If you’ve ever found yourself typing a message to a school group, then switching to another language to explain the same thing at home — you’re not alone. Multilingual families juggle more than just logistics. They juggle communication across cultures, languages, and generations.
And when the tools we use only “work” in English or require perfect grammar, it creates a barrier. That’s why Simplify was built to understand the way you speak — in your language, with your accent, and at your pace.
Because real life doesn’t come with subtitles. But your AI assistant should still be able to help.
You can send a voice note to Simplify in your native language — and it will still pick up key tasks, dates, instructions and reminders. Whether you're most comfortable in:
Simplify will extract the useful information and add it to your calendar or to-do list — no translation app required.
Multilingual parents already do mental gymnastics every day:
Simplify removes the pressure to “speak properly” or “remember the right word.” You just talk — and it organises your life for you.
You send (in Arabic): “Don’t forget the blue PE kit on Wednesday.”
🟦 Simplify adds it to your child’s uniform schedule.
You say (in Tagalog): “Sa Friday may swimming si Daniel, add mo please.”
🏊♂️ Simplify picks up the keyword “swimming,” matches the day, and adds it to Daniel’s calendar.
You speak (in Hindi): “Next Sunday ko birthday party hai, 4 baje.”
🎉 Simplify schedules the event and adds a reminder to your week-ahead summary.
There’s no need to repeat it in English. No need to double-check the spelling. It just works.
Simplify isn’t here to test your vocabulary. It’s here to help you parent, plan, and stay sane — in the way that feels most natural to you.
Simplify is built for the way families really communicate. Whether you speak one language or three, whether you switch mid-sentence or use phrases passed down from your grandparents — you deserve a tool that understands you.
Because when parenting already requires so much energy, your assistant should feel like a partner — not a language test.