Manifesto

You know that feeling.

The one where a simple meeting becomes an expedition.

Where “let's find a time” becomes an archaeological dig through email chains that started three days ago.

Where you're copying and pasting availability across threads, losing track of who said what, watching windows close before you can pin them down.

The more people involved, the worse it gets.

Everyone's busy. Nobody's calendar syncs with anyone else's. IT won't approve the integration. Someone always forgets to reply.

And somehow, in 2026, we're still solving this the same way we solved it in 2006. Manually. Painfully. Repeatedly.

This is the Coordination Tax.

Every professional pays it. Every day. In hours that don't show up on any timesheet but show up in everything — the stress, the delays, the meetings that almost didn't happen.

We built nexcal because we were done paying it.

One flow. Multiple parties. No integrations required.

You set the parameters. The system handles the handoffs.

Availability in. Confirmation out. Everything else — handled.

It's not magic. It's just scheduling that finally works the way scheduling should have always worked.

Like water finding its path.

nexcal.

Scheduling that flows.

Start scheduling that flows