Guided journey · Investors
Many niche apps. One shared graph. A compounding ecosystem.
Five steps through the graph — the same story an org chart or a deck can't tell, because the argument is the architecture.
Step 1 of 5
Everyday life has no data layer
Your family's people, events, lists, assets, and money are scattered across nine-plus apps that share nothing. Nobody owns the graph. Sneat ships focused niche apps that all read and write a single shared graph — each new app makes every existing one more valuable.
Step 2 of 5
Why now
AI collapsed the cost of shipping software: one founder plus agent orchestration now sustains an ecosystem's development pace that used to need a department. The super-app pattern is proven in Asia; everyday life in the West is still fragmented. The window is open.
Step 3 of 5
The moat is compounding, not features
Features are copyable; a graph that ten apps enrich is not. Retention compounds because leaving one app means leaving the graph all your apps share — and users still hold their data, which is why they trust it.
Step 4 of 5
The growth engine
B2B ritual apps (retros, standups, team pulse) bill teams — and hand every team member a personal graph account. B2B revenue funds consumer growth: the negative-CAC flywheel.
Step 5 of 5
The ask
I'm raising a seed round to turn one founder plus AI agents into a small exceptional team, focused on the consumer doors and the first paying team verticals. Diligence is easy: my specs, standards, and code are largely in the open — the map is the data room's table of contents. The booking link below runs onBookius, because using my own graph for my own front door is the point.