What’s the difference between DevEx Starter, Teams, and Work Smart?
Starter is for teams getting baseline visibility—simple surveys, no integrations. Teams gives you per-team reports, benchmarks, and follow-ups. Ideal if you're scaling improvements across squads. Work Smart is for orgs ready to sync passive data (calendars, chat, email) to spot real collaboration debt and save serious time.
Starter = Fast start.
Teams = Cross-team insight.
Work Smart = Full-stack observability.
What kind of ROI can I expect?
Expect to save 2 hours per week per developer from reduced context-switching, better flow, or fewer wasteful meetings—that’s $2,000+ saved per dev per quarter. Multiply that across 50, 100, or 1,000 engineers. This platform pays for itself fast.
What data do you use—and is it private?
We use a combination of survey results and passive metadata (like meeting times, email volume—not message content). All data is 100% anonymous, GDPR-compliant, and never used to profile individuals. You get system-level visibility without breaching trust.
What kind of support do we get?
For Starter, there’s documentation and email support. Teams and Work Smart come with onboarding sessions, hands-on help, and a dedicated success team that’s seen it all—from startups to Fortune 500.
Can this integrate with our stack?
Yes. Work Smart integrates with Outlook, Google Workspace, Slack, Teams, Jira, and more. If your tools live in the cloud, we can talk to them.
How does this compare to DORA / SPACE / LinearB / other tools?
Those focus mostly on delivery metrics or repo activity. We focus on work experience and collaboration friction—what actually slows engineers down. Our goal isn’t to monitor—it’s to enable high-leverage improvement with zero micromanagement.
Can this integrate with our stack?
Yes. Work Smart integrates with Outlook, Google Workspace, Slack, Teams, Jira, and more. If your tools live in the cloud, we can talk to them.
What response rate and feedback volume can we expect?
You can expect response rates over 90%—even higher with small teams. On average, each developer leaves 2 comments, meaning you'll collect around 100 comments from 50 devs, and 1,000+ from 500. That’s not just data—it’s rich, actionable insight from the people closest to the work.