For people who already have a system — and want somewhere to think about how it's actually going
idazery combines tasks organized by context with daily reflection on the same timeline. It doesn't replace your productivity system — it adds what no task manager has: the space to think about how you're actually doing it.
- Tasks + Reflection Together
- AES-256 Encrypted
- No Installation Needed
What productivity tools don't have
They manage what you have to do. None of them produce self-knowledge about how the system itself is working.
Task managers know what's due, not how it's going
Todoist knows what you have to do. It doesn't know if you're doing it well, or why this week worked better than the last.
Notion organizes everything, except how you're actually doing
It can hold any system you build. It still has no space built in for reflecting on whether that system is working.
The calendar manages time, not how you lived it
It tells you where you were supposed to be. It says nothing about how that time actually felt or what you'd change.
Productivity tools measure activity, not self-knowledge
Without reflection, a system optimizes for looking productive — not necessarily for being it.
Sound familiar? idazery brings it all together: here's how
Reflection, integrated into the same system as your tasks
idazery doesn't replace your productivity tools. It adds the reflective layer they don't have, on the same timeline.
Today's tasks next to what you wrote about today
Open today and see what's still due alongside how the day actually went. No second app to keep in sync.
The weekly review, in the same space as next week's plan
Reflect on the week that's ending and plan the one that's starting without switching to a separate app that never talks to the rest of your system.
What got done, next to how it was
The done list records what you completed. The entry next to it records how it actually went.
Built around how productive people actually work
Not another productivity hack: the specific moments where reflection changes how the system itself performs.
Tasks organized by context, reorderable by priority
A topic for work, another for personal projects, another for health. Drag and drop to reorder priorities without friction. The monthly planner gives you a full view of the month. See how to organize your tasks by topic.
The weekly review, where it belongs
Reflection on the week that's ending and planning for the one that's starting, in the same space. Not in a separate app that never talks to the rest of your system. See why a done list matters.
A done list alongside the to-do list
Recording what you completed matters as much as planning what you'll do. Weeks that feel unproductive often have more real work in them than the to-do list shows. More on your done list.
Reflection on the system itself
What worked this week, what didn't, why. The space to think about how you work, not just to log what you did. See why this kind of reflection keeps you from stagnating.
Everything a productive person needs to reflect and plan
Built for the reflection your task manager doesn't have, alongside the planning it does.
Topics with drag & drop
Organize tasks by context and reorder priorities visually, without friction.
Monthly planner
A full view of the month, with tasks and events laid out alongside your reflections.
Daily timeline
Tasks and the day's reflection together, in chronological order.
Integrated done list
A record of what actually got done, not just what's pending. See why a done list matters.
Mood tracking
Track your emotional state alongside your productivity. The weeks with the best output have an emotional context worth recording. More in idazery's mood tracker.
Reminders and deadlines
Deadlines integrated into the same timeline as your journal, not a separate alert system.
PDF and Markdown export
Review a period of work or pull reflections out whenever you need them elsewhere.
Real privacy
AES-256 encryption. Reflections about how you work and why are especially private.
The reflection productivity systems are missing
The best productivity systems have a review built in — GTD has the weekly review, the bullet journal has the monthly migration. But that review usually happens inside the same system that manages the tasks, with no separate space to think about how the system itself is working. idazery is that space: it doesn't compete with Todoist or Notion, it's where you reflect on what those tools can't capture.
What you write about your own system stays private
Reflections on what's working, what isn't, and how you really feel about your productivity are especially private. Everything in idazery is protected with AES-256 encryption, there's no ad network, and nothing you write is used to train AI models.