The goal was never to build a better newsletter.
It was to give you the morning back — to walk into your day already ahead, without reading 30 things to get there.
Readout is live. Founding access through June 16 → delvereadout.com
More newsletters were supposed to make us better informed.
Instead, you still feel like you're missing something — but you’re never sure what.
With Readout you receive the signal you need without the noise of reading 30 newsletters → delvereadout.com
30 newsletters. 90 minutes. And you still might miss what matters to you.
That math never worked.
Readout is one email, five minutes, tuned to your issues, sectors, and stakeholders.
Founding access closes tomorrow → delvereadout.com
The old playbook was simple: read enough and you'll stay informed.
It worked when the volume was manageable. It doesn't anymore.
Readout is built for the volume we're living in now.
Founding access closes June 16 → delvereadout.com
More newsletters. More alerts. More sources. And less certainty than ever that you're seeing what matters.
That's the problem Readout solves. Founding access open through June 16 → delvereadout.com
The future of this work isn't reading more. It's knowing more.
That's the whole bet behind Readout — Founding access open through June 16 to the people who want in early → delvereadout.com
If you've been curious about Readout, this is the week to try it.
Founding access closes June 16. Free for 14 days, easy to cancel — though I doubt you'll want to. → delvereadout.com
But Readout isn’t the destination. It’s the first step toward what we've believed for years: intelligence should come to you — surfacing what matters, instead of making you hunt for it.
If you've been curious, now's the time → delvereadout.com
Keyword tools search for words. Count mentions. Fire alerts.
What they can't do is tell you what actually matters to you.
That gap is why we built @delvedeeperai — and why Readout exists today → delvereadout.com
Today, Readout cuts through newsletter overload.
Tomorrow, the same intelligence engine can help surface what matters before you even know to go looking.
That's where we're headed → delvereadout.com
The real problem: public affairs pros are asked to process more information, from more sources, at greater speed than ever.
No human workflow scales forever.
That's why I don't see Readout as a product. I see it as the first step.
Today it ends the newsletter slog. Next: intelligence that surfaces what matters before you know to look.
Founding access is open through June 16 → delvereadout.com
Washington has a newsletter problem. Thirty newsletters, ninety minutes, and you still might miss what actually matters to your work.
Today, we're launching Readout to fix it.
Thank you to @RoederKaela for her thoughtful piece in @Technical_ly this morning. She recently sat down with cofounders @jberk and @kylehuwa to discuss Readout and what we're building at Delve.
Read her exclusive → technical.ly/civics/delve-re…
Thanks to @RoederKaela at @Technical_ly for covering @delvedeeperai's launch of Readout today!
If you need to track policy and politics, head to DelveReadout.com to bring some sanity back to your inbox while ensuring you never miss a key development again.
1/ In public affairs, you can do everything right and still miss something important.
Everything we've built at @delvedeeperai starts with that problem, including today's launch.
A discussion last week with a global head of corporate affairs reminded me why it matters.
5/ The old playbook was simple: Read enough and you'll stay informed.
That worked when the volume was manageable.
It doesn't anymore.
That's the challenge we've spent the last several years trying to solve at @delvedeeperai.
Today, we're taking another step in that journey.
6/ Today we're launching Readout.
A personalized daily briefing built around the issues, industries, and developments that matter to you.
One email.
Five minutes.
Ready for the day.
DelveReadout.com