Every message you send
carries signals you didn’t put there.
Thought analyzes your written communication and strips out the cognitive noise before you hit send.
You write an email. You think it’s clear. The recipient reads urgency where you meant calm. Passive aggression where you meant diplomacy. Thought shows you what your words are actually saying — not what you think they’re saying.
You can’t unsend it. But you can see it before they do.
Why Grammar Tools Aren’t Enough
Spell-check and tone-suggesters edit at the word and sentence layer. The damage in written communication happens at a different layer entirely — what the structure of the message implies, what the omissions signal, and how a recipient with a different cognitive architecture will read it. Thought works on that layer, which is why it catches what every other writing tool misses.
The Message Cycle
Step 1
Scan
Before you send, Thought reads the message the way a recipient with a different cognitive profile will read it — extracting the actual claim, the implied assumptions, and the tone the words will land with.
Step 2
Surface
The gap between what you think you’re saying and what the recipient will receive is named. On inbound messages, Thought surfaces what the sender almost certainly meant but didn’t say — including an ND–NT translation layer where it’s needed.
Step 3
Interrupt
You see the signal you’re actually sending before it leaves the building. Rewrite, recalibrate, or send with eyes open — but stop discovering the miscommunication a week later in someone else’s reaction.
Built For
| Audience | Context |
|---|---|
| Professionals navigating high-stakes written work | Legal, clinical, financial, and executive communication where ambiguity produces real cost |
| Neurodivergent professionals | ND–NT translation between literal communication and convention-heavy implicit structure |
| Managers and team leads | Feedback, performance reviews, and difficult written conversations where intent is misread |
| Distributed and remote teams | Organizations where written communication is the primary channel and noise compounds across hundreds of messages a day |
See It Before They Do.
Signal without the noise, on every message.