I built Creator Notes because I could not find a tool that matched how I think.
Most tools gave me places to store information. Documents. Folders. Notes. Tasks. Chats.
That was not enough.
My problem was not storage.
My problem was shape.
I needed to see how ideas connected. I needed to move things around. I needed to capture messy thoughts before they became polished documents. I needed AI to understand the context behind my work, not just answer one prompt at a time.
So I built Creator Notes.
At first, it was just for me.
I used it to think through product ideas, customer problems, strategy, prompts, meeting notes, and half-formed thoughts. Over time, it became less like a note-taking app and more like an extension of my own brain.
That is the good part.
It is also the hard part.
A tool like this is personal. If I ask you to use Creator Notes, I am not just asking you to learn new software. I am asking you to try a different way of thinking.
That is not for everyone.
Some people want simple notes. Some people want documents. Some people want tasks. Some people do not want a canvas. Some people do not want to build a knowledge system.
That is completely fine.
Creator Notes is for a narrower group.
It is for people who think in connections.
People who collect ideas from everywhere. People who work across messy projects. People who need to see the whole picture before they can make sense of the parts. People who want AI to work with their actual context, not a blank chat box.
I am now looking for teams with the same problem.
Teams where context is scattered across meetings, docs, chats, transcripts, tickets, and people’s heads.
Teams where decisions get made, then forgotten.
Teams where AI is useful, but still disconnected from the real work.
Creator Notes is not finished.
It is not trying to be a mass-market notes app.
It is a bet that the next generation of software will not just help us store information. It will help us build shared understanding between people and AI.
— Deniss
Founder, Creator Notes