Why This Exists: The ADHD Entrepreneur Problem
The ADHD brain is a superpower and a saboteur at the same time. You can spin up 15 workstreams in a week that would take most people a quarter. You can see connections nobody else sees. You can hyperfocus for 8 hours straight when something clicks.
But here's what actually happens most mornings: you wake up and there are a million floating things in your head. OA operations. Legal issues. Sales strategy. Partnership follow-ups. Your book. Your newsletter. Your personal brand. Cash flow. A team that needs teaching. A software product that's been sitting for four years. All of it feels equally urgent. All of it is genuinely important. And the sheer volume creates paralysis.
The biggest challenge isn't capability. It's priority management. Because of your massive attention span, competency, and ability to open loops so fast, you quickly lose track of what to focus on. And underneath that is something deeper: fear. If you put all your energy on just one thing and it doesn't work... then what? The irony is that by doing many things, you do none of them well.
Sequential Domination vs. Parallel Diffusion
The human brain was not designed to multitask. Study after study confirms this: the American Psychological Association found that switching between tasks can cost up to 40% of productive time. Stanford research showed that heavy multitaskers are actually worse at filtering information and switching contexts than people who focus sequentially. Dr. Gloria Mark at UC Irvine found it takes an average of 23 minutes to refocus after an interruption.
For ADHD brains, this is amplified. The executive function system that manages task-switching is already strained. Every open loop consumes working memory. Ten open loops means your cognitive RAM is full before you've done anything.
Sequential Domination means choosing a small number of priorities and driving them forward one at a time, stacking wins. Give yourself permission to focus on just the one thing in front of you, knowing the others are safely held in the system and will get their turn.
Parallel Diffusion is what happens by default. You touch 12 things, advance none of them meaningfully, and end the day feeling busy but empty. Energy diffused in parallel produces heat but no motion.
This app is architected around Sequential Domination. The 5-task limit, the energy matching, the revenue isolation, the weekly #1 pick... every feature exists to narrow your focus to what matters RIGHT NOW and give your brain confidence that everything else is handled.
How the Architecture Fights ADHD Sabotage
- Decision paralysis → 5-task ceiling. The ADHD brain freezes when presented with too many options. This app never shows more than 5 tasks at once. The algorithm picks them. You just execute.
- Energy mismatch → energy-state matching. Forcing deep strategic work when you're depleted guarantees failure and guilt. Tap your current energy. The engine adapts. Low energy? You get quick wins. High energy? You get the hard stuff that moves the needle.
- Revenue tasks buried under admin → revenue isolation. The ADHD brain gravitates toward easy, high-dopamine tasks (emails, Slack, small admin). The Revenue tab and revenue-first ranking ensure money-moving work never gets buried.
- Working memory overload → instant capture inbox. Dr. Russell Barkley's research: ADHD working memory is unreliable. If a thought isn't externalized within seconds, it's gone. The Inbox is frictionless capture. Type it, enter, done.
- Unconscious avoidance → defer tracking. Most ADHD task avoidance happens without awareness. The defer counter and "avoiding this?" flag after 3 defers makes the pattern visible. Not as guilt. As information: do it, delegate it, or delete it.
- Willpower dependence → environment design. Benjamin Hardy's core finding: willpower is an unreliable resource. The people who achieve their goals don't have more willpower... they design environments where the right behavior is the path of least resistance. This app IS that environment.
- Relationship decay → proactive reminders. "Out of sight, out of mind" is an ADHD trademark. The People tab and relationship reminders on the Right Now screen ensure important connections don't silently go cold.
- System abandonment → guided weekly review. Most ADHD productivity systems fail because they become write-only... things go in but never get reviewed. The Review tab walks you through a 5-step guided process so the system stays alive.
- Gap thinking → gain measurement. Hardy and Sullivan: ADHD entrepreneurs constantly measure the gap between where they are and where they want to be. This creates chronic dissatisfaction. The Settings tab measures backward... how many tasks did you complete this week? Progress builds momentum.
Morning Start (5-10 minutes)
- Open the Command Center. Not email. Not Slack. Not texts. This is your first screen.
- Check your energy. Be honest. Tap High, Medium, or Low. This isn't a judgment call... it's a calibration. If you slept 4 hours, you're Low. That's fine. The engine adjusts.
- Look at your 5 tasks. These are the only 5 things that exist right now. Everything else is held safely in the system. You don't need to think about it. The algorithm already sorted 50 tasks to find these 5.
- Pick #1 and start. Not #1 and #2 and #3. Just #1. Sequential Domination. Do that one thing. When it's done, the next one surfaces automatically.
- Brain dump anything new. If you woke up with ideas, anxieties, or to-dos floating in your head, dump them ALL into the Inbox immediately. Don't organize them. Don't evaluate them. Just externalize them so your working memory is clear for the actual work.
Midday Check-in (2 minutes)
- Re-check your energy. It may have shifted. Tap the new level. The Right Now tab recalibrates.
- Glance at Revenue. Did you touch at least one revenue-moving task today? If not, that's your next action. Admin can wait. Revenue can't.
- Dump any new captures. Anything that hit you during the morning... conversations, ideas, follow-ups... goes into Inbox. Don't process it now. Just capture.
End of Day (10 minutes)
- Process your Inbox. Go through each unclarified item and give it an energy level (H/M/L). Set priority and company if obvious. Archive anything that's "someday/maybe." Delete anything that's noise. Goal: Inbox Zero.
- Celebrate completions. Open Settings, look at "Done This Week." You did that. Don't skip this step. The ADHD brain naturally focuses on what's left, not what's done. Measuring the gain builds momentum.
- Check the Pipeline. Quick scan of the kanban. Anything stuck in "Waiting" too long? Anything in "In Progress" that should move? This is a 60-second visual sweep.
- Set tomorrow's energy expectation. If tomorrow has a heavy calendar, you know you'll be Medium or Low by afternoon. Plan accordingly... front-load the hard task.
Weekly Review (Sunday evening or Monday morning, 20-30 minutes)
This is the most important ritual. Without it, the system dies. The Review tab guides you through 5 steps:
- Process every inbox item. Nothing stays unclarified going into a new week.
- Check overdue follow-ups. Anyone owe you something for more than 7 days? Nudge them or decide it doesn't matter.
- Review cold relationships. Anyone you haven't talked to in 30+ days that matters? Send a text. Make a call. It takes 2 minutes.
- Pick your #1 revenue task for the week. This is the Sequential Domination decision. Out of everything, what is the ONE thing that moves the most money this week? That's your North Star. It gets first energy, best time slots, and priority over everything else.
- Rate your week and reflect. 1-10 scale. Brief notes. Were you in Sequential Domination mode, or did you slip into Parallel Diffusion? No judgment. Just awareness. The trend line matters more than any single week.
The confidence principle: The weekly review is what gives you permission to focus sequentially during the week. When you know every open loop has been reviewed, categorized, and prioritized... you can trust the system. The fear that you're forgetting something goes away because the system is holding it all. Your brain can stop scanning and start doing.
How to Choose When Everything Feels Urgent
The ADHD brain treats everything as equally urgent. Legal issues, sales strategy, partnership follow-ups, your book, operational fires... they all scream at the same volume. Here's the framework to cut through:
The Three Filters (apply in order):
- On fire? Is there a genuine deadline or consequence in the next 24-48 hours? Legal deadlines, payroll, client emergencies. These go first. Not because they're most important, but because they'll burn you if ignored. Handle them, then return to what matters.
- Moves money? Of everything remaining, what directly generates revenue, closes a deal, or prevents revenue loss? This is the Revenue tab. ADHD brains often avoid these because they're big, ambiguous, and carry risk of rejection. The fix: break them into one concrete next action. Not "advance the WorkIz partnership"... instead, "send the follow-up email to Didi."
- Compounds over time? What creates leverage? Teaching your team a skill so you don't have to do it again. Building a system that runs without you. Writing a chapter of the book. These don't feel urgent, but they're the highest-ROI uses of your time. Schedule blocks for these... they'll never feel urgent enough to happen spontaneously.
Everything else is maintenance. Email, Slack, routine operations, small admin tasks. These are necessary but they are not where your unique value lies. Batch them. Delegate them. Do them during Low energy windows.
The permission you need: It's okay to let things sit. Not everything needs to move today. The 1-on-1 Connections platform that's been sitting for four years? It will sit for one more week while you close a revenue-moving deal. But it won't sit forever, because the weekly review will keep surfacing it until you either act on it or consciously decide it's not the priority right now. Deciding "not now" is a valid decision. Avoiding the decision is not.
Decision Engine + Controls
Energy Buttons (High / Medium / Low)
Tap your current energy state. The decision engine re-ranks your tasks instantly.
- High energy: Surfaces strategic work, creative tasks, and difficult items that need your best brain
- Medium energy: Shows a balanced mix of tasks across priorities
- Low energy: Only shows quick wins (under 15 minutes) and easy tasks. No heavy lifting when you're depleted
The Decision Engine (ranking algorithm)
- Overdue deadlines first ... anything past its due date shows up regardless of energy. Urgency activates the ADHD brain
- Revenue-impact tasks second ... tasks flagged as money-moving get priority so they never get buried under admin
- Priority + energy match third ... tasks matched to your current energy state, sorted by priority level (critical > high > medium > low)
- Backfill ... if fewer than 5 tasks from the above, remaining open tasks fill the remaining slots
Task Card Buttons
- Done ✅ ... Marks the task complete with a satisfying slide-off animation (small dopamine hit by design)
- Defer ⏩ ... "Not right now." Pushes the task down. Tracks how many times you've deferred it
- Mark Revenue / Revenue ✓ ... Toggles revenue-impact flag. Flagged tasks rank higher and appear in the Revenue tab
Tags
- 15m ... estimated time
- OA / BST ... company
- 💰 revenue ... moves money
- ⚡ quick win ... fast dopamine hit
- 🔴 avoiding this? ... 3+ defers. Gentle awareness nudge
Relationship Reminder: If someone in your People tab is overdue for contact, a reminder card appears at the bottom.
Frictionless Capture + Clarify
Pure capture. When something hits your brain, type it and hit enter. Don't organize. Don't prioritize. Just externalize it. This is based on modified GTD: capture and processing are separate activities.
Clarifying buttons on each item:
- ⚡H / 🔄M / 🔋L ... set energy level. Once tagged, item leaves inbox and enters the Right Now engine
- Priority dropdown ... Critical, High, Medium, Low
- Company dropdown ... OA, 1-on-1, BST, MaxVA
- Someday 🗃 ... archives the item. Kept but removed from active rotation
- Delete 🗑 ... permanently removes it
Inbox Badge: Red number on the tab shows unclarified items. Goal: Inbox Zero once daily.
Visual Kanban Board
Four columns: Not Started | In Progress | Waiting | Done (last 7 days). Each card has buttons to move to the next status.
Why kanban for ADHD: Visual progress tracking outperforms flat lists for ADHD brains. Seeing tasks move left-to-right provides momentum. Solves the "out of sight, out of mind" problem.
Color coding: Tasks tagged with a company get a colored left border (violet=OA, cyan=1-on-1, amber=BST, green=MaxVA).
Money-Moving Tasks Only
Isolates revenue-impacting tasks from everything else. Exists because of the "Wrong-Task Loop"... ADHD brains gravitate toward easy tasks while the big revenue work sits untouched.
Add tasks via the input bar. Auto-flagged as revenue-impacting + high priority.
Grouped by company with collapsible headers showing active vs. done counts.
Flag existing tasks: Any task anywhere can be toggled to revenue via the "Mark Revenue" button.
Relationship Tracker
Add contacts by name and category (Business, Personal, Investor, Mentor, EO, YPO, Client). Each shows days since last contact: green (recent), yellow (14+ days), red (30+ days).
"Reached out" button: Resets the counter to today.
Auto-reminders: Overdue contacts surface on the Right Now tab automatically.
Guided Weekly Review (5 Steps)
- Process inbox ... clear every unclarified item
- Check overdue follow-ups ... anything in "waiting" for 7+ days
- Cold relationships ... contacts with 30+ days since last touch
- Pick #1 revenue task ... your North Star for the coming week
- Rate your week (1-10) ... self-assessment + reflection notes. Tracked over time in Settings
Stats, Trends, Admin
Stats Grid: Total, open, completed, archived, revenue, overdue, deferred 3+, inbox.
This Week: Completion count. Measures the Gain, not the Gap.
Daily Questions Trend: Bar chart of weekly review ratings. Spot patterns over time.
Energy Log: Your recent energy entries. Reveals natural rhythms.
Actions: Run Migration (schema updates) and Set API Token (external connections).
Core principles this app is built on:
- Environment over willpower (Benjamin Hardy) ... The app IS the environment. It makes the right behavior the path of least resistance by limiting choices and matching them to your energy state
- Sequential Domination ... Choose key priorities and stack them sequentially, rather than diffusing energy across parallel workstreams. The 5-task limit and #1 weekly pick enforce this
- Energy-based task selection (Ezra DeWolf, modified GTD) ... Don't force deep work when you're depleted. Match the task to the brain state
- Externalize everything (Dr. Russell Barkley) ... ADHD working memory is unreliable. If it's not in the system, it doesn't exist
- PINCH motivation (Dr. William Dodson) ... ADHD brains activate on Passion, Interest, Novelty, Competition, and Hurry... not on importance. The engine uses urgency and revenue impact as activation levers
- Gentle accountability (Ezra DeWolf) ... The "avoiding this?" tag isn't punishment. It's awareness. Most avoidance happens unconsciously
- The Gap and the Gain (Hardy/Sullivan) ... The weekly review measures backward (what did you complete?) not forward (what's still left?). Progress builds momentum
- Forcing functions (Benjamin Hardy) ... Revenue flagging, deadline surfacing, and the 5-task limit are forcing functions that remove decisions and create focus
- The 100% Rule (Benjamin Hardy) ... It's easier to be 100% committed than 98%. When you pick your #1 revenue task, you're making a 100% commitment for the week. No negotiation, no "maybe I'll also..."
- Visual progress (Dr. Ari Tuckman) ... The Pipeline kanban and completion animations provide immediate visual feedback that sustains ADHD motivation
- Multitasking tax (APA, Stanford, UC Irvine) ... Task-switching costs up to 40% of productive time. 23 minutes to refocus after interruption. Sequential focus is measurably faster
Command Center v1.0 ... Built by Sterling AI
Last updated: June 26, 2026