Approve, don’t type: it reads every message that lands, decides what actually needs you, and drafts the replies.
It reads every message that lands, decides what actually needs you, and drafts the replies so you approve instead of type.
Most inbox tools bolt onto your personal Gmail and try to guess what you want from a sidebar. Fasrad gives the agent a real, separate mailbox it owns end to end. It pulls mail down, reads the full thread, and works the queue the way a competent assistant would: the contract renewal gets flagged, the third newsletter this week gets archived, and the customer asking where their order is gets a draft reply waiting for your nod.
It knows who people are because it keeps its own contact list and notes. A reply from a client it emailed last month carries the history with it, so the draft references the right quote and the right deadline instead of starting from a blank page. When something needs a meeting, it checks your calendar and offers times that are actually free.
A normal morning, handled before you open the laptop:
You stop living in the inbox and start reviewing it. The agent does the reading and the typing; you keep the judgment calls and the send button when it matters.
These pages cover the adjacent jobs buyers usually compare before choosing an AI agent.
A separate one. The agent gets its own mailbox it fully controls, so it can triage and draft without touching your personal inbox. You forward mail to it or hand the address out directly.
Only for the cases you explicitly allow, like acknowledging a receipt or confirming a booking. Everything else comes back as a draft for you to review and send.
It learns from the threads it reads and the corrections you make to its drafts. You can also tell it directly: shorter, warmer, no exclamation points. It remembers.
Up to roughly 100, pulled from a Google Sheet and personalized per row. It staggers them across the day rather than firing all at once, which keeps you off spam filters.
It gives a reason on every triage decision, so a wrong call is visible at a glance and one correction teaches it. You can also pin rules like 'always flag anyone at this domain.'
$49/month or $490/year — cancel anytime. That covers the agent, its mailbox, calendar and contacts, outreach, and the automations. It's in public beta and takes about 4 minutes to set up.