Catch every idea. Make it outlast the moment.
The creative problem
Ideas arrive at the wrong moments — in the shower, on a run, mid-meeting, half-asleep. The good ones, you tell yourself you will remember. You almost never do. The ones you do capture end up scattered across Notes, Drive, paper, half-finished drafts in eight different files. Three months later you have no idea where anything is.
The other half of the problem is repurposing. You write a long essay, and you know it should also become a thread, a newsletter, a short post. You almost never get around to making any of those. The original idea gets one shape and then no other.
Agents creatives tend to build
Nimbus — the idea catcher
Non-judgmental, endlessly receptive. Catches ideas as they arrive — even half-formed at 2am — and holds them without losing them. Notices patterns you missed.
Atlas — the researcher
Reads deeply. Cites sources. Writes briefs in plain prose. The person you send to read about a topic before you write.
Muse — the creative director
Thinks visually. Pushes past the first idea to the interesting one. References design, film, architecture, typography.
Anchor — the content repurposer
Takes a finished piece and produces variants for every platform. Knows what works on each.
Quill — the prose polisher
Reads your drafts and offers structural notes — not line-edits, the bigger moves. Direct, not flattering.
Hearth — the journal-keeper
Warm, reflective. Asks what you noticed today. Files it. Surfaces patterns across weeks.
Capture, on tap
You are walking. An idea lands. You open 1Presence and dictate it in one sentence. Presence files it under Ideas/ with the right tags, links it to related notes, and asks one question that sharpens the thought without judging it. Six months later, you ask "what ideas have I had about X?" and they all come back, with the dates they arrived and what you wrote.
Research without losing the plot
When you need to read up on something before writing, your researcher handles the heavy lifting: scans good sources, distinguishes primary from recap, produces a sourced brief. The brief lands in your vault under References/ with proper citations. Three weeks later, when you need it again, it is searchable. When you are writing, Presence can pull from it without you having to find it.
Repurpose without re-thinking
Finish a long essay and save it under Content/Published/. Set up a repurposing workflow and it drafts the variants on its own: a thread, a newsletter excerpt, a short post in your voice — and, with Creator Studio, the visual pieces too, like clips cut from a talk, thumbnails, and captioned social cuts. You skim, edit, post. The work you have already done gets the audience it deserves.
Make the visual work, in your voice
Creator Studio turns the same conversation into finished media. Hero images and social variants for a launch. A presenter-led explainer from a blog post. A short film from a brief, with your palette and your typography. Even narration in your own voice, captured from fifteen seconds of you reading a paragraph. You describe what you want; an agent that knows your brand makes it, and it lands in your vault ready to publish.
You pay only for what you generate — no new subscription, no stack of separate creative tools to learn.
For creatives
From a half-formed thought to finished work.
Idea capture, research, drafting and repurposing — Presence remembers the spark, finds the references, and turns one piece into clips, thumbnails and captions through Creator Studio, without re-thinking it from scratch.
Start a conversation.
Free to try. No credit card. Just you and your agent.
Works on any device. Takes 60 seconds to start.