
People make promises constantly. Most are made with good intentions, but memory is fragile. We're building rememberr to ensure one billion of those promises don't slip away.
Our founder was running a growing company. Dozens of commitments every day across Slack, email, and meetings. "I'll send that over by Friday." "Let me follow up with an intro." "I'll get back to you on pricing."
The mental load was constant. Not because something had gone wrong yet, but because it always felt like it was about to. Every meeting ended with a quiet anxiety: what did I just promise, and will I remember it tomorrow?
The solution wasn't another app to check. It wasn't a better to-do list. It was something that watches the tools you already use, catches the things you said you'd do, and only speaks up when something needs your attention.
No new habits. No workflow changes. Just a quiet layer of protection between you and the things that could slip through.
The rest of the time? Silence. And that silence means everything is handled.
Make it impossible to drop the ball. Not by adding more tools or more notifications. By watching what you already say, and stepping in only when it matters.
That's the whole reason we exist. Not productivity. Not task management. Just making sure that when you say you'll do something, it actually gets done.
We read your messages to find commitments, then forget what we saw. Not as a policy. As architecture. Read-only access, immediate discard, zero content storage.
The best CEOs have someone behind them catching every loose thread. That kind of support used to be reserved for the top floor. rememberr gives it to everyone.
You shouldn't have to change how you work. No tagging, no logging, no new habits. Just keep talking the way you always do. rememberr adapts to you.
We're a small, obsessive team. We care about one problem: making sure the commitments you make actually get kept. Every decision we make is measured by whether it creates real value for the people who use rememberr.
No feature bloat. No roadmap theatre. Just a relentless focus on solving this one thing better than anyone else.
Give it 7 days.