Samepage introduces Signals for product teams

Samepage has launched Signals, an AI-powered product management tool designed to help teams collect updates, surface trends and reduce the need to chase status across multiple systems. The company describes the product as a "second brain" for product management, with a focus on consolidating information from workplace tools and the web into a single view.

Signals is built to automatically identify the information most relevant to a user and bring it together from sources such as email, Slack, Jira, Pendo, sales call transcripts and other internal systems. Instead of forcing product managers to manually review scattered conversations and dashboards, the tool aims to synthesize context, analyze it and highlight what needs attention.

The launch follows a recent funding round. Samepage said it raised $4.85 million as it prepared to bring Signals to market. The product also appeared on Product Hunt as part of its public launch.

What the product does

According to Samepage, Signals is meant to help product leaders stay aligned on developments across their organizations without spending time piecing together updates from different channels. The platform scans connected data sources and generates recurring summaries, including weekly product and engineering progress reports.

In one example shown by the company, a generated report included work underway on a Zendesk integration, signal observability, Mixpanel dashboards, onboarding changes and daily summaries. The same update also outlined recently completed work, security upgrades and bug fixes, along with priorities for the following week.

Samepage says the system runs daily, learns the user’s role and preferences, and then publishes automated signals. Those signals can surface items such as bug tickets found in QA, overdue responses, pending comments, new feature ideas and triage opportunities.

The company also says users can ask the assistant questions, draft documents, summarize user interviews or search for information quickly. The product is presented as a context-aware agent for product work rather than a general-purpose chatbot.

Integrations and security

A key part of the pitch is connectivity. Samepage says Signals includes native integrations with critical workplace systems and is designed to connect securely to the tools teams already use. The company highlights integrations with Slack, Notion and Asana among the platforms it supports.

Security and privacy are also prominent in the launch materials. Samepage says the product is designed to keep work information safe, secure and compliant. The company points to GDPR and CCPA alignment, saying it processes personal data on behalf of customers and does not sell data or use it for independent purposes.

Aimed at reducing information overload

Signals is entering a crowded category of workplace AI tools, but Samepage is positioning it specifically around product management workflows. The company’s message centers on reducing noise and helping leaders avoid fragmented updates across screens, inboxes and project trackers.

One testimonial on the company’s site from Ryan Smith, vice president of product at Omni, echoed that theme, saying the value of Samepage comes from consolidating signals in one place and reducing the need for manual tracking and note-taking across tools.

Samepage is now offering users a way to get started with Signals or request a demo, signaling that the company is targeting both self-serve adoption and enterprise interest as it opens the product to the market.