On Wednesday, Grammarly officially changed its company name to Superhuman. While the beloved Grammarly writing assistant product will keep its original name, the broader parent company—which also includes the artificial intelligence (AI) productivity platform Coda and Superhuman Mail—will now operate under the Superhuman brand. In an exciting move, the company also unveiled its newest innovation: Superhuman Go. This advanced AI assistant is designed to work seamlessly across various platforms and devices, offering proactive and context-aware help by connecting to different data sources. Much like Grammarly, it’s a tool that assists without needing explicit prompts.
Grammarly Embraces the Superhuman Brand
Among the many unconventional business decisions seen recently, an acquiring company adopting the brand identity of the acquired one stands out. When Grammarly acquired Superhuman Mail earlier this year, few might have anticipated such a comprehensive brand integration. However, the San Francisco-based company has shown a consistent willingness to embrace the strategic vision of its acquired entities.
This strategic direction began in December 2024 when Grammarly acquired Coda, transitioning from a single-product focus to a multi-product portfolio. Following this acquisition, Shishir Mehrotra, co-founder and CEO of Coda, was appointed as the CEO of what was then Grammarly, succeeding Rahul Roy-Chowdhury.
Under Mehrotra’s leadership, the company has now finalized its rebranding and will be known as Superhuman. Its impressive portfolio now boasts four powerful AI-driven work products: Grammarly, Coda, Superhuman Mail, and the newly launched Superhuman Go.
Superhuman Go represents the company’s latest cutting-edge offering. Marketed as a tool that “works in every application and tab,” this agentic AI assistant provides comprehensive writing assistance, automatically drafts content, summarizes information, and much more. Its “agentic” nature allows it to tap into diverse knowledge hubs, enabling it to complete complex tasks proactively.
Just like Grammarly, Superhuman Go operates with a proactive approach. For example, if you ask a colleague on Slack for a meeting tomorrow, Go can instantly check your emails and calendar, suggest available slots, and display this information directly within your conversation to help you schedule effectively. Similarly, it can assist in drafting emails by refining language and rephrasing sentences, or even pull product pricing details from your CRM and highlight recent support issues automatically.
Initially, Superhuman Go seamlessly integrates with and retrieves information from Google Workspace and Microsoft Outlook. The company is also inviting developers to create and integrate their own custom agents into the AI assistant through the Superhuman Agents SDK. They noted that companies like Common Room, Fireflies, Parallel, and Speechify have already developed and made new agents available for Go.