Focus App helps parents turn screen-time rules into a practical daily system with study mode, bedtime windows, parent controls, app blocking, weekly summaries, and trilingual support designed for Ethiopia.
This page is meant to work like the other product pages attached to the corporate site: clear problem statement, clear fit, clear rollout path, and a credible summary of what families, schools, and partners get.
Focus App is designed to reduce friction for both parents and children: set expectations, activate guided study mode, then review progress without guesswork.
Choose the child profile, study hours, sleep window, parent PIN, and preferred language in a simple setup flow.
Allowed apps stay available while distracting apps are pushed aside so the phone supports school instead of pulling attention away.
Parents get a clearer daily picture of study time, gaming, and social-media use, with room for reminders and weekly follow-up.
The page needs to explain why this product is commercially believable: local-language support, real Android enforcement, family workflow clarity, and a rollout path beyond single-household use.
English, Amharic, and Afaan Oromoo reduce language friction for families, schools, and community rollouts.
The core experience is centered on school routines, allowed apps, focus time, and calmer day-to-day phone use.
The app supports direct household onboarding today and gives schools, NGOs, and youth programs a strong starting point for wider deployment later.
The public product page should make the commercial path clear: families can start small, while schools and NGOs can discuss broader deployment.
Basic study mode and language switching for families that want to begin with a lighter guided routine.
Weekly reports, extra schedules, and reminders for parents who need stronger day-to-day structure.
Family controls, advanced reporting, and multi-child support for households that need a fuller control system.
The page should show that FocusApp is not only a concept. It already has mobile workflows, multilingual positioning, and subscription-ready backend foundations.
Focus App should work as a product story for parents, a program pitch for education operators, and an access-and-impact pitch for institutional partners.
Families who want less conflict around screen time and a better study routine on the child’s phone.
Education teams that want a practical digital-focus companion for students outside class hours.
Programs that need a trilingual, mobile-first tool for digital wellbeing and guided study support.
Tell us whether you are evaluating FocusApp for your family, a school, a tutoring network, or a broader youth program. We can route you to the right next step.