on any task, review time logs per project. Performance Reports — see completed tasks, streaks, and team output over time. Rich Notes — linked notes per project or task, not a separate app. Push Notifications — real-time alerts on web, mobile, and desktop. Use case: A freelance designer uses Vector ToDo to manage 4 client projects simultaneously — each with its own Kanban board, notes for briefs, and a time tracker to bill accurately. The weekly performance report tells her exactly where her hours went.
Use case: A small dev team runs their sprint in Vector ToDo. Tasks move through "Backlog → In Progress → Review → Done", each assigned to a team member. The project health dashboard shows what's overdue before the standup.
Use case: A solo founder captures every idea into the inbox while on mobile, then processes it into projects during their weekly review — using keyboard shortcuts the whole way through on desktop.
Available everywhere, feels native everywhere
Vector ToDo runs as a PWA on any browser — install it on iOS, Android, or any desktop OS in one tap. For macOS users, there's also a polished native app that integrates with the system like a first-party tool.
Free during early access. No credit card required.
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What other founders did to grow.
2722 dispatches from hundreds of founders, pulled from the week's best podcasts.
Bonus point — step four: have a tool to easily migrate your competitor's user to your platform with one click. In Uform we have a landing page where you can paste your Typeform URL and it will generate a Uform within a few seconds.
Build a one-click migration tool from the incumbent — switching cost is what kills conversions, not features
When attacking an established incumbent, friction kills switching more than features do. A one-click migration tool — paste a competitor URL, get your asset rebuilt instantly — removes that friction and turns the landing page into a working demo. Prospects see the value before they sign up.
just don't get emotionally attached to a project just use simple deadlines and milestone as the only source of truth to carry on or not i've wasted so many years to just you know believing in something that had no traction just because I was emotionally attached to the logo or the project or the team members
Let Deadlines And Milestones Be The Only Signal Because Ego Kills More Startups Than Bad Code
Loick names emotional attachment as the single biggest tax on his career — he kept resuscitating products because he loved the logo, team, or idea, not because the numbers said so. His prescription: pre-commit to deadlines and milestones, and let traction (or its absence) be the only input to the kill-or-continue decision.
There's a play for whatever you're stuck on.
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