You are a big planner. A hard worker even.
Every beginning of the year you say: this year is the year. To build the business, grow the side hustle, take care of your health, leave the 9-to-5 — because really, no one should be the boss of you.
You are always busy. So the problem isn't that you don't put in the work. It's more complicated than that.
The task directly building the life you planned. The main quest. The thing January-you was counting on October-you to do.
You making life move. Real, necessary, counts — Rally logs it. It just isn't the mission.
That meeting you didn't need to be in. Sidequest. The proposal you finished at midnight. Priority Move. The client invoice you chased for three weeks. Sidequest. The chapter you wrote because you promised yourself you would. Priority Move.
You decide which is which. At the start of every month you set up to five priorities — the bets you're placing on yourself. When you add a task, you tag it to one of those priorities. That is a Priority Move. Anything that comes up outside of them — real work, real life — that is a Sidequest. Rally does not choose for you. It just makes sure the choice stays visible.
Rally lays the two next to each other every week — so you never miss where your year is going.
on mission. That number exists inside Rally. Calculated weekly. Yours.
So you see in May, not December, whether the mission is moving.
Your true main mission never accidentally becomes a sidequest.
Not a to-do list — up to five things that, if they moved, would make this month worth it. Every task you add lives in relationship to one of them. Nothing floats.
Missed a week? Got pulled in six directions? Rally doesn't punish you or reset your streak. It just holds your place — so returning feels like continuing, not starting over.
You can operate Rally fully by voice. Add tasks, brief your day, plan your week — all by talking. Never work for an app you paid for ever again. Goodbye forms.
Rally architects the prompt sequence for your specific task — the context, the depth, the order of attack. You sit down with your AI of choice already inside the work, not figuring out how to start it.
Rally knows the difference between a busy week and a drifting one. When your priorities are quietly losing ground to everything else, it tells you — while there is still time.
Not a notification. An actual plan. Rally looks at your calendar, finds the real gaps, and suggests blocks — day by day — to get the priority moving again. You pick what works.
Not a check-in form. A moment to be honest — where you are, where you're going. Built into the app so the work and the meaning-making happen in the same place.
Completion. The list cleared. The streak kept.
Not the metric that matters.
The metric is: are the things you are doing today connected to the reason you started.
And nobody — not Notion, not Todoist, not the beautiful planner you bought in January — nobody has been watching that for you.
So you worked. Hard. The client is happy. The invoices are paid.
And December comes and the thing you said you were building is exactly where it was in January.
Not because you failed.
Because you were busy with everything else and nobody was watching the mission.
You are one of the people for whom the cost of entry into some tasks is unexplainably bigger than others. You have been searching for a solution in apps built for people who simply want to remember things and organise.
You've been right. You didn't need more discipline. You needed the beginning of every hard task handled — and your mission watched while you kept everything else moving. That is not a discipline problem.
Until Rally.
When a task arrives, Rally finds everything connected to it — the document, the attachment, the feedback, the file that came separately — and hands it to you already open, already pointing at what needs to happen first.
You tap Start Here and you are inside the most important document. Not hunting for it. Inside it. Or tap Open All and every linked file opens simultaneously — from your Drive, your Notion, wherever they live. Rally doesn't host your files. It just stops making you hunt for them.
That is the whole psychological wall gone.
Not reduced. Not managed. Gone.
The beginning was the monster. Rally ate it.
Say everything out loud. Rally breaks it into tasks, matches each to the right priority or you can pick manually, and puts them on your board. You don't type. You talk. The mess becomes the list.
Every month, you place up to five bets on yourself. Promises you intend to keep. The things this month is actually about. Not a to-do list — the things that, if they moved, would make this month worth it.
At the end of every day, you don't need to tick things off. You just talk — like you would to a friend — and Rally knows what your day means for each task. It notices the thing that wasn't on the list but got done anyway, and updates your board. Without you having to.
You should never be using an app you have to babysit. Rally was built by someone who always dreaded telling the mandatory team app about work, after a full day of real work.
And then — weekly, monthly, across the whole year — Rally shows you the split. Whether your Priority Moves are moving. Whether the mission is gaining ground or the Sidequests are quietly winning.
While there is still time.
If you struggle with beginnings, you know the first few minutes are the hardest. Rally has promised to always do those with you.
Enter AI Assist.
Everyone has AI now. There is no flex in that. The output is going to be okay at worst — which means your reader has already skimmed twenty-five okay pieces before they found yours.
Hello, every prompt pack you have ever commented "Prompt" for, and packed away. 😂
Rally worried about it for you. You don't get a prompt. You get a sequence — built around your specific task, your specific context, the specific depth your work requires. Each stage a different focus, a different level of pressure on a different part of the problem.
Rally does the beginning of the AI session the same way it does the beginning of every task: before you. By the time you sit down with your AI of choice, the thinking is done, the orientation is built, the session is architected. You are not coming in as an intern — you are catching the task on its way to the end, ready to do the only part that requires you.
All you do is put your nerd glasses on and tooth comb the output.
Because I know what it feels like to look at a task and feel the weight of the beginning and handle every other thing first. And I know what it feels like to arrive in December with the thing I said I was building exactly where it was in January. Not because I didn't work — because nothing was watching the mission while I did.
I am not trying to help you track your tasks.
I am trying to make sure the person you said you wanted to become at the start of this year is still possible by the end of it.
"Every return is a vote
for the life you're building."
Rally is in early access. A small group of remote professionals are using it right now — building the businesses, growing the newsletters, doing the work they kept putting off while the documents sat unopened.
Locked rate for life. What you pay today is what you pay forever. The price goes up when early access closes.
Direct line to the builder. Your feedback shapes what Rally becomes. I am genuinely in this with you.
The whole year, from day one. No waiting for features. Everything in Rally is yours the moment you join.
The beginning of every task is handled.
And someone is finally watching the mission with you.
Early access · yourrally.app
Everything you promised yourself. Done.Rally · Early access open
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