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AI Emaily
Your AI inbox that writes like you + replies on autopilot
184 followers
Your AI inbox that writes like you + replies on autopilot
184 followers
AI Emaily is the AI-native inbox that runs like your chief of staff. It reads every message, triages what actually needs you, and quiets the noise. It drafts replies in your own voice — not generic AI text — then schedules and sends across Gmail, Outlook, and any provider from one inbox. Three modes: Manual, Copilot, Autopilot. You approve, it acts, with undo and a full audit trail on everything. Your mail is never used to train models. Start free.













How does the "drafts in your own voice" part actually work in practice? Does it learn from your sent folder, or do you have to feed it samples first, and how long before the replies stop sounding off?
AI Emaily
@cemdokurel No sent-folder scraping and no feeding it samples first — that's the part most tools get wrong. The "your voice" bit comes from the Context brain you set: your details, how you like to sound, plus optional client profiles for specifics.
Because you define it up front, drafts are on-voice from the very first reply instead of needing a break-in period. Each edit you make just tightens it further. You control exactly what it knows and how it sounds.
Check our use cases for different features → aiemaily.com/use-cases
How does it actually learn my voice well enough to draft replies I'd send without heavy editing, and is that calibration a one-time setup or something it keeps refining over time?
AI Emaily
@sebahatnrrr Both, in the best way — it's a quick one-time setup and it keeps sharpening. You set your voice once in the Context brain (your details, tone, optional client profiles), so replies land close enough to send without heavy editing from day one — no long calibration wait.
Then the small edits you do make feed back in and refine it over time. So: solid immediately, better the more you use it, and you're always in control of what it knows and how it sounds.
Check our use cases for different features → aiemaily.com/use-cases
how does it actually learn my voice without training on my mail, and is that only on the free tier or paid too?
AI Emaily
@furkanyhey You set your voice directly in the Context brain (your details, tone, optional client profiles) — so there's no training on your mail, it just uses what you define. And it's not locked behind a plan: voice-matched drafting works on the free tier, not only paid. You're in control of what it knows from the start.
Check our use cases for different features → aiemaily.com/use-cases
How does the voice-matching actually work when you first set it up? Does it learn from my sent folder, or do I have to feed it examples?
AI Emaily
@ymet_k46473 Neither, actually — no sent-folder scraping and no samples to feed in. When you first set up, you define your tone in the Context brain, plus optional client profiles for specifics. That's why it's on-voice from the very first draft instead of needing a break-in period, and each edit just tightens it.
Check our use cases for different features → aiemaily.com/use-cases
How does it actually learn my voice well enough that I don't end up rewriting every draft, and is there a real free tier or just a trial before the first bill?
AI Emaily
@kamile1170180 You set your voice once in the Context brain, so drafts land close enough to send from day one — no rewriting every reply, and small edits refine it further. On pricing: there's a genuine free tier to start, not just a countdown trial before the first bill. You can actually live in it.
Check our use cases for different features → aiemaily.com/use-cases
The undo + audit trail is reassuring, but undo only works if you catch it before the recipient reads it. Once Autopiolt sends somethings wrongs, what's the actual recourse, is it just a follow-up correction email, or is there more built in?
AI Emaily
@hudson_blake Fair point — undo is the safety net, not the strategy. The real answer is prevention, and that's where you're in control: the quality of Autopilot's sends is a direct reflection of how you set it up. When your ruleset defines exactly which lanes it can touch, your Personal Context gives it your voice and boundaries, and your client profiles load the right facts per person, the drafts it sends aren't guesses — they're built from what you told it. That's what keeps the "wrong send" from happening in the first place.
And there are layers before it ever leaves: an action allowlist limits what Autopilot can do, an optional send delay gives you a real window to catch things, and everything's logged in the audit trail. The recommended flow is to earn that autonomy gradually — run new lanes in Copilot first, and only promote them to Autopilot once you've seen it nail them. So by the time it's sending solo on a lane, it's already proven itself on your rules. Set it thoughtfully and it's less "hope nothing breaks" and more "it only does what you've cleared it to do."
Check our use cases for different features → aiemaily.com/use-cases
The "writes like you" part is the hard part — most AI email tools sound like a press release. Curious how many emails it needs before the voice actually matches?
AI Emaily
@medal411 That's the part we flipped — it doesn't need N emails to warm up. Your voice comes from the Context brain you set up front, so it matches from the first draft rather than slowly averaging toward you like the "press release" tools do. Define it once, and each edit you make sharpens it from there.
Check our use cases for different features → aiemaily.com/use-cases