A partner sees your travel and the shared schedule. A co-parent sees the kids' activities only. Grandparents know when you're free. Kids can ask if you're home this weekend. Every person in your network gets the right view — and only that view. You define the relationships. Chief enforces them.
When a gap appears in the plan, Chief finds who in the network can fill it, asks them, closes the loop, and tells everyone what happened. No group text. No thread to manage. Nobody coordinating the coordination. Chief just handled it.
Not just a calendar lookup. Chief reads your GroupMe, your TeamSnap, your WhatsApp, your school emails — and reasons across all of them. It knows what Coach posted 20 minutes ago. It finds the open weekend hidden across four schedules. It knows who's free Sunday. Just ask.
Multiple schedules. Multiple households. Multiple sets of demands. Finding a window where everything aligns used to take 20 texts and a shared spreadsheet. Chief sees all of it simultaneously and tells you exactly when you're free — across the whole network at once.
The real schedule doesn't live in a calendar. It lives in the GroupMe message from 20 minutes ago. In the TeamSnap update nobody opened. In the school Remind buried under 40 others. Chief reads every channel your network uses and surfaces what matters — to the right person, in the right place, at the right moment.
Every source built what it could. Calendars stored events. Group chats passed messages. Apps tracked schedules. None of them could learn from the network, reason across relationships, or know that what Marcus needs to see and what Diane needs to see are completely different things. Now one layer does all of it — quietly, before anyone has to ask.
LifeChief is coming. Join the waitlist and be among the first families to experience it.