Grammarly had acquired Superhuman, an AI-native email app in July, and the company now plans to rename itself to Superhuman. Despite the branding change, Grammarly, the product will continue to be known by the same name. However, the company says it is thinking about rebranding products like Coda, a productivity platform it acquired last year, in the long run.
Grammarly is also launching an AI assistant called Superhuman Go that’s built into Grammarly’s existing extension. This assistant can provide writing suggestions, and give feedback to emails. It can even be connected to other apps like Jira, Gmail, Google Drive, and Google Calendar to obtain more context.
Superhuman said it plans to add functionality to enable the assistant to fetch data from sources like CRMs and internal systems to suggest changes to emails.
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Users can turn on a toggle in the Grammarly extension to try out Superhuman Go. While Grammarly users can try out Superhuman right now, the company is also selling product bundles. Its Pro subscription plan will cost $12 per month (billed annually) and will enable grammar and tone support in multiple languages. The Business plan will cost $33 per month (billed annually) and will give users access to Superhuman Mail.
Superhuman said it also wants to add more AI features to the Coda document suite and Superhuman email clients, such as fetching details from external and internal sources to create additional details in documents and email drafts automatically.
Grammarly had previously said that while artificial intelligence promises to “revolutionize work and boost productivity with immediate impact,” technology providers often simply “bolt AI onto existing tools, fragmenting an already chaotic tech ecosystem and making professionals’ lives harder.”
The company has taken a different approach by building an “AI superhighway” that delivers writing agents to users across more than 500,000 applications and websites. The company is now building a “productivity platform with more agents that handle more tasks for that superhighway, bringing AI directly to users everywhere they work.”
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Grammarly has been making a concerted effort to increase viability as a productivity suite with its acquisitions of Coda and Superhuman. With this AI assistant, the company is gearing up to compete with the likes of Notion, ClickUp, and Google Workspace, which have launched multiple AI-powered features in the past few years.
Superhuman was founded by Rahul Vohra, Vivek Sodera, and Conrad Irwin. The company raised more than $114 million in funding from backers including a16z, IVP, and Tiger Global with its last valuation at $825 million, according to data from venture data analytics firm Traxcn.


