We often judge a tool by its features. How many integrations, how many views, how many keyboard shortcuts. The more it does, the better it seems.
I think the opposite. A good tool should do its job without friction - then disappear. You shouldn't be thinking about it. You should be thinking about your work.
The best tool is the one whose absence you don't notice - because it was always there when you needed it.
That's hard to build. The temptation is always to add. A new view, a new report, a new integration. Each addition seems reasonable on its own. Collectively, they turn a quiet tool into something you have to manage.
That's the line I try to hold with Odha. Not out of minimalist ideology - but because every feature I add is one more thing you have to learn, understand, and maintain.