Grammarly rebrands as Superhuman & launches AI suite
Grammarly has changed its corporate name to Superhuman and has launched a bundled subscription that combines Grammarly, Coda, Superhuman Mail and a new product called Superhuman Go.
The company said the Grammarly product name will remain in use. It framed the change as a shift from a single product to a suite that spans writing, documents and email.
Shishir Mehrotra, Chief Executive Officer, described the expansion as a move into a wider range of workplace tasks. "Today, we're adding a whole team of agents that help you write, research, anticipate feedback, automate tasks, schedule meetings, and much more," said Shishir Mehrotra, CEO, Grammarly Superhuman.
The announcement places Grammarly alongside a growing group of software companies that market "agent" features. These tools aim to complete tasks across applications, rather than respond only inside a single chat interface.
Suite approach
Superhuman said the bundle includes Grammarly's writing product, Coda's document and workspace product, and Superhuman Mail's email product. It also includes Superhuman Go, which the company described as a cross-application layer that can host multiple agents.
The company positioned the package as available now via a bundled subscription. It did not provide pricing or customer adoption figures for the bundle.
Grammarly has a large consumer and business user base for writing assistance across web and desktop applications. Mehrotra said that usage has already reached scale. "You might think you've only recently started writing with AI. But if you're one of the 40 million people who use Grammarly every day, you've been writing with AI for years," said Mehrotra.
The company also described its distribution approach as a key part of its product design. "We created our own mass transit system to deliver AI in every app quickly and reliably. But until now, Grammarly was the only agent on the tracks," said Mehrotra.
Superhuman Go
Superhuman Go sits across applications and browser tabs, according to the company. It described Go as different from Grammarly's current assistant because it supports multiple agents and extends beyond writing suggestions.
Mehrotra described the operating model as proactive, with the software surfacing information and actions in context. "What makes Go special is (1) it works in all the apps you already use, and (2) it helps without you needing to ask. Everywhere you are, Go will look for opportunities to say something better, or do something faster," said Mehrotra.
The company gave examples such as pulling information into a conversation thread and offering to schedule meetings when a thread suggests it. It also outlined scenarios in customer emails where Go uses multiple agents to refine language, reference product pricing from a CRM and highlight recent support issues.
Agents SDK
Superhuman also introduced the Superhuman Agents SDK. The company said organisations can use the SDK to add their own agents to Go, including internal chatbots trained on company data.
It named several partner agents that it said are available today. The list includes Common Room, Radical Candor, Latimer, Fireflies, Parallel, Speechify and Quizlet. It also said additional agents are expected from Saifr, Axios HQ and Napkin AI.
The SDK signals an attempt to build a partner ecosystem around Go, with third-party agents appearing across the same "every app" surface the company described for its own tools.
Coda and Mail
Superhuman said it acquired Coda and Superhuman Mail earlier this year. It linked those products to what it described as "proactive AI" inside documents and email.
For Coda, the company described a workflow where meeting notes convert into action items and suggested assignments. It also described drafting functions that create briefs from discussion themes and extend research and planning inside a document.
For Superhuman Mail, it described an inbox that already organises messages and drafts replies in a user's voice. It also set out a plan for drafts that incorporate information from an inbox, a CRM and other tools, and an inbox view that adjusts as priorities and schedules shift.
"First, our name: the Grammarly product will still exist, but we're changing our company name to Superhuman," said Mehrotra.
Workplace positioning
The company framed the broader push as a shift away from prompt-based interactions. "We have to remember to use it and we have to think hard about what we ask it. We nudge it through a series of prompts and then paste the output wherever we're working," said Mehrotra.
It described the goal as embedding AI across tools and reducing the need to switch contexts. "You don't have to pause, prompt, paste, or even think about it. The AI naturally fits into where you work, and only then does it really start to change how you work," said Mehrotra.
Mehrotra also argued that the shift changes how users allocate time. "At first, you think faster and more deeply. Soon, you never drop the ball. And before you know it, you have the time to be more creative, strategic, and impactful - free to do what only you can do," said Mehrotra.