Use cases

Ways people use Ember

Ember adapts to anyone whose results come from relationships. Here are the jobs people hire it to do.

Ember is for anyone whose results come from relationships rather than volume. It is not a cold-email blaster or a sequence builder — it reads each contact’s real history, decides who needs a touch and why, and drafts the next email in your voice for you to approve. The shape of that job looks a little different depending on who you are.

Founders are the best salesperson for their product but have no time to follow up, so warm prospects and design partners quietly go cold. Account executives juggle more live deals than anyone can nurture by hand, and follow-up is the first thing to slip when the calendar fills. Anyone tending long-term relationships — consultants, investors, recruiters — neglects the contacts that matter most because there is never an urgent trigger to reach out.

How to choose: pick the use case that matches how you spend your day. The underlying engine is the same — Ember reasons about each relationship individually and never sends without your approval — but each page walks through the specific problem, workflow, and outcome for that persona.

Stop sequencing. Start closing.

Ember reads your pipeline, writes in your voice, and keeps every relationship moving. You approve every send.