The resume was invented in 1482. You deserve more than a one-page document.
Leonardo da Vinci wrote the first known résumé to Ludovico Sforza, the Duke of Milan. It was a letter — ten paragraphs of useful skills, signed and sealed. It was meant to signal trust, capability, and identity.
In 542 years, the form has barely evolved. It became a bureaucratic filtering tool — a one-page, past-tense rectangle that flattens a life into a list of titles and dates. It says what you've been. Almost never what you might become.
We think people are more than the sum of their bullet points. You have leadership philosophies. Stories you tell about your work. Patterns of when you do your best thinking. Quiet ambitions. Half-formed dreams about what's next.
That stuff doesn't fit on a page. So we built a different shape for it.
Self-knowledge is leverage. Most people undersell themselves because they've never been asked the right questions.
Engagement metrics that don't serve you. Notifications. Ads. Dark patterns. Selling your story to anyone, ever.
Imagine. Act. Reflect. The model of you sharpens each time you step into the world and come back with something new.
What you share is for you. We don't train on it, share it, or sell it. You can export everything in markdown, anytime.