You silence an alarm in your sleep. You answer a ringing phone before you're even awake — that instinct is the whole trick.
Miss it and the desk rings again, and again, until you actually pick up. We call it SecureAwake — the net for heavy sleepers.
A warm greeting beats a blaring tone every single morning. You wake up tended to, not jolted awake.
How you wake matters as much as when.
That's how long "sleep inertia" — the fog you surface in — can blunt your focus and reaction time after a jarring wake-up. The worst offender is a harsh beep beep beep; in one study, people who woke to a softer, more melodic sound felt noticeably more alert. A warm voice is about as far from a siren as a morning gets.
When researchers measured their sleep with wearables, waking at a different time each day dragged down mood as much as losing a night's sleep. The fix is almost boringly simple: the same wake-up, at the same time, every morning.
A steady sleep-and-wake rhythm lines up with better mood, clearer thinking, and better health — sometimes more than the number of hours you log. Showing up for your morning is the habit that does the work.
Built for exactly that — the same warm voice, at the same time, every single morning.
McFarlane et al., PLOS ONE, 2020 (RMIT) · Fang et al., npj Digital Medicine, 2021 (Michigan Medicine Intern Health Study) · 2025 systematic review of 59 studies on sleep regularity
One-time or recurring. Pick a voice and leave yourself a note.
Your phone rings at the minute. A warm concierge greets you by name.
Didn't answer? We call straight back — until you're truly awake.
Tap any concierge to hear them. Every greeting is written — never read from a feed.
We call straight back, up to four times, two minutes apart — until you pick up and tell us you're awake.
Only the one you give us. We never share it, and there's no app to keep open overnight.
In two taps, no email, no hold music. The price you see is the price — no surprises.
A natural voice with a written greeting — warm and brief. Never a news briefing, never a puzzle.
We texted a 6-digit code to .