Hey

Hey(hā)

Hey everyone—

It’s 2020, we need to talk about email.

Email gets a bad rap, but it shouldn’t. Email’s a treasure.

It feels great to get an email from someone you care about. Or a newsletter you enjoy. Or an update from a service you like. That’s how email used to feel all the time.

But things changed.

You started getting stuff you didn’t want from people you didn’t know. You lost control over who could reach you. An avalanche(ˈavəˌlan(t)SH) of automated emails cluttered everything up.

And Gmail, Outlook, Yahoo, and Apple just let it happen.

Now email feels like a chore(CHôr), rather than a joy. Something you fall behind on. Something you clear out, not cherish(ˈCHeriSH). Rather than delight in it, you deal with it.

And yet, email remains a wonder. Thanks to email, people across cultures, continents(ˈkänt(ə)nənt), countries, cities, and communities communicate every day. It’s reliable(rəˈlīəb(ə)l). It’s simple. It makes it easy for two humans to share their love, and for millions of people to earn a living.

So good news, the magic’s still there. It’s just obscured(əbˈskyo͝or) — buried under a mess of bad habits and neglect(nəˈɡlekt). Some from people, some from machines, a lot from email software.

Email deserves(dəˈzərv) a dust off. A renovation(ˌrenəˈvāSH(ə)n). Modernized(ˈmädərˌnīz) for the way we email today.

With HEY, we’ve done just that. It’s a redo, a rethink, a simplified, potent reintroduction of email. A fresh start, the way it should be.

HEY is our love letter to email, and we’re sending it to you on the Web, Mac, Windows, Linux, iOS, and Android.

https://hey.com