Close Menu
TechTost
  • AI
  • Apps
  • Crypto
  • Fintech
  • Hardware
  • Media & Entertainment
  • Security
  • Startups
  • Transportation
  • Venture
  • Recommended Essentials
What's Hot

Fusion power company General Fusion races to go public via $1bn reverse merger

Synthesia Hits $4B Valuation, Lets Employees Make Cash

Snapchat gives parents new insights into teens’ screen time and friends

Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Disclaimer
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
TechTost
Subscribe Now
  • AI

    Synthesia Hits $4B Valuation, Lets Employees Make Cash

    26 January 2026

    This Founder Broke the Firebreak — Now He’s Creating an AI Goldmine

    25 January 2026

    A new test for AI labs: Are you even trying to make money?

    25 January 2026

    Tech CEOs brag and argue about artificial intelligence at Davos

    24 January 2026

    Legal AI giant Harvey acquires Hexus as competition heats up in legal tech

    24 January 2026
  • Apps

    Snapchat gives parents new insights into teens’ screen time and friends

    26 January 2026

    Google’s AI feature can now use your Gmail and Photos to provide customized responses

    25 January 2026

    Here’s what you need to know about the US TikTok deal

    25 January 2026

    Ex-Googlers seek to captivate kids with an AI-powered learning app

    24 January 2026

    TikTok users are freaking out over the app’s “immigration status” collection — here’s what it means

    24 January 2026
  • Crypto

    Hackers stole over $2.7 billion in crypto in 2025, data shows

    23 December 2025

    New report examines how David Sachs may benefit from Trump administration role

    1 December 2025

    Why Benchmark Made a Rare Crypto Bet on Trading App Fomo, with $17M Series A

    6 November 2025

    Solana co-founder Anatoly Yakovenko is a big fan of agentic coding

    30 October 2025

    MoviePass opens Mogul fantasy league game to the public

    29 October 2025
  • Fintech

    50% off +1 ends | TechCrunch

    23 January 2026

    Capital One acquires Brex for a steep discount to its valuation, but early believers are laughing all the way to the bank

    23 January 2026

    Tiger Global and Microsoft will fully exit Walmart-backed PhonePe through its IPO

    22 January 2026

    Fintech firm Betterment confirms data breach after hackers sent fake crypto scam alert to users

    12 January 2026

    Flutterwave buys Nigeria’s Mono in rare African fintech exit

    5 January 2026
  • Hardware

    Apple iPhone just had its best year in India as the smartphone market remains generally flat

    24 January 2026

    From invisibility cloaks to AI chips: Neurophos raises $110 million to build tiny optical processors for inference

    23 January 2026

    Ring adds a new content verification feature to videos

    22 January 2026

    OpenAI aims to ship its first device in 2026, and it could be a headset

    21 January 2026

    Why Serve Robotics is acquiring a hospital assistant robot company

    21 January 2026
  • Media & Entertainment

    Sci-fi writers, Comic-Con say goodbye to artificial intelligence

    26 January 2026

    Amagi debuts in India as cloud TV software company tests investor appetite

    24 January 2026

    What you need to know about Netflix’s acquisition of Warner Bros.

    24 January 2026

    TikTok-style mini-dramas are set to make billions this year, even though they’re kind of crap

    23 January 2026

    TechCrunch Disrupt 2026 tickets now on sale: Lowest prices all year

    23 January 2026
  • Security

    Investigators say Russian government hackers are behind attempted power outage in Poland

    24 January 2026

    Microsoft gave FBI set of BitLocker encryption keys to unlock suspects’ laptops: reports

    23 January 2026

    Ireland proposes new law to allow police to use spyware

    23 January 2026

    Under Armor says it is “aware” of data breach claims after 72 million customer records were posted online

    22 January 2026

    UStrive Security Lapse exposed personal data of its users, including children

    21 January 2026
  • Startups

    Fusion power company General Fusion races to go public via $1bn reverse merger

    26 January 2026

    Humans& believes coordination is the next frontier for artificial intelligence, and they’re building a model to prove it

    26 January 2026

    OpenAI is coming for those sweet business dollars in 2026

    25 January 2026

    OpenAI chief Sam Altman plans visit to India as AI leaders converge in New Delhi: sources

    25 January 2026

    This startup will send the ashes of 1,000 people into space — affordably — in 2027

    24 January 2026
  • Transportation

    TechCrunch Mobility: RIP, Tesla Autopilot and the NTSB is investigating Waymo

    26 January 2026

    How PopWheels helped a food cart cut generators for e-bike batteries

    25 January 2026

    Tesla is shutting down Autopilot in an effort to boost adoption of its Full Self-Driving software

    24 January 2026

    Waymo was investigated by the National Transportation Safety Board for illegal school bus conduct

    24 January 2026

    Waymo continues the robotaxi ramp with its Miami service now open to the public

    23 January 2026
  • Venture

    What are bending spoons? The little-known company behind Vimeo’s sweeping layoffs

    25 January 2026

    PraxisPro Raises $6M Seed Fund From AlleyCorp To Mentor Medical Sales Reps

    23 January 2026

    Ex-CEO of celeb fav gym Dogpound launches $5 million fund to back wellness companies

    22 January 2026

    Former OpenAI Sales Lead Joins VC Firm Acrew: OpenAI Taught Her Where Startups Can Build A ‘Moat’

    22 January 2026

    Sources: SGLang project emerges as RadixArk at $400M valuation as inference market explodes

    21 January 2026
  • Recommended Essentials
TechTost
You are at:Home»Apps»$13 million and 3 years later, Superlist hopes to become decacorn. But will he?
Apps

$13 million and 3 years later, Superlist hopes to become decacorn. But will he?

techtost.comBy techtost.com19 February 202408 Mins Read
Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
$13 Million And 3 Years Later, Superlist Hopes To Become
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

The former founder of a to-do lists app that sold for $200 million is back, nine years later, with another app to do the same thing. Really? It’s a story that would be hard to make up, but it happens.

I guess you can’t keep a good founder down. After selling his first startup — the to-do list app Wunderlist — to Microsoft in 2015, Christian Reber (pictured above) could have backed off with his angel investing (he’s an investor in Notion for example). Instead, he founded a new company, Pitch, for which he now had to find a new CEO. But a long time ago he also decided that his “to-do app” itch still needed scratching.

This week finally brought Superlist out of beta. It’s a smartphone and desktop app that takes the elegant interface approach of the old Wunderlist and brings it into the 21st century.

Now, before we get into why the hell Reber decided to go back to a startup, let’s cover the basics of the app.

Superlist is a complete to-do list app (it should be, it spent a full 12 months in beta testing) which, unusually, allows you to split up personal to-do lists and share them with family members, friends or even colleagues ( this last point is key to what follows). These tasks or tasks can also be enhanced much more deeply than other apps of this type: with long notes, images, you name it, giving it much more firepower than similar platforms.

There’s also a pretty basic “AI” feature that can turn unstructured emails or Slack messages into tasks and their content with other productivity tools like Gmail, Slack, GitHub, and Google Calendar. The minimalistic user interface is simple to use, but the main point to remember is that Superlist is designed for teams. You can create a list for a project, share it with a group, and then pack it with notes, files, tasks, images, etc. The Pro account is $8 per month per user, but a free account will really be enough for most people.

So yes, it’s designed to be personal, but it has an interface that makes it easy to switch between personal and workspace. Reber says he found when surveying Beta users, most of them didn’t want to use their company’s tools “because of privacy concerns or usability issues.” Instead, they’re more likely, he says, to bring their personal to-do list into the work environment and start using it there. In other words, Superlist has a “Trojan Horse” strategy where it will use people’s personal to-do lists — which also include to-do lists — to get back into business.

As for the company, it has a very experienced founding team in Reber and Niklas Jansen (founder of Blinkist). To date, the company has raised €13.5 million in funding from Cherry Ventures and EQT.

Superlist application. Image Credits: Superlist

What’s key to all of this is that Reber is convinced there’s a void between programming apps and list apps that Superlist will fill. And you can bet he’s pissed that Microsoft turned his baby into a rather boring version of his original vision and then shut it down. Ironically, Superlist has no integration with Microsoft 365. Maybe they should buy Superlist again?

This is an edited conversation with Reber about what he plans to do:

Reber: The full story is that in 2015, we sold, and I personally as the founder and head of product felt like I hadn’t really finished the job. What we wanted to achieve was a better app that worked for individual users and scaled to groups, basically. We would like to create a product for people to manage their personal and professional projects. Because out there you have tools like Things or Reminders. These are well-made tools for organizing your personal life, but you can never bring them into the business world because they’re not really meant for sharing and collaboration.

TechCrunch: What about all the design tools out there?

Reber: In the business world, you have tools like Asana, Monday.com, Basecamp, and other pieces of software that are optimized for project managers. But we did a lot of research that showed us that 75% of users don’t use these tools. They are bought for the company, but people don’t really enjoy using them. When we sold to Microsoft, Microsoft decided to rework the product into the Microsoft stack, but frankly, the product wasn’t for me. i used it. I respect the work, but I didn’t really enjoy it.

However, there have been other note and task tools. What did you see that was wrong?

Evernote was that single first productivity app that took notes and recorded tasks and put together business cards. And then Notion (I was an early investor) took it to a whole new level where you have workspaces. You can add team members, you can collaborate on very simple types of documents. I absolutely love the company and it has grown into a $10 billion productivity business. And I’m a heavy Notion user. I use it in every project I’m involved with. But for me, I’ve always felt that if someone built the successor to Evernote, why isn’t anyone building the successor to Wunderlist, like a first-party app? A collaboration app that bridges that gap between personal and professional life?

And I really honestly think it’s a multi-billion dollar business opportunity. I think it’s a huge market. Every person in the world works with lists, organizing their life personally and professionally. I tried as an angel investor to find the company that excited me but then COVID happened.

Why did it take you three years to make the Superlist?

There were hassles like figuring out what the hell Superlist is and how do we solve this problem? And how do we make the product feel cool, unique, and not like a cheap copycat of Wunderlist. So there was a lot of thinking and a lot of iteration and a bit of founder conflict.

Did you see the opportunity in the fact that we had an explosion of tools for collaborative work like Slack, Teams, Notion, etc.?

Apple Reminders is a very personal product. Asana is a very business oriented product. I don’t know personally why every company in this space works in either the consumer space or the business space. But no one is facing the real problem. What we’ve noticed is that people want flexibility. They also want to add long paragraphs to a quick side note, or want to add extra headings or add images to lists, attachments, PDFs, numbered lists, and so on. What we did wrong in the software world was, for example, Evernote was only about notes. And that’s still the problem. The lists are much more.

What will be the aspect of artificial intelligence?

We’re working on a lot of AI features right now, like “build me a due diligence list for a new company.” Maybe you could ask Superlist to generate a short summary of something.

How do you see this becoming more than just a consumer app and something that integrates with other business platforms?

You can be part of many groups. You actually start using this product yourself and then bring your own software to a business. And then you just start organizing your lists at work too. And then you invite your colleagues to grow the groups you create. That’s the idea that we have here, and that’s, I think, a nice part of the whole experience is that you can just turn these groups off and then your worklists are gone. And if you’re at work, you can turn off your personal list. You don’t have that ladder of switching between many different workspaces.

It reminds me a little bit of Dropbox’s strategy where people would use it in their personal lives because it was a lot easier than trying to use an internal intranet or something like that.

Correctly. This is where we failed with Wunderlist. We had tens of millions of users. All we managed to do was create a nice interface for managing shopping lists. But we had a few users using it at Fortune 500 companies and none of them paid. None of them actually invited their teams because it was too messy. It just didn’t work. And I think that’s the challenge that we’re trying to focus on. How can you bridge this. How you can organize your life and work, but not get distracted by either.

Do you see this being picked up on exit from Notion or Slack or Salesforce or someone else?

Look, it always sounds cheesy, but I don’t want to start a company to sell it. I didn’t want that with Wunderlist and hope to avoid that with Superlist. I learned the hard way that every time you write a line of code, it can be replaced the next day, the next month, or the next year, so nothing lasts forever. I also have to put my co-founder’s vote into the equation, like if they want to have an opportunity where they turn their shares into real money and so on. There are always ways we can find to solve this. But I don’t want to sell it. I really think Superlist can be a decacorn if we just focus on executing it very, very carefully, not getting into a feature war with competitors and just really focusing on our mission.

decacorn hopes million Superlist years
Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Previous ArticleFamily tragedy for former YouTube CEO Susan Wojcicki
Next Article Dili wants to automate due diligence with AI
bhanuprakash.cg
techtost.com
  • Website

Related Posts

Snapchat gives parents new insights into teens’ screen time and friends

26 January 2026

Google’s AI feature can now use your Gmail and Photos to provide customized responses

25 January 2026

Here’s what you need to know about the US TikTok deal

25 January 2026
Add A Comment

Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Don't Miss

Fusion power company General Fusion races to go public via $1bn reverse merger

26 January 2026

Synthesia Hits $4B Valuation, Lets Employees Make Cash

26 January 2026

Snapchat gives parents new insights into teens’ screen time and friends

26 January 2026
Stay In Touch
  • Facebook
  • YouTube
  • TikTok
  • WhatsApp
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
Fintech

50% off +1 ends | TechCrunch

23 January 2026

Capital One acquires Brex for a steep discount to its valuation, but early believers are laughing all the way to the bank

23 January 2026

Tiger Global and Microsoft will fully exit Walmart-backed PhonePe through its IPO

22 January 2026
Startups

Fusion power company General Fusion races to go public via $1bn reverse merger

Humans& believes coordination is the next frontier for artificial intelligence, and they’re building a model to prove it

OpenAI is coming for those sweet business dollars in 2026

© 2026 TechTost. All Rights Reserved
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Disclaimer

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.