In this episode of The PowerTalk Show, we talk with Thibaud Hartwig, the CEO and Co-founder of Organaise and Head of Sales at Tendium, about the future of productivity—one that’s rooted not in hustle, but in focus, mental clarity, and sustainable output.
Organaise is a personal productivity platform designed for today’s over-stimulated, hyper-scheduled professional. Whether you’re a solo founder, a creator, or a corporate team member, Organaise is built to help you work smarter—aligned with your energy, goals, and mental state.
Rethinking Productivity: From Hustle to Human-Centric
Thibaud shares the underlying problem modern professionals face: being busy doesn’t mean being productive. Organaise flips the model. Instead of juggling endless tasks and calendars, it helps you organize your time and attention based on mental readiness, emotional load, and goal alignment.
Context Switching is Killing Your Flow
Modern work promotes multitasking. Thibaud explains how Organaise reduces the cognitive load caused by constant context switching, enabling users to enter and stay in their “focus zone” longer.
“The best productivity comes from avoiding simple and unnecessary tasks that breaks great focus”
Features That Reflect the Mindset Shift
Organaise allows users to:
- Overview of all your time by connecting all your calendars in one place
- Never be double booked by sharing Booking Pages / Meeting Links
- Book meetings with groups without sending an email or talking on the phone
It’s not just about managing your time—it’s about managing your mind.
AI-Powered Nudges & Wellness First Design
Organaise trains an AI productivity assistant that learns your habits and nudges you toward healthier, more focused patterns—a digital coach for your brain.
“We’re not optimizing for speed. We’re optimizing for clarity.”
Watch the Full Podcast Episode with Thibaud Hartwig:
What’s Next for Organaise?
The roadmap includes:
- Team-based energy alignment tools
- Focus metrics dashboards
- Enhanced integrations (Notion, Google Calendar, Slack)
Thibaud envisions a world where “impact per hour” is more important than hours worked.