Welcome to Remy
A memory layer for your relationships — built on top of Google Contacts, owned by you.
What Remy Is
Remy is a personal CRM for people whose work depends on remembering the texture of every conversation — founders, recruiters, consultants, anyone whose network is too big to remember unaided.
Google Contacts already holds names, emails, and phone numbers. Remy adds the parts those don't capture: notes you wrote yourself, tags that match the way you think about your network, and a record of who introduced you to whom. Connect Google once and your existing contact book becomes the foundation Remy builds on.
Remy is single-user by design. There are no shared workspaces, no team seats, no permission grids. Just your network, the way you remember it.
Read This First
If you're new, the fastest path to a working setup is:
The Four Things to Know
Most of the rest of this site is detail. The four pages below cover the load-bearing concepts — read them once and you'll predict Remy's behavior on the rest.
Contacts
The contact book — search, filter, sort, bulk operations, keyboard shortcuts, and how synced and manual contacts coexist.
Google Sync
The two sync modes, who owns which fields, and what happens when both sides change at once.
Notes
The timeline. Back-dating, editing, deleting, and the 30-day reality of recovery.
Activity Log
A complete record of every change against your account — searchable, filterable, with authMethod to distinguish dashboard from API activity.
Honest About Gaps
Remy is shipping software, not aspirational marketing. A few things you might reasonably expect aren't in v1:
- No browseable trash for notes or contacts. The note Undo toast is the only in-product recovery surface today; deleted contacts can't be restored from the UI.
- No grace period on account deletion. The click is the action.
- No notification when Google deletes a contact that you had notes on.
- The contact list search doesn't read note bodies (semantic note search is on the roadmap).
Each is documented honestly on the relevant page rather than hidden behind marketing language. If something here is wrong or doesn't match what you see, the docs are the source of intent — flag the mismatch.
Around This Site
Reading order doesn't matter much. The sidebar groups pages by what you're trying to do — set up sync, write notes, manage your data, integrate via the API. Search the sidebar (top-left) if you know the term you're looking for.
The Developer (REST API) group at the bottom is for people writing scripts against Remy's API. End-user docs come first; API docs second, separated, and clearly labeled as a different audience.