Use case · Investor updates
Pulls from your week — shipped features, metrics, asks. Writes the update. You read, edit, send.
Get your first task done freeLooks at what you shipped, what your metrics moved, and what asks are open. No empty updates.
Writes the way founders actually write to their investors — direct, no corporate puffery.
Surfaces the introductions and decisions you need from investors. Most updates forget this part.
Weekly, biweekly, monthly. Set it once and the worker keeps the rhythm.
The weekly investor update is one of the highest-ROI things a founder can do, and one of the things most founders quietly stop doing within three months of closing the round. The reason isn't laziness. It's that writing a good update takes ninety minutes, and ninety minutes is what you don't have when you're also building, selling, and supporting.
An AI worker for investor updates writes the first draft so the founder only has to edit. It pulls from the week — what shipped, what the metrics did, what hires are pending, what introductions are needed — and assembles it into a clean, honest update in the founder's voice. The founder reviews, tightens, and sends. What used to be a ninety-minute task becomes ten.
The compounding value of staying in your investors' inboxes is enormous. They remember you when allocations come up. They make introductions. They notice momentum. The founder who skips updates loses all of that without ever seeing the cost.