Connor Payne

Pomodoro Club - A pomodoro timer, task manager & AI music made just for you

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Most productivity apps ignore how your brain actually works. Pomodoro Club is built for focus — especially if you're neurodivergent. It combines a Pomodoro timer, ADHD-aware focus music (personalized to your distractibility, energy, and genre preferences), task management with time-blindness tools (estimated vs actual time tracking), Spotify integration, and Google Calendar sync all in one place. No more juggling Forest + Todoist + Spotify. One app, designed to help you actually get things done.

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Connor Payne
Maker
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Hey Product Hunt! I'm Connor, the maker of Pomodoro Club. I built this because I was tired of juggling 3+ apps just to sit down and focus — a timer in one tab, a to-do list in another, and a "focus playlist" I'd spend 20 minutes picking instead of actually working. The idea started simple: what if your timer, your tasks, and your music all lived in the same place? But as I built it, I realized the music piece was the most interesting problem. Not everyone focuses the same way. People with ADHD need consistent rhythm with no surprises. Some people need calm ambient, others need driving deep house. So I built a recommendation engine that scores songs based on your ADHD profile, distractibility level, and energy preference. Here's what's in the box today: Pomodoro timer with custom cycles Focus music personalized to how your brain works (ADHD-aware) Spotify integration — use your own playlists during sessions Task management with time estimation vs. actual tracking (for time blindness) Streaks, analytics, and weekly focus reports Google Calendar integration is coming very soon once verified. What's the one thing that breaks your focus the most? And what do you listen to when you need to lock in?
Agbaje Olajide

@connor_payne 
This is a really smart integration play. The “stop juggling 3 apps just to focus” positioning hits immediately — and the ADHD-aware music engine is a genuinely differentiated angle, not just another timer.

One opportunity I see: the concept is strong, but the onboarding moment could probably lean even harder into personalization. If users immediately feel, “oh wow, this understands my brain” within the first 60 seconds, retention could spike. For example, a quick interactive focus profile before they even start their first session.

Also, the estimated vs. actual time tracking is powerful for time blindness — that could be framed more as a transformation story (e.g., “From guessing your day to actually predicting it”).

I’ve been doing short post-launch audits focused on activation and retention loops for productivity tools. If helpful, I can share a concise breakdown (3–4 tactical improvements to increase daily active sessions and reduce drop-off after week one).

Happy to send it over if that’d be useful.