See only what matters: it reads every email, drafts the reply you’d send anyway, and surfaces the three that actually need you.
It reads every new email, sorts it, drafts the reply you'd send anyway, and surfaces the three messages that actually need a human.
Most of the 80 emails you got overnight don't need you. They need a one-line acknowledgement, a forward to the right person, a calendar check, or nothing at all. But you can't know which is which until you've opened each one, and by the time you've triaged the noise the morning is gone and the two emails that needed real thought are buried on page two.
The agent watches your inbox and runs every new message through the same triage you do in your head, just faster and without skipping any. It reads the thread, checks who the sender is against your contacts, looks at your calendar when the email is about a meeting, and decides: reply now, draft for your approval, flag as urgent, or file and move on.
What it actually does with a new email:
It sends nothing on its own unless you tell it to. Drafts sit in your inbox until you approve them. You stay in control of every word that leaves under your name — you just stop spending an hour deciding which emails deserve words at all.
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No. By default it writes drafts and leaves them in your Drafts folder for you to send or edit. If you explicitly tell it to auto-send a specific category — say, simple meeting confirmations — it will, but only the ones you've signed off on. Everything else waits for you.
Filters match keywords and senders. They can't tell that 'just following up' from a stranger is a pitch while the same words from your biggest client are a deadline. The agent reads the actual message and the thread, so it sorts the way you would, including the cases your filters were never written for.
It writes in a plain, professional voice and learns your patterns from how you phrase things over time. You can tell it 'keep it short' or 'always sign off with thanks' in plain language. And since every draft waits in your inbox, you see exactly what it wrote before anything goes out.
The opposite. Genuine urgency — a client complaint, a missed deadline, a money question — gets flagged and surfaced to you first, optionally as a Telegram ping. The routine 64 emails get filed quietly so they're not competing for your attention.
Each agent connects to one Google inbox. You can run separate agents for separate inboxes — one for your support address, one for your personal mail — each with its own triage rules. They don't share data.
$49/month or $490/year — cancel anytime. That's the whole platform — the email triage agent plus calendar, contacts, automations, and the rest. No per-email or per-seat charge, no setup fee.