For the 14 deals you'll close in 2026. Not the 33 you won't.
You sent the Calendly link.
That deal is already lost.
The moment your prospect saw the link, they moved you to the “vendor” folder. VPs don’t schedule with one-of-forty. The Tuesday morning you wrote by hand — three real times, one line of warmth — that’s how $180K closes. You missed that morning today.
Founding price $9/mo, locked for life. The window closes at 100 members.
The future you already had
It’s 9:14 AM on a Tuesday.
The morning is already yours.
The Hartmann email came in at 8:47. The one worth $180,000 if you close it. You’re in the kitchen. The light is the kind of pale you only get before 10 AM in October. You glance at your phone, read the email once, and tap a single button.
By the time the espresso is done, three drafts are open on your laptop. The second one reads like you wrote it on a quiet Tuesday morning — your hedge in the second sentence, your sign-off, three real time slots pulled live from your calendar. Tuesday 2pm. Wednesday 10. Thursday 4. No paragraph of scheduling logic. No “let me know what works.” One copy, one paste, one send.
9:16 AM. Total thinking time: ninety seconds. You walk into your 9:30 with one less item in your head and the second-largest deal of the year already moving.
This Tuesday is already in your calendar. You just haven’t unlocked it.
The morning you keep choosing
It’s still 9:14 AM.
The email is still there.
You read the Hartmann email a third time. You alt-tab to your calendar. You type “Tuesday or Thursday work, happy to —” and then you delete it because it sounds like every other AE on Earth. You start again. You think about whether to propose Wednesday because they’re East Coast. You re-read the original. You hedge.
You send at 10:08 AM. Fifty-four minutes lost. The 9:30 meeting just ate its own preparation window. By 5 PM you’ll have done this four more times.
This Tuesday looks identical to last Tuesday. By December, you’ve written the same six-sentence scheduling email 564 times. Three full workdays of typing, gone. The Hartmann deal? Your competitor in Atlanta replied at 9:05 with three times in a single line of warmth. The prospect booked Thursday with them. You’ll find out in February when their logo appears on a press release.
This is the morning you chose. You’ll choose it again tomorrow. Not because you want to. Because the alternative — sitting down to craft a personal scheduling email forty-seven times a month — is not a thing a human does at scale.
How you take it back
Ninety seconds.
Not three workdays a month.
Replyy isn’t a faster scheduling link. It’s the Tuesday morning you had before scheduling links existed — the one where you wrote three lines and won the deal.
01
Paste their email
Drop in the message you just received. Replyy reads the tone — formal, warm, urgent, hedging — and the meeting context.
02
Pick the one that sounds like you
Three drafts. Each in your voice. Each with three real time slots from your calendar. The one you’d have written if you had the morning back.
03
Send from your own inbox
Copy. Paste. Hit send. We never touch your outbox. Your prospect sees an email from you — because that’s what it is.
Calendly didn’t fail you
Your prospect’s patience did.
The link wasn’t the problem until it was.
Calendly is excellent — for the part of your pipeline that doesn’t care if you’re one of forty. Replyy is for the part where that distinction is the deal.
| Calendly | Replyy | |
|---|---|---|
| What your prospect feels | “I’m one of forty in their pipeline.” | “They made time for me.” |
| Average reply time | Same — but feels colder | Eighteen minutes, in your voice |
| Where the deal goes | “Vendor” folder. Pricing comparison. | Partner conversation. No comparison. |
| Calendar integration | Yes | Yes — same Google/Outlook backend |
| Price | $12–$20/mo | $9/mo founding price, locked for life |
Who already lost a deal this way
If your average deal is over $25k,
this has already happened to you.
You probably can’t name the deal. That’s the point. Scheduling friction loses deals quietly — they don’t show up in the lost-reason field of your CRM. They show up in the gap between the 47 conversations and the 14 closes.
Enterprise AEs
You closed 14 deals last year. You worked on 47. Of the 33 that didn’t close, ask how many died between “great call” and “let me know what time works.”
Executive coaches
Your average client is worth $48k over twelve months. They decide whether you’re “a coach” or “the coach” in the first email. The Calendly link gives them the answer.
Boutique consultants
Your last three lost engagements all said the same thing in the post-mortem: “It just didn’t feel like the right fit.” Half of that feeling was your scheduling email.
Lawyers & advisors
You bill $850 an hour. The five minutes you spent re-writing a scheduling email last Tuesday cost more than this subscription costs all year.
The voice that was already yours
It learns from five emails.
Then it disappears into the work.
Onboarding is forty seconds. Forward five emails you’ve sent — preferably to people who matter. Replyy extracts your sentence length, your sign-offs, the hedges only you use, your exact warmth. Then it disappears into the work.
No em-dashes you’d never write. No “I hope this finds you well” if you’ve never written one in your life. No tracking pixels, no read receipts, no “powered by.” The output is your email. The only difference is you wrote it in ninety seconds instead of nine minutes.
You’ve been writing this email correctly since the day you started closing big deals. The version you wrote on quiet mornings was already optimal. You just couldn’t keep doing it 47 times a month.
What you don’t lose
We take back the morning.
Nothing else leaves your control.
Your inbox
We never send. You copy, paste, hit send yourself. Your SMTP, your outbox, your audit trail.
Your calendar privacy
Read-only access. We see your busy blocks. We never see event titles, attendees, or notes.
Your drafts
Auto-deleted after 30 days. Or instantly, from your dashboard. Default off for any training.
Pricing
$9/mo, locked for life.
Or $19/mo, like everyone after you.
We’re taking 100 founding members at the launch price. When the hundredth one signs up, the window closes — for everyone. After that, the price is $19/mo and the lock is gone. The members who got in keep their $9 forever.
Founding member
$9/month
normally $19. Locked for life as long as you stay subscribed.
- · Unlimited drafts
- · Google Calendar & Outlook
- · 5-email voice training
- · Cancel anytime — you just lose the price
No charge today. We launch in June 2026. You’ll be invited two weeks early.
FAQ
Questions, mostly answered.
Isn’t this just GPT with a calendar plugin?+
The calendar part is two days of work. The hard part — the only part that matters — is making the reply sound like you wrote it. Not like “Sure, happy to chat! Here are some times!” That’s where 80% of our engineering goes. If you can’t tell it apart from your own writing in five emails, we haven’t shipped yet.
Will my prospect know it’s AI?+
Only if you tell them. No link. No widget. No tracking pixel. No “powered by.” It’s an email you reviewed, edited if you wanted, and sent from your own inbox. Because that’s what it is.
What if it sounds wrong?+
You don’t send it. You get three drafts every time. Pick one, edit it, or write your own — the same way you’d treat a draft from an assistant who knows your voice. The difference is the assistant doesn’t cost $60k/year.
Languages?+
English at launch. Japanese support in v1.1 (Q4 2026). If your buyers reply in English, you’re covered now.
When does the founding price actually close?+
When 100 people sign up. We’re not playing scarcity games — there’s a real Stripe limit and you’ll see the count on the next email we send. After that, the price is $19/mo and there’s no lock.
One decision
The next 47 emails are coming.
Decide once whether you write them, or Replyy does.
Every Tuesday morning you spend on a six-sentence email is a Tuesday morning you’re not spending on the call that closes the deal. Take back the morning. Lock the $9 price. Launch in three weeks.
47 founding spots left of 100. No charge today.