Our Mission

BETTER WORLD APPS (BWA) is a collaboration among investors, Donors, Designers, and Developers looking to produce Apps that will make the world a better place.

It will include a wide spectrum of computer applications that will benefit humanity and all people of any gender, race, class, sexual orientation, and generation, with the ultimate goal of equity and equality for all by providing people self-produced opportunities and happiness.

Our applications bring to light the possibility of developing personal apps for making people and the world better. The mission of BWA is to develop and support the development of technology and computer applications intended to help people better themselves and in essence make the world a better place for all.

Our Team

OUR STORY

THE STORY OF BETTER WORLD APPS, BWA

The Beginning

We were thinking one day how morose the world has become, so negative-competitive with so many people bringing the world down around us. We know there are good people out there, but they are getting lost in the sadness and negative world aspects surrounding us. Being the year of covid-19 and a low point in United States politics, it was difficult to see the good that is in the world and finding anything that brings a smile to our face.

 

Then it came to us, SENDING SMILES! An app whose only purpose is to bring a smile to someone’s face with a simple positive compliment. Whoever obtains/purchases this app would fulfill a simple initial setup and then the only thing that appears when this app is used is a button on the user’s screen. Whenever the user pushes this button someone else, who remains anonymous, receives a compliment/inspiration/joke. Anytime someone has the urge to bring a smile to a person’s face or wants to bring hope or inspiration to someone who may need it or feels the need to help or support an individual, they just need to push the button. Quite simply they are being there for someone else, Sending Smiles.

 

Next Level Professional (NLP) is another app being developed to help its user accurately and efficiently track their efforts in achieving their goals. Using the latest science in achieving professional excellence as the foundation in this App, users set their goals and accurately see if they are on track in achieving their goals. Initially, this was for developing skillsets typically acquired in athletics and music. In developing it further it was brought to our attention that it could be used in education, for business professionals, for philanthropic groups tackling tough problems, from equity to world hunger and water. People can use it for developing and tracking their efforts in a sport like tennis or a version of the app can be used for a poor person trying to overcome poverty. Fairly minor changes and adjustments NLP’s uses are limitless. Anyone trying to better himself or herself or specific skills would have the most powerful tool at their disposal to achieve personal goals and dreams.

 

BETTER WORLD APPS is born! This suite of computer applications brought to light the possibility of developing personal apps for making people and the world better. The mission of BWA is to either develop or support the development of technology and computer applications intended to help people better themselves and in essence make the world a better place for all of mankind. 

 

THE STORY OF NEXT LEVEL PROFESSIONAL, NLP

 

By: Chris Rheault

I have always had a fascination with being a true professional. The idea of gentleman/woman has been deliberated in my mind many times as an air of being professional. As a young tennis player, I had hoped and dreamed of being a professional tennis player with roots established on the top collegiate team in the United States, the University of Southern California. Very few people, including friends and family, saw these as being feasible for me to accomplish. I did not have the talent, but many had said that I had heart, and this quality can take you far.

 

I was accepted into the University of Southern California for the Fall semester of 1996. I then proceeded to get myself on the Men’s Tennis team as a redshirt freshman/team manager. I spent three years training with some of the very best tennis players, and with many of the best athletes, in the world. In the 1996 Olympics USC would have ranked top 10 in the medal count as a country. I had a roommate and a handful of friends who went on to play professional baseball (my roommate made it to the National League Pennant championships on the Houston Astros). Some of my acquaintances/friends from this time include Reggie Bush (famous American Football player, won Super Bowl XLIV in 2010), Brian Scalabrine (NBA Basketball Player, won NBA championship in 2008), George Bastl (My Roommate who beat Pete Sampras at Wimbledon in 2002, Still a top 5 all-time upset), Andre Agassi practiced with my tennis team when I was at USC (one of my idols), Rick Leach was my coach’s son who would practice with us (number 1 professional doubles tennis player in the world at the time, one of the very best doubles players of all-time), as well as other top 50 professional tennis players, and other top athletes. By my junior year, I had improved my level from being a team manager to that of a top 6-8 player on the team. I quit this same year to focus on my architectural studies, USC has one of the best architecture schools in the world. I was fortunate to have studied under some of the most well-known architects in the world. By the time I graduated the USC Men’s tennis team won their 16th team NCAA Championship, could have had a ring if I stayed with it. My only regret in my tennis life.

 

A particular moment was life-changing and the basis for me becoming, arguably, one of the very best tennis coaches in New Hampshire’s history. I was a premedical student my freshman year with an emphasis on physical therapy. Somehow, I was registered for a senior-level Exercise Science class. The professor noticed I was a freshman and mentioned I could stay in the class if I wanted because I would need it to graduate. In this class, we researched and studied various theories. One of the latest and greatest studies, at this time, was “The role of deliberate practice in the acquisition of expert performance” by Anders Ericsson and others. Today this study is one of the most well-regarded and the standard in any well-regarded University for the area of Expertise. The premise states how the common thread among professionals is the time and amount of focus, “Deliberate Practice” they put into becoming a professional. This time ends up being about 8,000-12,000 hours of effort for highly skilled trades, including music, most athletics, business professionals, Doctors (my skin cancer doctor even knew about it and mentioned how he referenced it in his residency) and various levels of education.

 

Initially, I was a skeptic of this study and spent years trying to disprove it. The more I tried, the more I realized it was completely accurate and accounted for everything I saw in athletics at USC and that I researched beyond USC. Every professional I investigated in one way, or another met the criteria of this science. It became the foundation for my coaching practices. And the reason I have been so successful as a tennis coach and design/athletic consultant. I can even calculate the relationship between the number of hours of deliberate practice and the various output levels of performance in competition. This understanding allows for the accurate placement of individuals into a variety of schools/business positions.

 

Around 2005 I started designing a mobile app representing the 10,000-hr model into real-time use/experience. Then in 2020 it all rapidly came together. That February, Recovering from some cancer removal allowed some quality time in designing this mobile app. I then reach out to Anders Ericsson, the scientist who developed the science that is the basis for the app. At this point, he has written books and developed more studies regarding this science. Anders Ericsson is the scientist at the forefront in this area, and any authority in this knows Anders and the 10,000-hr rule very well. I contacted him at Florida State University. We started to collaborate over the phone regarding my work on the app. He helped develop a mobile app that accurately represents his science and puts it into a user-friendly, organic, and natural workflow environment for people to map and track their efforts in acquiring technical skillsets. The potential is remarkable! The original app is for tennis players. This brought on Adam Peterson and Peter Arsenault into our collaboration. Together we developed a more finished and polished product. We have now conceptualized a suite of apps across many fields. Including Music, Athletics, Education, Business, Mind, and Body, as well as others.