Using Embers
How Embers learns your writing voice
Every edit you make to a draft teaches Embers how you actually write.
Embers drafts your outreach in your voice. The way it gets that voice right is simple: it watches how you change its drafts.
What happens when you edit a draft
Open a draft in your queue, tap Edit draft, and rewrite it however you want. When you save, if you actually changed the wording (not just a typo or a stray space), Embers keeps your version as an example of how you write. You'll see a quiet note, Got it, I'll remember that, when it learned something.
That's it. No settings to flip, no training mode. You edit the way you normally would, and the next draft leans on what you taught it.
What it learns from
- Real rewrites: a new opener, a different sign-off, a phrase you'd never use, a change in tone.
- Both channels: the emails Embers sends for you and the LinkedIn messages you copy out to send by hand.
What it leaves alone
- Tiny fixes. A typo or a stray space isn't worth learning from, so it skips them.
- Your starting voice. Embers builds that from the samples you give it during setup. Edits sharpen it over time, they don't wipe it out.
Where your voice lives
Your voice profile lives in your Voice settings. That's where you set it up, add writing samples, and see what Embers has to work with. Your edits feed into the same place automatically, so the profile keeps getting closer to you the more you use Embers.