A tool that helps individuals track their personal energy levels and productivity through a 'week in review' template, possibly with UI/UX built on self-reported data or integrating with existing tools, to provide insights into what activities energize or drain them.
Opportunity5.9
Why now
Increased focus on personal well-being, burnout prevention, and optimizing work/life balance, especially post-pandemic. Existing manual solutions show a clear demand for a more polished product.
Market gap
Lack of a dedicated, well-designed, and integrated tool specifically for tracking and visualizing personal energy and productivity trends based on self-reported data and calendar events, particularly with a 'week in review' focus.
Business fit
Type
SaaS, App
Target
Individuals looking to optimize personal energy and productivity, content creators, solopreneurs.
Revenue
unknown (likely subscription model)
Founder
Someone passionate about personal productivity, UX/UI design, and data visualization.
Scores
Problem
8.0
Feasibility
6.0
Why now
7.0
Go-to-market
7.0
Confidence
9.0
Proof signals
Greg's personal calendar color-coding ('energy color coding my calendar')
Noah's Google Forms survey for weekly review ('a survey that i give myself in google forms')
Existing apps like 'rise productivity' that track computer usage ('something called like rise productivity')
Concept of 'energy-draining' vs. 'energy-creating' activities ('who energizes your battery and who depletes it')
Discussion around post-meeting feedback ('after the email after the meeting you get an email it starts like getting data points')
Keyword demand
Keyword
Volume
Growth
Personal productivity
170/mo
-19% YoY
Energy tracking app
30/mo
+50% YoY
Week in review
480/mo
-33% YoY
US English Google Ads volume from DataForSEO; growth uses returned monthly search history.
Source episode
Bootstrapping Through A Bear Market with Noah Kagan8:09
I started energy color coding my calendar in real time after the meetings and it completely changed