It has never been quicker to build. Most companies are putting out new features or bug fixes daily. But do your users actually know what you shipped today?
Building has never been faster, but telling people about it hasn't kept up. Marketing what you shipped is slower than shipping it: record the demo, fumble fifteen takes, design the post, edit the video, get it on-brand, publish. An afternoon gone for twenty seconds of footage. So most teams skip it, and their best work ships to silence.
tday.com closes that gap. Connect your GitHub repo or point us at your site, and every release turns into a complete launch package: a demo video that shows how the feature works, a feature showcase built to sell it, and on-brand graphics for every placement, published to social automatically.
There are two ways in, and both produce both outputs. Connect your repo and tday spins up an isolated sandbox, captures the exact change in each pull request before it even merges, and posts the assets back to the PR to review or auto-publish. Or hand us a demo account set up exactly how you want to be marketed, pick the feature, and tday signs in, drives the real flow, and records it.
What makes it different is that everything is grounded in your real product and brand. tday already knows your colors, fonts, and voice, so output is on-brand every time, and you can tweak any line, scene, or image from the platform without re-recording the source. Ship a new version and the demo re-records itself: it captures a capability, not a one-off moment.
The creative we generate is already running at up to 8.3% CTR in early paid tests, several times the typical benchmark. Paid campaigns inside tday are next, and from there, marketing that scales at the speed you ship: hundreds of thousands of on-brand, hyper-targeted assets, generated and published automatically.