AI chief of staff for all relationships
One briefing. Three people. The reason each one is on it.
A chief of staff does not run your life — they hand you the short list and the context behind it, then step back. Ember does the same across every relationship you carry: the client waiting on a number, the colleague you owe an answer, the family birthday you meant to plan for. Each priority comes with the reason you saved and the next action you chose. You decide what to do and you do it.
The morning briefing
Three priorities, drawn from three parts of your life.
Work relationships and personal ones live in one place, so the morning briefing does not pretend your day is only a work day. Marcus is a client, Nadia is a colleague, Elena is your sister — and each line carries the reason you wrote down, not a score Ember invented.
Today
The same three, as a list you can actually work through.
Today is the short list, not the whole address book. Three people, the reason each one surfaced, and nothing else competing for the space. You open the one you are ready for, act like yourself, and mark it done — Ember does not message anyone, and it cannot.
Ask, and get only what you saved
Keeper tells you what needs attention first — from your notes alone.
Ask Keeper where to start and it reads back your own facts: the deadline you noted, the promise you made, the date on the calendar. It has no access to your inbox, your calendar, or your messages, and it will not rank people by importance. It hands you the context; the judgement stays yours.
A briefing, not an autopilot
The list is Ember’s job. The relationship is yours.
Ember is a private notebook that briefs you each morning on the people you decided matter today — clients, colleagues, family, all in one view. It does not send messages on your behalf, scrape your calendar or email, execute tasks, guarantee that its ordering is the right one, or turn into a shared team workspace. It only reflects what you chose to write down, so you can choose what to do next.