Grammarly's New Chapter: Shishir Mehrotra on Superhuman's Future as A.I.-Driven Productivity Platform 
In a bold move, Grammarly's CEO Shishir Mehrotra is rebranding the company as Superhuman, a name that better reflects its expanding suite of products and mission to empower users. This shift in branding marks a significant transformation for the company, which has long been synonymous with grammar checking and writing assistance tools.
Mehrotra explained that the new name was necessary due to the company's growing ambitions beyond its original scope. "We cover so much more ground than we used to," he said. "We wanted to be able to expand our offerings over time and still have it fit." The Superhuman umbrella will encompass a range of products, including Coda, an acquired collaboration platform, and Superhuman Mail, an A.I.-powered email platform.
At the heart of this new era is Superhuman Go, an A.I. assistant that can connect to over 100 apps across multiple platforms. This tool aims to provide seamless integration with users' documents, emails, meeting transcripts, and chat threads. Mehrotra likened Grammarly's transformation to other major tech rebrands, such as Google's restructuring under Alphabet and Facebook's pivot to Meta.
Grammarly has long relied on A.I. to power its writing assistance tools, but Mehrotra emphasized that the company is designed to enhance human work, not replace it. "We assist you in many different ways, but at the end of the day, you actually publish the article, you post the blog, you submit the essay," he said.
Superhuman Go is already gaining traction in education, with Arizona State University announcing its deployment to improve student support and address tool fragmentation. Mehrotra sees this as a key moment for Superhuman's mission to integrate A.I. seamlessly into daily life. "Most A.I. tools are focused on becoming destinations—you go to them, that's how you experience your A.I.-based productivity," he said. "We bring A.I. to you, and we think that's pretty different."
As the company embarks on this new chapter, Mehrotra is clear about Superhuman's vision for the future of A.I.-driven productivity platforms. By putting users at the center of its offerings, Superhuman aims to revolutionize the way people work and communicate. With its expanding suite of products and commitment to empowering users, the company is poised to make a significant impact in the world of A.I.-powered productivity.
				
			In a bold move, Grammarly's CEO Shishir Mehrotra is rebranding the company as Superhuman, a name that better reflects its expanding suite of products and mission to empower users. This shift in branding marks a significant transformation for the company, which has long been synonymous with grammar checking and writing assistance tools.
Mehrotra explained that the new name was necessary due to the company's growing ambitions beyond its original scope. "We cover so much more ground than we used to," he said. "We wanted to be able to expand our offerings over time and still have it fit." The Superhuman umbrella will encompass a range of products, including Coda, an acquired collaboration platform, and Superhuman Mail, an A.I.-powered email platform.
At the heart of this new era is Superhuman Go, an A.I. assistant that can connect to over 100 apps across multiple platforms. This tool aims to provide seamless integration with users' documents, emails, meeting transcripts, and chat threads. Mehrotra likened Grammarly's transformation to other major tech rebrands, such as Google's restructuring under Alphabet and Facebook's pivot to Meta.
Grammarly has long relied on A.I. to power its writing assistance tools, but Mehrotra emphasized that the company is designed to enhance human work, not replace it. "We assist you in many different ways, but at the end of the day, you actually publish the article, you post the blog, you submit the essay," he said.
Superhuman Go is already gaining traction in education, with Arizona State University announcing its deployment to improve student support and address tool fragmentation. Mehrotra sees this as a key moment for Superhuman's mission to integrate A.I. seamlessly into daily life. "Most A.I. tools are focused on becoming destinations—you go to them, that's how you experience your A.I.-based productivity," he said. "We bring A.I. to you, and we think that's pretty different."
As the company embarks on this new chapter, Mehrotra is clear about Superhuman's vision for the future of A.I.-driven productivity platforms. By putting users at the center of its offerings, Superhuman aims to revolutionize the way people work and communicate. With its expanding suite of products and commitment to empowering users, the company is poised to make a significant impact in the world of A.I.-powered productivity.