The honest reason most co-founder relationships fray isn't personality. It's that the working record is fuzzy. You and your co-founder agreed to something three weeks ago, and now you remember the agreement slightly differently. You both committed to a deliverable, and now neither of you is sure who owned the next step. You decided to wait on a hire and you can't remember why. By the time the friction shows up in a hard conversation, you've lost the source material that would have let you resolve it cheaply.

A working record that's actually written down — and that an agent can read across — fixes a surprising amount of this. Not "use AI to mediate co-founder disputes." Just hold the decisions, the rationales, and the followups in one searchable place, and let the agent do the housekeeping you'd otherwise skip. Most co-founder pairs we've talked to find that this turns weekly conflict into weekly housekeeping, which is a much better problem. The same decisions-log discipline is the spine of [annual planning and goal setting](/guides/founders-ceos/annual-planning-goal-setting/) and the cycle behind a [board-of-directors meeting](/guides/founders-ceos/board-of-directors-meeting-notes/).

A note before the rest: Capy is single-user by design. The shape that works for co-founders is two people running parallel personal vaults, agreeing on a shared layer of decisions and followups that each maintains in their own. We'll come back to this. The product isn't a team workspace, and pretending otherwise would set you up to fight the tool.

## A working record that's actually working

The shape that holds up is roughly: each co-founder runs a personal vault with one cross-cutting page called "co-founder shared." Inside that page lives the decisions database, the followups database, the running agenda for your weekly sync, and the recaps from prior syncs. You both own the source of truth in your own vault; you both copy or sync the shared layer the same way you'd sync a shared doc.

The decisions and followups are inline databases — they live directly inside the page via the `:::database:::` directive. You don't switch tabs to a separate tracker. The decisions database has rows for date, decision, rationale, owner, and status. The followups database has rows for owner, item, due date, and status.

Capy supports unlimited page nesting, so a heavy week can fan out into per-topic sub-pages. The shared page stays at the top. The detail lives below.

This isn't elaborate. The point is that the decision and the followup leave your conversation and land in writing. Once they're written, the agent can read across all of them on demand.

## Weekly syncs that don't restart from zero

A working co-founder sync isn't a status meeting. It's a forty-minute conversation about the two or three things that are actually live, where both of you walk in with the same view of what you decided last week and what you each owe each other. The hard part is getting both people to the same view without spending the first ten minutes reconstructing it.

A working flow: an hour before the sync, ask the agent in your own vault to read the prior sync recap, the decisions made since then, the followups marked complete or slipped, and any major notes you've added on shared topics. Have it draft a one-page sync brief: what closed, what slipped, what's open, what you want to discuss. Your co-founder does the same in their vault. You compare briefs at the start of the meeting. (The same brief-from-the-vault pattern shows up in [AI notes for fractional executives managing multiple engagements](/guides/founders-ceos/fractional-executives-multiple-engagements/) — different audience, same warm-up.)

The conversation that follows is dramatically tighter, because both of you walked in with structured reads instead of vibes. The decisions you make in the meeting land in the decisions database in the moment. The followups land in the followups database with owners. Neither of you is doing the housekeeping later from memory.

## Decisions written with the rationale, not just the outcome

The decision that hurts the relationship a month later is rarely the decision itself. It's the missing rationale. You agreed to skip the contract hire. Why? You agreed to push the launch by two weeks. Why? When the question comes back — and it always does — both of you reconstruct the rationale slightly differently and the conversation goes sideways.

The fix is mechanical. Every entry in the decisions database has a rationale field, and you fill it in at the moment of the decision, not later. Two sentences is fine. The point is that the rationale is in writing while it's still fresh.

Ask the agent to help. After a meaningful working session or sync, point it at the relevant notes and have it propose decision entries with proposed rationales. You and your co-founder confirm or edit. The cost of keeping the log gets close to zero, which is the only way it actually gets kept.

When the question comes back, you both look at the same row. The conversation is about whether the rationale still holds, not about what you remember saying.

## Recordings with speaker labels for the hard conversations

Most co-founder syncs don't need to be recorded. The hard ones do. The conversation where you're working through a real disagreement on direction, or a hire that one of you wants and the other doesn't, or a tension in the equity arrangement — those are the ones where a transcript would help and where neither of you wants to be the one taking notes.

Record the conversation in Capy. The transcript comes back with speaker diarization — labels like "Speaker 1: …" so you can tell who said what, not just a wall of text. Park the recording on a private page in your own vault if it's sensitive; share the structured outcomes back to the shared page. Ask the agent to draft a recap with three sections: what we agreed, what's still open, what we agreed to revisit and when. (For coaching contexts, [AI notes for coaching sessions and personal growth](/guides/founders-ceos/coaching-sessions-personal-growth/) covers the same recording-then-recap loop in a more individual setting.)

The transcript matters less for litigation purposes (it isn't that, and don't pretend it is) and more for the next conversation. Two months later, when the topic comes back, the transcript is the source of truth for what each of you actually said. The conversation can pick up where it left off instead of restarting from rough memory.

## Accountability that's a database, not a vibe

The pattern that quietly destroys co-founder accountability is the followup that nobody owns explicitly. You both leave the meeting assuming the other will do it. Two weeks later, neither of you has, and the conversation about whose fault it was eats half the next sync.

A followups database with an explicit owner field eliminates the ambiguity at the moment of the decision. If the owner is empty, the followup didn't actually get assigned and you should fix that before leaving the meeting.

Ask the agent to read the followups database weekly and surface anything that's slipped past its due date with no status update. The agent isn't your manager; it's just doing the housekeeping that neither of you wants to do. The slips become a normal weekly conversation — "yeah, that one slipped because X, here's the new date" — instead of a quarterly blowup.

## PDFs and contracts you both need to read

Co-founder pairs hit a recurring failure mode around shared documents — the contract from a partner, the term sheet from an investor, the policy memo from a lawyer. One of you reads it, the other skims, and you have a conversation where you're not actually working from the same understanding of what the document says.

Drop the PDF on a Capy page. It auto-converts to markdown via docstrange, which means the agent can read every line and treat it as searchable text. Ask the agent to summarize the document in plain English, pull the three or four clauses that are likely to matter most for your situation, and flag anything that contradicts another agreement already in the vault.

You both read the summary. Then you both read the parts the agent flagged. Then you have the conversation about what to do — from the same understanding, on the same page.

## What this isn't

Capy isn't a team workspace. It doesn't have role-based access, shared workspaces, or admin permissions. The shape for co-founders is two parallel personal vaults that agree on a shared layer, not one workspace that both of you log into. If your team is bigger than two people who both want to maintain personal context layers, the shape gets harder, and we'd rather you know that up front than discover it after a month of trying to bend the product.

It's also cloud-hosted. Your vault sits on our servers. For most early-stage co-founder pairs, the cloud-vault shape with one integrated agent each is a strict upgrade over the current reality of a shared Drive folder plus Slack plus a notebook. If your situation requires keeping data on your own hardware, this isn't the right fit.

## A small first test

Pick last week's biggest decision between you and your co-founder. Write the decision and the rationale in the decisions database in your vault. Have your co-founder do the same in theirs. Compare. If the rationales come out meaningfully different, you've just discovered something you'd otherwise have discovered in a fight three months from now.

[Try Docapybara free](/accounts/signup/). Run one week's syncs with the decisions and followups in writing and see what the next sync feels like.