Meet Sage — Your AI Project Co-Pilot
Every implementation PM has had this experience: you open an AI tool, start typing a question about your project, and immediately realize you have to explain the entire situation before the AI can help you. The client name, the scope, what was decided last week, what's blocked, who owns what.
By the time you've typed all of that, you could have just written the thing yourself.
Sage is different. Sage is context-aware by default.
How It Works
When you log a meeting, that goes into project memory. When you record a decision, that goes into memory. When you add an action item, update a risk, or note a scope change — all of that accumulates in the project's persistent memory layer.
Sage reads that memory before responding to you.
So when you ask "What's blocking Project Apex right now?" or "Draft a status update for the Meridian team," Sage already knows the project, the history, the stakeholders, and the current state. You're not re-briefing it. You're just asking.
What You Can Ask Sage
- "Generate a status report for this project"
- "What decisions have we made about data migration?"
- "Which action items are overdue and who owns them?"
- "Draft a client-facing summary for tomorrow's steering call"
- "What risks haven't been addressed in the last two weeks?"
- "Write the agenda for next week's go-live readiness review"
What Sage Isn't
Sage isn't magic. It can only surface what's been logged. If a decision happened in a side conversation that never made it into ProjektMind, Sage won't know about it.
That's actually the point. Sage creates a strong incentive to keep your project memory current — because the better your logs, the better your co-pilot.
Sage is included in every ProjektMind plan, Solo and Team.