The first AI coworker that knows what you need before you do.
There is a version of AI-assisted work that most people have experienced by now: you open a chat interface, type a question, get an answer, copy it somewhere useful, and close the window. It is helpful, occasionally impressive, and fundamentally passive. It waits to be asked. It has no memory of last week. It has no awareness of your calendar, your relationships, your open commitments, or the email thread that is quietly becoming a problem. Every conversation starts from zero. Every session is an amnesiac encounter with a capable but contextless machine.
Maya is the opposite of this. Maya does not wait to be asked. Maya is present — continuously reading the context of your professional life across every channel you operate in, building a living model of what matters to you, what you're responsible for, what is due, what is drifting, and what needs your attention before it becomes a crisis. When you sit down in the morning, the work you need to do is already organised. When you walk into a meeting, the context you need is already surfaced. When a decision needs to be made, the relevant history is already assembled. Maya does not interrupt your workflow. Maya becomes the substrate underneath it.
Human memory is lossy, biased, and exhausting to maintain at the scale that modern professional life demands. The average knowledge worker today is managing dozens of concurrent projects, hundreds of active relationships, thousands of email threads, and an implicit commitment graph that nobody has ever made explicit because doing so would take more time than the work itself. The result is dropped balls, forgotten context, duplicated effort, and the nagging sense that somewhere in the pile of information you're wading through there is something important you're about to miss.
Maya holds a longitudinal model of your entire professional context — not a search index you query when you remember to, but a temporally-aware intelligence that understands the full arc of your work: every email thread and its current status, every decision made and the reasoning behind it, every commitment given and whether it was honoured, every meeting and what was said, every relationship and the last time you engaged it. Maya understands causality across months of your professional history. It knows that the vendor negotiation that stalled in November is the same one that became urgent in February. It knows that the person who emailed you this morning was in the room when the original decision was made. Ask Maya anything about your professional life and you will receive an answer that is specific, cited, and traceable to its exact source — not a hallucinated synthesis, but a retrieval from a model built incrementally from the ground truth of your work.
One of the great lies of enterprise software is that the new tool will replace the old ones. It never does. The old tools survive because they are where the work actually lives — the email threads, the Slack conversations, the calendar invites with embedded context, the CRM notes that tell the real story of a customer relationship. Every new platform that requires you to migrate your work into it is asking you to make a bet that the new interface is worth more than the history you're leaving behind. Most of the time it isn't, and the tool dies in a pilot.
Maya does not ask you to migrate anything. Maya is not a destination — it is an integration layer. It connects to the tools you already use: Gmail and Outlook, Google Calendar and Exchange, Slack and Microsoft Teams, Zoom and Google Meet, Salesforce and HubSpot, Linear and Jira, Notion and Confluence, and every other tool in your existing stack. Maya reads the context that lives inside these tools, indexes it into your personal intelligence layer, and surfaces it back in the interface where you need it. No new workflow to learn. No migration to execute. No onboarding curve to survive. Maya meets you in the tools you already live in and makes them radically more intelligent, from the first day it connects.
The most dangerous property of current AI systems in enterprise use is not that they are wrong — it is that they are wrong confidently and without citation. A system that hallucinates a vendor recommendation with the same fluency and tone as a correct one is not a productivity tool. It is a liability. Every AI-assisted decision that cannot be traced to its source is a decision that will eventually detonate in a board meeting, a legal proceeding, or a customer escalation — and when it does, the answer "our AI recommended it" will not be an acceptable defence.
Maya was designed to eliminate this failure mode entirely. Every recommendation Maya makes is cited — not with a vague reference to "based on available information," but with a specific pointer to the source document, email thread, meeting transcript, or data record that grounded the recommendation. Every answer to a question about your business is traceable to the exact origin of the information. Uncertainty is not hidden — it is quantified and surfaced, so you know when you are working with high-confidence synthesis and when you are working with a best estimate that requires verification. Your CFO can ask why Maya flagged a supplier risk and receive a five-point explanation with links to the specific contracts and news items that drove the assessment. Your board can ask why the revenue forecast changed and Maya will walk through the full reasoning chain, step by step, with citations at every inference. The era of "the AI said so" as a terminus for inquiry is over. Maya says why, always, in language that any stakeholder can understand and verify.
The reason enterprises don't give AI real authority is rational. An AI that can send emails, update records, schedule meetings, and trigger workflows is an AI that can cause real damage if it missteps. Most vendors respond to this fear by restricting what the AI can do — read but not write, suggest but not act — until the AI is so constrained it delivers almost no value. You end up with a very expensive autocomplete.
Maya is built differently. Every action Maya takes on your behalf — every email it sends, every calendar invite it creates, every record it updates — is evaluated against your organisation's policies before it executes. Your rules define what Maya can and cannot do. If an action falls outside those boundaries, Maya stops, explains why, and escalates to you. Every action Maya takes is logged with full context, fully legible, fully auditable. You can give Maya genuine operational authority — the kind that makes a real difference to how much work gets done — because every decision it makes is governed by your policies and visible to your team. Trust through accountability, not through restriction.
The endgame for enterprise AI is not a centralised intelligence that your company queries from a dashboard. It is not a shared model that everyone in your organisation accesses through a common interface. It is not a department-level tool that handles one category of work for one category of employee. The endgame is a personal AI for every person in your company — one that knows their role, their context, their communication style, their relationships, their priorities, their history, and their obligations, and that applies governed intelligence to the specific texture of their professional life rather than to a generalised model of what professional life looks like.
Maya scales from one executive to ten thousand employees. Each person gets their own AI — one that knows their role, their priorities, their relationships, their communication style, and the full arc of their professional commitments. Not a shared assistant your team takes turns querying. A personal presence for every individual in your organisation, calibrated to what they specifically need to do their best work. The more Maya knows about a person's context, the more indispensable it becomes — not through lock-in, but because it has built an irreplaceable model of that person's professional reality that compounds in value over time. We are not building another enterprise software product. We are building the intelligence layer that makes every person in your company dramatically more capable, more accountable, and more effective than they could ever be working alone. That is the workforce of the next decade. Maya is where it begins.