Growyn
Founding access

Company · FAQ

Asked before trusting. Answered straight.

Every page on this site ends with its three honest questions; this is the commons — the ones founders ask before handing a system their marketing, with the hard ones first instead of buried. One question left after this? The contact page routes it to a human.

01 · Start with the hard ones

The questions other FAQs bury. If we can’t answer these, the rest is decoration.

Is this just AI slop in a trench coat?
It would be, if the writing came from nothing. It comes from your dossier — the researched strategy, your voice, your facts — and nothing ships without your yes. More structurally: generic output dies here by design, because every piece is graded by the Monday readout against what it actually produced, misses first. Slop doesn't survive a system that keeps score on itself. (And no, it's not ChatGPT with a wrapper — the difference is the method, not the model: disciplined research grounded in sources, confidence scored, a memory of your business between sessions, results fed back into the next plan. Large language models — from Anthropic — do the language work inside it. A chat model writes text; a system runs a loop.)
What if it says something wrong in my name?
The honest answer is layered. First: nothing publishes without your approval — drafts arrive scored, with reasons shown, so review takes seconds rather than faith. Second: the claims discipline is structural — no outcome promises, no hype math, and in regulated fields the system errs toward you (it will never answer a clinical or legal question in your name; those are flagged and wait). Third: if something approved still lands wrong, every piece carries its reasoning and its trail, so you can see exactly what happened and the lesson is kept. The system is built like a careful employee, not a confident intern.
What happens to everything if Growyn disappears?
You keep what matters, because it was built to be yours: the facts the system learned are written down where you can read and export them — not dissolved into a black box — your content is yours, your list is yours, and your data deletes on request. We're an early company asking for trust, so the architecture puts the risk on our side: nothing about your business is held hostage by our existence. The longer answer about who we are and why we're built to last is on Story.
How much of this is real today, honestly?
Eleven capabilities across four movements. Think writes the strategy and the funnel math. Attract builds the site, the content, and the ad engine. Convert captures leads, nurtures them, answers conversations, and closes. Grow reads the numbers in plain English and moves effort toward what works. One honest “not yet”: direct social connections (posts publishing themselves, results flowing back) are in build, pending each platform's app approval — today the content engine plans, writes, scores, and schedules your week, then tells you when each post is due; you publish and mark done. Packages lists every capability; capabilities arrive in waves, reserved list first.

02 · The system, day to day

What living with it actually looks like.

What do I actually do, day to day?
Minutes — mostly spent saying yes over coffee. Drafts, moves, and replies queue with their reasons attached; approving the week's work costs about as much attention as approving a coffee order, because the explanation is always one line away. The judgment calls that belong to a founder — positioning, pricing, what ships — pause and ask. Everything else runs.
Do I need to know anything about marketing?
No — that's the founding premise, and it's in the tagline. Everything is explained in dinner-table words: what's being done, why, and what you got. The pleasant side effect founders report is that they end up understanding their own marketing for the first time, because a system that shows its work is accidentally a teacher.
Can it work with the tools I already have?
Yes, gradually — nothing requires a dramatic Tuesday where you cancel six subscriptions. Founders typically start where the pain is loudest and retire old tools one by one as the overlap becomes obvious. Worth knowing: the compounding comes from the shared memory, so each tool you retire stops hoarding facts the rest of your system needs. The migration is gradual; the direction is one-way.
Will it work for my industry?
The loop adapts — the strategy reads your specific market and the content speaks its language. The eight fields with the deepest playbooks are on Industries, each with its own page explaining exactly how the system bends to that field's shape. If yours isn't there, it very likely still works — write to us and we'll tell you honestly.

03 · Money & the waves

What it costs, what reserving means, and why the price looks the way it does.

What does it cost?
Three tiers — Starter at $49, Growth at $99, Scale at $499 a month — plus The Network for multi-business operators and agencies. No per-seat games, no agency markup. The full breakdown, and what each tier does versus thinks versus optimizes, lives on Pricing.
What does “founding access” actually commit me to?
An email address — that's the entire stake. Reserving locks your founding rate: every capability in your tier, at the price you joined at, for as long as you stay. You pay when a wave ships and you choose to step in; walking away before then costs nothing but the spot. Founding access is limited by design — early members shape the product, and the rate never moves.
Can I cancel?
Anytime. Monthly billing, no lock-in, no exit interview — and your data deletes on request per the privacy policy. A system whose pitch is “it compounds” should be confident enough to let you leave the moment it stops earning the month.
Why is it so much cheaper than an agency?
Two honest reasons. Software economics: the expensive part of an agency is humans doing repeatable work, and that's precisely what the system industrializes. And the missing mystery premium: a meaningful slice of every retainer pays for fog — the decks, the “it's a process,” the not-explaining that keeps clients dependent. We removed the fog as a feature, and the price dropped with it.

04 · The boundaries

What it never does without you — and what it never does at all.

What will it never do without asking me?
Publish, spend, or rearrange. Every post waits for your yes, every budget move queues with its reason and its undo, every path change keeps the way back. The standing rules are architecture, not settings — Optimize shows them carved in stone.
What will it never do at all?
Promise outcomes or returns. Speak clinically or legally in your name. Manufacture urgency theatre, fake countdowns, or discount-spam your best customers into waiting for coupons. Make the bets that belong to a founder — positioning, pricing, what ships — those pause and ask, always. The system is ambitious about the work and conservative about the claims, which is exactly the combination you'd hire for.
What happens to my data?
Your strategies, content, and results are processed only to run the product — never sold, never used for advertising, not used to train models. Connected-platform access can be revoked anytime, and full account deletion completes within 30 days. The details live in the Privacy Policy.
Who builds this?
EDMA Group — a team shipping real products in trade infrastructure and Web3, building Growyn in the open and running its own marketing on it, including this page. The longer version — the nights that made it inevitable — is on Story.

Founding access

One question left? Ask it inside.

Reserve founding access — or send a letter through the contact page and a human answers.

No agency markup · cancel anytime · built at EDMA Group