TL;DR: Today weâre releasing a new episode of our podcast AI & I. Dan Shipper goes in depth with Kieran Klaassen, the general manager of Coraâour latest product incubation that lets you manage your inbox with AIâand Brandon Gell, Everyâs head of Studio and consulting. We get into the inside story of how a one-person engineering team built and launched Cora in three months. Watch on X or YouTube, or listen on Spotify or Apple Podcasts.Â
On a summer evening last year, Every entrepreneur in residence Kieran Klaassen hotfooted it home from his coworking space. To passersby, Kieran may have looked a littleâŠweird. For one, he appeared to be talking to himself. He walked in short, fast bursts, stopping to think for a moment, before resuming the janky monologue. Those within earshot wouldâve heard snatches of âemail,â âdread,â âCora,â âdelightful,â and âmagic.â Oh, and there was a giant grin on his face the whole time.Â
Before leaving the office, Kieran had a call with Every Studio head Brandon Gell about a new projectâreimagining email in the age of generative AIâand his mind was buzzing. After putting his daughters to bed that night, he sat down at his desk, pulled up a transcript of the voice memo heâd just recorded, and started coding.
When Brandon and Dan Shipper woke up the next morning, they had a message from Kieran: the MVP of Coraâa whole new way to do emailâwas ready.Â
That was the beginning of the exciting, exhausting, emotional journey of building a product weâre proud of at Every, and Dan invited Kieran and Brandon on the show to talk about it. They go behind the scenes on how they went from idea to execution on Coraâmeandering, occasionally chaotic, and unvarnished (we have the voice memos to prove it). Here's a link to the episode transcript.
Cora, Everyâs latest product incubation, is a way to manage your email with AI. It frees you from your inbox by turning all your emails into a sleek, scannable storyâa âbriefââtwice a day. A month after launch, there are almost 8,000 people on the waitlist. If you want to try Cora, sign up. The team is onboarding new people every day and prioritizing Every paid subscribers. If you want to jump the waitlist, make sure you subscribe if you havenât already:
Watch on X or YouTube, or listen on Spotify or Apple Podcasts.Â
If you want a quick summary, hereâs a taste for paying subscribers:
Sponsored by: Every
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Act I: Finding the right problem to solve
The team intuitively thought that the problem with email was the burden of responding, so they built Cora, an AI email assistant that drafted email in your voice and style. That was the primary function of the MVP that Kieran shipped overnight. Cora was tested internally until the product was really good at drafting email in the userâs voice, but they still werenât satisfiedâthe drafts often missed important details.Â
â[W]e realized that it doesn't matter how good an LLM can mimic your voice,â Brandon recalls. âIf it's not in your brain, if it doesn't have the context that you have, it just can't write a good email for you.â
At this point the team had been thinking deeply about email for a whileâin Kieranâs words, âwe were feeling this idea already for monthsâŠit was in the airââand they realized that responding to email wasnât actually a problem. As Brandon adds, â[Itâs] kind of the pleasurable part of emailing because it means you're maybe progressing something forward.âÂ
They believe that the stress that we feel about email goes beyond that, flowing from the cognitive load of reading, archiving, and organizing emails. Thatâs the arc of why Cora is centered around briefs, so that you donât have to worry about cleaning your inboxâitâs neatly delivered to you twice a day. âCora does draft emails for you, but it only drafts emails that it thinks that it can do a great job drafting, where you're going to have to edit a very small amount,â Brandon says.
Coraâs journeyâfrom ideas to drafts to briefs in three months, owned by a one-person engineering teamâreminds Dan that software development is forever changed. Building software isnât expensive anymore. AI has made it possible to build a product, at least a rough version, in a couple of days, and that makes the question of what youâre building even more important. The hard thing isnât writing code; itâs running experiments and developing the taste to know when youâve found something valuable.Â
Act II: Searching for the soul in software
After nailing down the problem they wanted to solve, the next phase of the teamâs journey was building a delightful solution. Â
Build products with a point of viewÂ
As AI democratizes the process of building software, what counts is building products with soul, ones that reflect a clear point of view. â[A] lot of the most successful businesses that are being built using AIâŠcome from people or organizations that have really strong perspectives,â Brandon says.Â
Cora is a good example of this philosophy, because telling users to look at their email just twice a dayâthrough the brief at 8 a.m. and 3 p.m.âis a bold position. Kieran explains, âWe hear people say, âThereâs no one else like this, itâs differentââand that can be good, that can be bad, but we're very proud of it.â
Building products that reflect an opinion, or a feeling, comes naturally to Kieran. âIâm a musician, he explains. âI did film music for eight years, conducting orchestras and scoring, and for me, software is very similarâŠyou score a filmâŠto make you feel a certain wayâŠin a similar way with software, you create an experience where it makes you feel or experience something, or tell a story.âÂ
Creating something that makes someone feel is a quality thatâs hard to define, Dan explains, and one we aspire toward at Every, both in writing and in software. He says that the lines between the two are blurringâsoftware is beginning to resemble contentâand in a world where building products is faster and more inexpensive than ever, the ones that make users feel great will win.
How Kieran used AI to build CoraÂ
Kieranâs philosophy about building a product as complex as Cora in three months is: âReally drilling down to understand what the problem is you're trying to solve, and at the same time being super free and just doing shit.âÂ
Whether heâs building the MVP of an email consumer product or a personal app just for himself, Kieran has the same process. He goes for a walk and records himself talking about his vision for the product, letting his thoughts wander and adding as many details as he can. He transfers the transcript to an LLM of his choice and converts it into a PRD (a product requirement document is an overview of what a new product should do, how it should look, and what features it needs to have).
When it comes to actually writing code, Kieran prefers to work inside AI code editor Cursor. He estimates that 80-90 percent of the underlying code in Cora has been written by AI, a valuable âcollaborator just enabling [him] to do things faster.â When Cursor has written subpar code, itâs usually because he hasnât been clear while defining the problem for the AI. âIf I don't understand all the aspects [of the problem], it's very hard for Cursor to do the right thing,â he explains. âIt will fill in the detailsâŠsometimes it goes rogue, in different directions that are contraryâŠso you need to be very clear on a direction.â He gives Cursor the right context by proactively editing Cursor rules, which are custom instructions that heâs written for a project.
Other than for coding, Kieranâs model of choice is OpenAIâs o1 Pro model, accessible through the $200 tier. o1 Pro is infamously slow because it uses more compute to âthinkâ harder about the prompt, a quality he sees as an added benefit: âIt also makes me chill a little bit because working with AI can be very energizing, but also a little bit stressful because it goes so quicklyâŠand it's kind of refreshing to have to just sit on a chair and do nothing for three to five minutes once in a while.â He uses the model as a thought partner, bouncing off ideas and thinking through strategies with the AI.
Act III: The future of Coraâbiggest wins and challenges
A month after Coraâs launch, weâre proud to have more than 8,000 people on the waitlist. As the team onboards new users, theyâve been getting more and more feedback. One of their biggest challenges is being able to recognize real problems in Cora, given their familiarity with a product that theyâve made.
The current goal for Cora is to make one part of emailâmanaging your inbox through briefsâas delightful for users as possible. As the team continues on the journey of building a product they love, theyâre alternately energized and drained. âThe reality is that completion state doesn't exist. It exists when you're writing code and you're building a feature, but for building a companyâbuilding a productâit's really enjoying the journey and embracing the suck of it and embracing the messiness,â says Brandon.
You can check out the episode on X, Spotify, Apple Podcasts, or YouTube. Links and timestamps are below:
- Watch on X
- Watch on YouTube
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- Listen on Apple Podcasts
Timestamps:
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Rhea Purohit is a contributing writer for Every focused on research-driven storytelling in tech. You can follow her on X at @RheaPurohit1 and on LinkedIn, and Every on X at @every and on LinkedIn.
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