The Context Gap
Context resets every time a shift changes. Amsterdam wakes up and spends two hours figuring out what San Francisco did yesterday.
StandIn aggregates your team's GitHub commits, Linear tickets, and Slack decisions into structured handoffs. Engineers review a pre-filled wrap and publish. The next shift gets answers from the record — no late-night pings, no 45-minute standup, no morning archaeology.
Last updated: March 2026
Context resets every time a shift changes. Amsterdam wakes up and spends two hours figuring out what San Francisco did yesterday.
Context resets every time a shift changes. Amsterdam wakes up and spends two hours figuring out what San Francisco did yesterday.
Context resets every time a shift changes. Amsterdam wakes up and spends two hours figuring out what San Francisco did yesterday.
Context resets every time a shift changes. Amsterdam wakes up and spends two hours figuring out what San Francisco did yesterday.
Context resets every time a shift changes. Amsterdam wakes up and spends two hours figuring out what San Francisco did yesterday.
Context resets every time a shift changes. Amsterdam wakes up and spends two hours figuring out what San Francisco did yesterday.
Context resets every time a shift changes. Amsterdam wakes up and spends two hours figuring out what San Francisco did yesterday.
Context resets every time a shift changes. Amsterdam wakes up and spends two hours figuring out what San Francisco did yesterday.
Context resets every time a shift changes. Amsterdam wakes up and spends two hours figuring out what San Francisco did yesterday.
Replace “being online” with “having left a good wrap.”
Your wrap drafts itself from today's commits and ticket updates. Review three fields, add anything the tools missed, publish. It's a commit for your workday — and most of it writes itself. Once you publish it, your team knows where things stand and you can actually go offline.
Your wrap drafts itself from today's commits and ticket updates. Review three fields, add anything the tools missed, publish. It's a commit for your workday — and most of it writes itself. Once you publish it, your team knows where things stand and you can actually go offline.
Two views that read from published wraps. No data entry. No status meetings.
Who's published today and who hasn't. Not a leaderboard. Not surveillance. Just a heads-up so you know if someone's state is missing before your shift starts.
Gaps show up as “no state declared.” People fill it in because they see the gap, not because something blocks them.
Who's published today and who hasn't. Not a leaderboard. Not surveillance. Just a heads-up so you know if someone's state is missing before your shift starts.
Gaps show up as “no state declared.” People fill it in because they see the gap, not because something blocks them.
Team Representatives roll up every engineer's wrap into a single queryable surface. Your sprint status is a query, not a meeting. Ask the Team Representative what shipped overnight, what's blocked, or who owns the next action. It answers from what the team published and cites every source.
Your wrap drafts itself from today's commits and ticket updates. Review three fields, add anything the tools missed, publish. It's a commit for your workday — and most of it writes itself. Once you publish it, your team knows where things stand and you can actually go offline.
How Representatives workStandIn is not designed for teams that require real-time synchronous availability, like L1 incident response rooms.