The Problem
Between work, errands, and everyday life, we already make thousands of decisions each day.
But when we get home, this doesn't stop.
"Did we pay that bill?"
"Whose turn is it to cook dinner?"
"Did you go grocery shopping?"
These small decisions and constant negotiations create an invisible cognitive load.
Overtime, they create friction, forgotten responsibilities, effort imbalances and unnecessary stress.
Home should be where you unwind, not where decisions keep piling up.
What exactly is Otto?
Otto is a household assistant designed to reduce the decision fatigue of everyday life.
Instead of constantly remembering, negotiating, and coordinating household responsibilities, Otto does it for you.
By bringing shared tasks, expenses, and individual routines into one place, Otto learns and decides what needs to be done and who is responsible.
Over time, Otto learns how your household works — adapting to routines, preferences, and unexpected changes — helping your home run smoothly without constant coordination and balanced contribution.
The goal?
Less planning. Less negotiating. More peace of mind.
Key Features
Smart Planning
Otto keeps track of your everyday tasks and helps organize what needs to be done.
Shared Visibility
Everyone in the household can see responsibilities and upcoming tasks in one place.
Expense Tracking
Shared bills and payments stay organized without confusion.
Adaptive System
Over time, Otto learns household patterns, adapts to unexpected changes, and understands individual preferences - helping your home run smoothly.
The future of Home Organization
For decades, technology has helped us organize our work, our finances, and our communication.
But the systems we use to manage our homes have barely changed.
Most households still rely on memory, conversations, reminders, or scattered notes to coordinate everyday responsibilities.
And as life becomes busier, that system breaks down.
Our Vision
Life outside of work it's considered "the second shift".
Its not only about doing simple chores. It’s about anticipating.
Tracking what needs to be done.
Remembering and reminding who does what.
Adapting to changing schedules, preferences and unexpected events.
These systems are complex, yet we still try to manage them manually, leading to burnout.
We built software to organize our work.
Now it’s time to organize our homes.
