Vector

Task management for people who run operations, not bucket lists.

Built for operations leads, project coordinators, and anyone who keeps other people's work moving. Designed by two controllers who got tired of watching teams collide on shared projects.

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Strip manual — three things to know

VEC-021 Route:
Assign → Sequence → Track

Flight plan

Every task has a route. Assign it, sequence it, and track it from departure to arrival. No more orphaned action items floating between Slack and email. Each strip shows who owns it, where it's headed, and when it's due to land.

AssigneesUnlimited
DependenciesPer-strip routing
SequencingDrag to reorder
VEC-047 Route:
Hand off → Confirm → Clear

Handoff

When you pass a task off, the next controller sees everything. Context, history, attachments, and blockers — all attached to the strip. No "what did they mean by this?" messages. The strip carries the full narrative.

ContextAuto-attached
HistoryFull audit trail
ConfirmAccept or bounce
VEC-063 Route:
Flag → Scan → Act

Clearance

Four priority levels, color-coded and always visible. You always know what needs attention right now and what can wait until the next shift. No guessing, no sorting through a flat list to find the thing that's on fire.

Priority4 levels, color-tabbed
ScanFilter by status
AlertsEscalation rules

A note from the founders

We spent six years clearing aircraft at Portland Approach. Every shift, 38 controllers coordinated 500+ flights without a single missed handoff. Then we'd come home and try to run a product release across three teams using a shared spreadsheet and a Slack channel. It was chaos. So we built what we knew: a system where every task has a strip, every handoff is visible, and nothing falls through the cracks.

— Kaitlyn Reyes & Dan Moroz, Portland, OR

840 ops leads on the waitlist

Next cohort boards March 2025. No credit card, no demo call, no pitch deck.

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