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- Hien Phan
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The Productivity Tool Graveyard: My Confessions of an App Hoarder and What Finally Stuck
My phone's home screen is a testament to my past life. Folders named "Productivity," "Task Masters," "Focus Fuel," and "Workflow Wonders" overflow with apps I downloaded with the best intentions. Each one promised to be the solution, the magic bullet that would finally make me a hyper-efficient, perfectly organized solo founder.

The reality? Most of them ended up gathering digital dust.
I'd spend days, sometimes weeks, meticulously setting up a new task manager, only to abandon it when a new, shinier app came along. It was a cycle of hope, setup, frustration, and abandonment.
My brain felt more cluttered than my phone.
The core problem wasn't the apps themselves, but my approach. I was chasing the "perfect" tool instead of building a system that fit my actual workflow. I was an app hoarder, and it was killing my productivity.
To break free, I developed a simple, three-step "Productivity Tool Sanity Check" framework. It's helped me declutter my digital life and finally find tools that stick.
My 3-Step 'Productivity Tool Sanity Check' Framework
- Identify the Core Problem, Not the Shiny Feature: Before even looking at a new tool, I ask myself: "What specific problem am I trying to solve right now?" Is it task overwhelm?
Difficulty tracking project progress? Forgetting ideas?
Be brutally honest. Most apps offer a million features, but you only need them to solve one or two core issues.
- The "One Week Rule" Test Drive: Once I identify a potential tool, I give it a strict one-week trial.
During this week, I force myself to use only this tool for its intended purpose. No switching back to old habits or other apps.
If it doesn't feel intuitive and genuinely helpful within those seven days, it's out. This prevents the endless "trying things out" phase.
- Integrate, Don't Replace (Unless Necessary): The goal is to build a system, not just a collection of isolated tools.
How does this new tool connect with what I'm already using? Can it sync?
Can I automate data transfer? If it requires a complete overhaul of my existing workflow, it's often a red flag.
Minimal integration is key for solo founders.

For my solo SaaS journey, this framework has been a game-changer. I used to jump between Notion, Todoist, Asana, Trello, and a dozen others. Now, my core stack is incredibly minimal.
For task management, I landed on Things 3. It’s not the cheapest, but its clean interface and focus on clear action items fit my brain perfectly.
I tried it during the "One Week Rule" and realized it solved my "task overwhelm" problem by forcing me to break down big projects. It doesn't try to be a note-taking app or a calendar; it's just a damn good task manager.
For note-taking and idea capture, I've gone back to basics: Apple Notes and Drafts. Drafts is phenomenal for quickly jotting down thoughts as they come.
I can then process them later, either in Notes or directly into Things 3. This simple combo eliminated the need for a complex second brain app.
For project management and tracking my 52-product challenge, I use a simple Google Sheet. It’s ugly, but it’s transparent and I can customize it exactly how I need.
It tracks key metrics, progress, and next steps for each product. It’s not fancy, but it works.

The biggest takeaway for you, fellow indie maker, is to stop chasing the "perfect" tool. It doesn't exist. The perfect tool is the one that fits your brain, your workflow, and helps you get things done without adding more complexity.
Focus on the core problems you need to solve. Test tools rigorously but briefly.
And build a system that integrates, rather than overwhelms. Your productivity, and your sanity, will thank you.
What are your go-to tools that actually stick? Let me know in the comments!

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