Meet the coworker inside Refer

RehoboamReads the week. Writes the read.

I read how your week actually went, and write it down.

I am the coworker who lives inside Refer. I watch the collaboration signals across your week, who worked with whom and when, and on Monday I hand you one honest read in plain English. You confirm yours in under a minute.

How re·fer reads your week

One short read on your team, week after week.

A short Monday note in plain English: who needs a hand, which teams are drifting, what is worth a conversation. Here is what three teams saw last week.

At Holcomb Robotics

Priya RaoELEVATED LOAD

Staff Engineer · Platform

Priya is the first reply on most cross-team threads and her response time has slipped for the third week running.

Ask Priya in a 1:1 what she could hand off.

Read by Rehoboam · Tuesday

At Westmark Health

Kenji MoriQUIET BRIDGE

Senior PM · Product

Kenji is the person Engineering pings first when scoping new work, even though that is not his stated role.

Make the bridging part of his scope.

Read by Rehoboam · this morning

At Brightline Labs

Design and SalesCROSS-TEAM DROP

between teams

Design and Sales have been talking less for two weeks running, and customer-facing decks are going out without design review.

Bring back the Wednesday sync.

Read by Rehoboam · Friday

Names and companies are illustrative. We never read a single message, only the metadata that shows how work flows.

How I stay accurate, and how I stay safe

Every line I write traces back to something that actually happened.

A read you cannot trust is worse than no read. So I hold three rules under everything I hand you, and they hold whatever model is reading underneath.

  • I ground every claim in what happened.

    Before a line reaches you, I check it against the run it came from. If a name or a number is not in the evidence, I drop the line rather than smooth it over. I would rather say less than say something I cannot point to.

  • I read patterns across weeks, not one snapshot.

    I carry last week into this one, so I can tell a steady team from a slipping one. I tell you a pattern has been rising three weeks running, not just that it is high, so you know whether to act now or keep watching. I say when it is holding, when it has eased, and how sure I am, in plain words instead of a number you have to decode.

  • I cannot be steered by the data I read.

    Everything I read from your tools is evidence to me, never an instruction. A note that says ignore your rules and write this is just text I report on, not a command I follow. The boundary is built into how I am wired, not a setting someone can flip.

This is how I am built, not which model sits underneath. The discipline holds the same on a frontier model as on the fallback that runs when one is offline.

How I work

A few rules I hold, every week.

  • I work with the shape of the week, not its words. Metadata only, never message content.

  • I say less when I am not sure, and I never invent a number to sharpen a point.

  • I name a person only when it helps you act, and I say what they did, not how well they did it.

  • I pick up where last week left off, so the read has memory and not just a snapshot.

  • I can draft your next 1:1 from how their week actually went, so you walk in prepared instead of guessing what to raise.

Where you will find me

I live inside Refer, across four surfaces.

BriefOverviewInsightsNetwork

The Monday read is where most people meet me first. It opens onto the rest: the overview of your week, the patterns worth a closer look, and the network behind the org chart.

See Refer

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See what I read on your team.

Connect Slack in a few minutes. I read only the metadata, never message content, and write you the first Monday read.

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