platoseed
Daily planner for busy professionals
Sunsama organizes your work one day at a time. In the morning, plan your day. Pick out what you want to work on today by importing your tasks and meetings for the day from your various tools. Decide how much time you want to spend on each item to make sure you're setting realistic goals for yourself. As the day goes on, stay focused. Concentrate on one task at a time. Keep track of how long you've been working, and when it's time to shift your attention to something else. When you're done, shut down for the day. Reflect on what you were able to accomplish. End the day feeling satisfied with what you could do rather than consumed by what you couldn't. Sunsama is built to improve your relationship with your work. Work should be an engine for fulfillment, not for stress and anxiety.
Sunsama markets a digital daily planner that unifies task management, calendar, and daily planning for professionals. It emphasizes work-life balance, focus, and reducing burnout by visualizing and blocking time across tools.
Sunsama lets users start each day with a clarified plan by prioritizing tasks, aligning goals, and workload. It visualizes and blocks time on a unified calendar, pulls in tasks from tools like Asana, Trello, Jira, email and messaging apps, and supports bi-directional calendar sync with Google, Outlook, and Apple calendars. Features include daily planning rituals, focus mode, Pomodoro timers, automatic reminders, weekly objectives, analytics of time use, and integrations with Zapier to connect 9k+ apps. It also offers an enterprise-ready suite with SAML SSO and SOC 2 compliance, and provides a 14-day free trial.
Who itβs for: Modern professionals and teams seeking to organize work across multiple tools, reduce burnout, and maintain focus throughout the day.
Pricing page and enterprise offerings; multiple customer testimonials; 14-day free trial; SOC 2 and SSO announcements; multiple integrations and partners listed.

One prompt. One app. One living workspace for teams.

Calendar that kills time fragmentation