Launched this week

Twyvo
Built for teams of two
9 followers
Built for teams of two
9 followers
Most collaboration tools are built for teams. Twyvo is built for teams of two. Twyvo introduces Pairspace™, a private workspace where two people can think, plan, and grow together. Share journals, track goals, capture meeting insights, organise documents, and stay aligned with AI summaries. One person can manage multiple Pairspaces with different partners. Built for focused partnerships — with end-to-end encryption coming soon.










Hi Product Hunt 👋
Twyvo is building the operating system for two-person partnerships.
I’m Nishkam, founder of Twyvo.
Most collaboration tools are built for teams.
But when I looked closely at how meaningful work actually happens, I noticed something different — many of the most important collaborations happen between just two people.
Two cofounders building a startup.
A coach guiding a client.
A mentor supporting a mentee.
A designer working with a developer.
A teacher helping a student.
These partnerships are deep, personal, and long-term. Yet today they are forced to operate across scattered tools — chat, notes, documents, and task boards.
So I started building Twyvo.
Twyvo introduces Pairspace™ — a dedicated collaboration space designed specifically for two people working closely together.
Inside a Pairspace partners can:
• keep a shared journal of ideas and reflections
• track goals and progress
• capture meeting insights
• organise documents and links
• receive AI summaries of activity
Over time, one person can create multiple Pairspaces, each tied to a different collaboration — a cofounder, mentor, client, or creative partner. The result becomes a structured network of meaningful partnerships.
And because these relationships are often deeply personal, privacy is core to the vision. One of the next major updates we’re working toward is end-to-end encryption, so conversations inside Pairspaces remain truly private between the two partners.
I’ve been bootstrapping Twyvo solo, and it’s currently in beta. Launching here is a chance to learn from this community and shape the product with early users.
If you collaborate closely with someone — or several people — I’d love to hear how you manage those relationships today.
Thanks for checking it out 🙏
Product Hunt
@twyvo I love the premise of this tool!
It looks like you've thought through a few different surfaces where two people can collaborate, and to be fair, there is something powerful about just having a separate tool for the two of you to work on.
I'm wondering what are the collaboration moments or use cases where you found that, with the right tool, two people can unlock much better, deeper, faster, or lower-friction collaboration than a small group of people? I guess I'm trying to understand your thinking on what's special and unique about two-person collaboration.
@rajiv_ayyangar Thanks for the thoughtful question, Rajiv — really appreciate you taking the time to engage with this.
While exploring collaboration patterns, one thing that became increasingly clear is that two-person collaboration behaves very differently from team collaboration.
In teams, tools are primarily designed around coordination — tasks, channels, permissions, status updates.
But in many two-person relationships, the dynamic is less about coordination and more about continuous thinking together over time.
A few examples where this shows up clearly:
Cofounders:
Early-stage startups are essentially a continuous loop of discussion, decision-making, and reflection between two people. The challenge isn’t managing tasks — it’s maintaining shared context as ideas evolve quickly.
Mentor–mentee or coach–client relationships:
These interactions accumulate over months. Insights, commitments, and reflections from previous sessions matter, but they’re often lost across scattered tools.
Creative or technical partnerships (designer–developer, researcher–writer):
Ideas rarely arrive fully formed. They evolve through ongoing dialogue, iteration, and shared references.
Across these cases, three patterns tend to appear:
• Long-term context accumulation
• Frequent but lightweight interactions
• A high degree of trust and unfinished thinking
Most existing tools fragment this experience — conversations in chat, thinking in notes, decisions in docs, goals somewhere else.
What Twyvo is trying to do is treat the partnership itself as the core unit of software.
Today, Pairspace provides a shared environment where two partners can gradually build a living record of their collaboration through journals, goals, meetings, documents, and AI summaries.
This helps reduce friction in a few practical ways:
• important ideas and reflections don’t get lost in chat history
• meetings naturally feed into ongoing context
• progress and decisions remain visible over time
Another behaviour we’re seeing early is that people rarely have just one such relationship. A founder might have a Pairspace with a cofounder, another with a mentor, another with a collaborator.
Over time this creates a network of structured one-to-one collaborations around a person.
Looking ahead, there are a few directions I’m particularly interested in exploring:
• stronger privacy and trust layers, including end-to-end encryption
• AI that understands the context of a specific partnership, not just individual notes
• tools that help partnerships reflect, decide, and evolve more effectively over time
The broader idea is that while teams coordinate work, many breakthroughs actually emerge from sustained thinking between two people — and software hasn’t really been designed with that dynamic in mind.
Really appreciate the question — it gets to the heart of why Twyvo exists