What started as a research project has slowly grown into an App Store Awards finalist. Along the way, there were long sprints, a fair number of abandoned features, a few strategic turns, and all the joyful chaos that comes with building something new. For this article, co founders Helene and Melissa share the three biggest lessons from that process and how Apple’s technology helped bring some of those ideas to life.
About the App Store Awards
The App Store Awards spotlight products that offer clarity, care, and creativity. This year’s nomination signals a growing understanding in the wider tech landscape that planning tools can support diverse cognitive and sensory needs without compromising on quality or polish. It also shows that accessible design is being acknowledged as a marker of excellence and innovation.After a first nomination to the Apple Design Awards 2024 in the inclusivity category, which already shed light on the importance of inclusive design, the Tiimo team is extremely thankful and humbled to have been listed as a finalist into this new nomination.
Learning 1: Surround yourself with people you like and who inspire you
Our journey was built on steady iterations rather than one defining moment. What made that possible was the mix of people behind Tiimo. The ones who question everything, the ones who bring grounding, the ones who think visually, the ones who think in systems, and those who think outside of it. You spend so much time with your team that their personalities and perspectives shape not just the work culture but the product itself.
Learning 2: Good design should not be an afterthought
From the start, aesthetics and simplicity have guided us, shaped by the work of functional designers like Dieter Rams. Along the way, we realised that accessibility is complex and rarely universal, and finding the sweet spot between clarity and inclusivity has become one of Tiimo’s defining traits. If people use Tiimo every day, we have the responsibility to make the experience feel gentle, inviting, and easy to trust.