Inbox zero that actually holds: it triages every email, drafts the routine replies for one-click send, and flags the few that need you.
It triages every incoming email, drafts the routine replies for one-click send, and flags the handful that need a human decision.
Most of the mail sitting in your inbox isn't a decision. It's a scheduling back-and-forth, a vendor invoice that needs a one-line acknowledgment, a recruiter you'll never reply to, or a customer asking the same question you've answered forty times. The problem isn't that these are hard. It's that they're constant, and each one demands a context switch.
The agent reads everything that lands in its inbox, sorts it the way you would, and writes the replies that don't need your judgment. A meeting request gets a draft that checks your calendar first. A 'can you send the deck' gets a draft with the file attached. The newsletter and the cold pitch get archived. What's left in front of you in the morning is the short list: the three or four emails where a person actually has to think.
The agent handles, every morning before you open your laptop:
You stay the one who hits send on anything that matters. The agent just makes sure that by the time you look, the typing is already done and the noise is already gone.
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Only the categories you allow. By default every draft waits for your approval. You can promote low-risk types — confirmations, receipts, 'got it, thanks' — to auto-send once you trust how it handles them, and pull that permission back anytime.
From your edits. When you change a draft before sending, the agent notices what you changed and why. Within a week it's matching your phrasing and sign-off; it also keeps a memory of standard answers you've given so it reuses them verbatim.
Yes. The agent connects to a Google inbox — either a dedicated address it owns, or your own account if you'd rather forward into it. It reads, drafts, and sends through that mailbox; there's nothing new for the people emailing you to learn.
It leaves it for you and writes a two-line summary explaining what the sender wants and why it didn't draft a reply — usually because the decision is yours to make. Those land at the top of the morning list.
Each agent owns one inbox, which keeps voice and rules clean. If you run a shared support address and a personal one, that's two agents — both set up in a few minutes, each with its own tone and auto-send rules.
$49/month or $490/year — cancel anytime. That covers the inbox triage, drafting, calendar and CRM access, and any automations you set up — no per-email or per-seat metering.