Powers.
Ve is an intelligence layer over your working day. It reads your mail, your calendar, your tasks, and the tools around them, then does the work you’d do if you had a sharp chief of staff who never slept. These are its powers, the big ones first.
The Morning Brief
Every morning, in your timezone, one email: your day, already thought through. The subject line reads Intent of the day, and Ve assembles it from five places at once: your tasks, today’s calendar, the threads still waiting on a reply, the work you’ve handed to others, and the action items from yesterday’s meetings.
It reasons like an analyst. A date that has passed stays gone. A conversation that went quiet gets flagged, with an offer to nudge it. And on a morning when nothing actually needs you, Ve skips the send. Most tools would mail you something anyway.
Too busy to read it? Listen to the briefing as audio instead.
Opportunities
Most tools react to what arrives. Ve also works on what should leave your outbox. Describe your ideal customer once and it goes looking: new prospects that match, a first email drafted for each, everything queued for your approval. It keeps hundreds of opportunities drafted and waiting. Nothing sends until you say so; you just open the queue and pick.
Ve answers wherever you message
Write to Ve where you already are. Reply to your morning brief over email like you’d reply to a colleague, and the action gets carried out. Message it on WhatsApp or Telegram to get things done without opening the inbox, and your routines can deliver their output to any of them.
Drafts that sound like you decided them
Ve models more than your tone. It learns how you decide: when you delegate, when you escalate, when you decline, when one line is enough. Drafting starts by simulating how you, with your priorities, would react to the thread. The drafts read the way you’d write them on your best day.
And when the stakes are real (contracts, pricing, legal redlines), the rules turn conservative. Ve never invents terms.
It studies your edits
Every draft you send carries a measure of how much you changed it. Heavy edits get analyzed for what changed and why. A correction you make twice becomes a rule, and that whole class of correction stops appearing. Ve a month from now writes noticeably more like you than Ve on day one.
Routines
Describe recurring work in plain language and Ve compiles it into a plan. Approve it once and it runs by itself: a summary of the week every Monday morning, a curated news digest at 7:30 from the journalists you trust, a monthly review of where your attention went. You read the output; the work happens on schedule.
Follow-ups you’d forgotten to send
Ve watches the threads marked awaiting reply. When one stays silent past the window you set, the follow-up draft is already waiting. The polite chase you always mean to send and rarely do.
Labels in your language
Every inbox tool ships preset categories. Ve asks what yours are. Name a label and describe it in your own words (by client, by project, by urgency, by anything), and Ve applies it to the right threads and keeps applying it as mail arrives. Your inbox starts to mirror how you actually think.
One memory across your tools
Connect an app once and its content joins a single searchable memory that Ve’s agents read when they plan your day or draft a reply. Granola and Attention meeting notes, HubSpot and Zoho records, Notion docs, ClickUp tasks, Slack and Teams messages. Calendars stay live: Ve’s calendar agent works directly on your Google and Outlook calendars. Gmail and Outlook both, end to end.
Ve on iMessage
Text Ve the way you text anyone, and it texts back with the work done. It’s the next channel on the list.