A phone on a kitchen table running StorySeeker, with a younger hand resting on an older hand nearby.

Never run out of questions.

StorySeeker listens and tells you the next question to ask, so you capture their stories before it's too late.

3 hours free. No credit card.

No tech skills needed.

Works in-person or on Zoom, Meet, and Teams.

Interview for a living?

Never run out of questions.

StorySeeker listens and tells you the next question to ask, so you capture their stories before it's too late.

No tech skills needed.

3 hours free. No credit card required.

Works in-person or on Zoom, Google Meet, and Teams. Laptop or phone.

Interview for a living?

Have a story expert beside you.

Your questions, on your screen. StorySeeker quietly suggests the one follow-up a seasoned interviewer would know to ask, so you can stay in the moment with her and trust you're not missing what matters.

StorySeeker interview screen during a conversation with grandma, showing the questions you prepared on the left and gentle AI-suggested follow-ups on the right.StorySeeker on a phone, showing the live interview questions with the AI Coaching panel suggesting a gentle follow-up question.

The hardest part of an interview is the part nobody is helping with.

There are tools to help you prep. There are tools to help you review. But the live conversation, the moment a story is actually being told, has always been on you alone. Until now.

Before
Prep tools, research assistants, question generators.
Plenty of help here already.
During
The live conversation. The most stressful part. The part that makes or breaks the story.
This is where StorySeeker lives.
After
Transcription, summaries, AI notetakers.
Helpful, but the moment has passed.

StorySeeker is the only tool built for the moment that actually matters. The conversation itself.

Whether you've done a thousand interviews or you're walking into your first, you'll never freeze on the next question again.

Family Stories

Preserve the stories that matter most.

A young granddaughter smiling across a kitchen table at her grandmother during a recorded interview.

Some stories only exist in the people who lived them. StorySeeker's Oral History mode helps anyone sit down with a grandparent, an Elder, or a neighbor with a story worth keeping, and guides the conversation so nothing important is lost.

Built by an Algonquin filmmaker from Wolf Lake First Nation who realized these conversations cannot wait.

Keep her words. And her voice.

Every conversation is saved as audio. So years from now, you can press play and hear her tell it in her own voice.

Distance shouldn't end the story.

A young woman on a video call at her kitchen table, headphones on, overcome by what her grandmother is telling her on the screen.

The people whose stories matter most aren't always in the same house, or the same country. StorySeeker sits quietly in your Zoom, Google Meet, or Teams call and captures every word, so the miles between you don't take the story with them.

Works in 50+ spoken languages. The app interface is in English; the AI listens and responds in the language you speak. Virtual call joining included on Pro and Studio plans.

Review what you captured, and what to capture next time.

After every conversation, StorySeeker quietly reviews what happened. A moment to hold. What you drew out beautifully. A gentle note on where to listen a little more closely next time.

StorySeeker Oral History insights dashboard showing your skills across a series of conversations — presence, drawing out detail, following their lead, honoring silence, and warmth.

After each conversation.

The moments that mattered, the detail she gave you, and one gentle thing to try next time.

After the conversationGrandma Margaret
32/40
She felt safe enough to go deep
Strongest skill: Warmth & Trust
A moment to hold

"We carried water from the creek in a dented blue bucket every morning before school."

What you did well
  • Warmth & Trust: She laughed, paused, and shared the hard parts. She felt safe with you.
  • Following Their Lead: You let her tangent into Aunt Rose. That's where the story opened.
For next time

She mentioned the blue bucket at 12:04. A gentle "what did it look like, what did it feel like?" might have opened a whole morning.

As the conversations build up.

How you're growing, what you keep unlocking, and the kind of questions that open her up.

Your journey so far8 conversations
How you're growing

Trending upward. You're getting braver with silence, and she's going further because of it.

A question that unlocked her

"Was that the same kitchen where your grandmother taught you to make bread?"

Your strengths
  • Warmth & Trust. She shares things with you she hasn't told anyone in years.
  • Following her lead. You let tangents breathe, and they turn out to matter.
Where to listen more closely

Drawing out detail. When she says "things were different back then," that's an invitation to ask about a specific morning, a specific room.

A gentle prompt to try

"Can you paint that for me? Who was in the room. What could you see from where you were sitting?"

Every conversation builds on the last.

Gather your people into one project. StorySeeker remembers who you've talked to, the threads Grandma opened but didn't finish, and what to ask Aunt Rose when you finally sit down with her.

Projects available on Pro and Studio plans.

← Your projects
Grandma's Stories — Summer 2026
Active
What we've learnedUpdated Apr 14
Where things stand

Grandma and Uncle Ray have shared the big chapters. Aunt Rose hasn't sat down yet.

Your people
Grandma MargaretUncle RayAunt Rose
What to ask next

3 follow-ups Grandma opened the door to but you didn't get to.

Next step

Call Aunt Rose · ask about the move to Halifax in 1968.

Conversations5 so far
Grandma Margaret — kitchen tableOral History1h 42m · Apr 12
Grandma Margaret — the war yearsOral History2h 08m · Apr 5
Uncle Ray — on the farmOral History1h 24m · Mar 29
Grandma Margaret — first timeOral History1h 06m · Mar 22
Uncle Ray — short callOral History0h 38m · Mar 18
Start a new conversation
This project
5
Conversations
3
People
6h 58m
Recorded
12
Stories saved
Started Mar 18, 2026
What the app has learned42% used
How much context the AI has about your family
TranscriptsAI reviewRoom to grow
About this project

Sitting down with Grandma, Uncle Ray, and Aunt Rose this summer to capture the family's story before we lose it. Starting with the kitchen table, the farm, and the move east...

Show more...
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Two minutes on why StorySeeker exists.

Built by a filmmaker who sat down with his own grandfather.

Your next conversation could be the one that matters most.

Try free. 3 hours included. Plans from $39.99 CAD/month — or a one-time $69 CAD Family Project pass.

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