One Thing Today
One skill. One day. One step forward.
According to the UNESCO Global Education Monitoring Report, if all students in low-income countries had just basic reading skills, 171 million people could escape extreme poverty. One Thing Today was built in response to that number.
It is a free, open platform that delivers one practical, life-improving skill per day to anyone in the world — no registration, no paywall, no internet connection required to act on what you learn. Skills are organised into five categories: health and survival, growing food, earning money, staying safe, and learning and communication. Every skill is written to be genuinely useful, requiring no special equipment, no prior education, and no infrastructure to apply.
The experience is personalised through a three-step skill finder. Users select their region, the area of their life they want to improve, and how much time they have today. Framer's CMS and variables power the filter logic that surfaces the most relevant skill for each person.
Framer 3.0 was central to how this was built. The skill finder is a multi-variant component driven entirely by CMS collections — regions, categories, time options, and skills are all relational references, nothing hardcoded. An interactive 3D globe responds to region selection in real time.
The site was designed and built in Framer in about 10 hours hours.
One Thing Today
One skill. One day. One step forward.
According to the UNESCO Global Education Monitoring Report, if all students in low-income countries had just basic reading skills, 171 million people could escape extreme poverty. One Thing Today was built in response to that number.
It is a free, open platform that delivers one practical, life-improving skill per day to anyone in the world — no registration, no paywall, no internet connection required to act on what you learn. Skills are organised into five categories: health and survival, growing food, earning money, staying safe, and learning and communication. Every skill is written to be genuinely useful, requiring no special equipment, no prior education, and no infrastructure to apply.
The experience is personalised through a three-step skill finder. Users select their region, the area of their life they want to improve, and how much time they have today. Framer's CMS and variables power the filter logic that surfaces the most relevant skill for each person.
Framer 3.0 was central to how this was built. The skill finder is a multi-variant component driven entirely by CMS collections — regions, categories, time options, and skills are all relational references, nothing hardcoded. An interactive 3D globe responds to region selection in real time.
The site was designed and built in Framer in about 10 hours hours.