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Your inbox is full of information that matters: invoices to pay, flights to catch, deadlines to hit, subscriptions renewing, deals expiring. But finding it means opening emails, scanning threads, and trying to remember what was where. Echo fixes that. Connect your Gmail once, set up a few Rules, and everything important shows up automatically on your dashboard — every time you open a new tab. Echo is a product by Beau, a Y Combinator-backed company.

The problem with email

Email wasn’t designed to be a database. But that’s what it’s become. Your invoice history, travel plans, contract deadlines, and renewal notices all live there — buried in threads, mixed in with newsletters and notifications. Most people deal with this by keeping tabs open, flagging emails, or just trying to remember. It works until it doesn’t.

What Echo does differently

Traditional email filters move emails around. Echo reads them and extracts what matters — amounts, dates, statuses, codes — and turns them into a live dashboard you actually look at.
Traditional filtersEcho
Move emails to foldersExtract data from emails
You still have to open themData surfaces automatically
Static rules based on sender/subjectAI understands context and meaning
You manage the systemThe system manages itself

Who uses Echo

Founders and freelancers use Echo to stay on top of invoices, renewals, and client deadlines without maintaining spreadsheets or checking their inbox constantly. Managers and operators use Echo to monitor contracts, vendor payments, and time-sensitive notices across a busy inbox. Anyone with an overwhelming inbox uses Echo because it turns email from something you manage into something that works for you.

Why it’s always in front of you

Echo lives in your new tab page. Not an app you have to remember to open, not a weekly digest you skim and forget. Every time you open a new tab — which is dozens of times a day — your most important data is already there. The best tool is the one you actually see.