The vision
Why we're building Nexus
Every team I've worked on has the same problem, and it gets worse the more they grow: the knowledge is all there, it's just scattered. A decision lives in a Slack thread, the reasoning behind it in a doc, the data in a spreadsheet nobody can find. We don't have a knowledge problem. We have a connection problem.
Nexus is a bet that the fix isn't another place to put things — it's an intelligent layer that connects the places you already use. Your notes, your docs, your conversations, woven into a single fabric you can actually ask questions of. Not "search," which makes you do the work. Knowing, where the answer finds you.
I've spent the last six years building thinking tools, most recently at Notion. The thing I kept running into is that the hard part was never storage — it was retrieval with context. The model era finally makes that tractable, and I'd rather build the thing I always wanted than watch someone else get it slightly wrong.
We're small, we're early, and we're building in the open. The waitlist isn't a marketing funnel — it's the first cohort. You'll get in before it's polished, and your rough edges will become the roadmap. If that sounds like your kind of thing, I'd love to have you.
Allan Ninal
Founder & CEO, Nexus
The roadmap
- At launch September 2026
- Connect Notion, Google Docs, and Slack in one click
- Ask-anything across everything you've connected
- Cited answers — every response links back to the source
- Desktop + web, end-to-end encrypted
- Soon after Q4 2026
- Linear, GitHub, and email connectors
- Shared team workspaces with role-based access
- Daily digest — what changed across your tools
- API + webhooks for your own integrations
- The longer bet 2027 and beyond
- Proactive surfacing — Nexus tells you before you ask
- On-device models for fully private workspaces
- A connector SDK so any tool can plug in
Join the first cohort
The waitlist is the first cohort — you'll get in before it's polished.
Join the waitlist →