Quick Answer

Grammarly helps after you have a draft. SayItWrites helps before you can form one. SayItWrites is voice-first intent-to-text: it writes what you mean, in the tone and length you choose.

Why Does The Drafting Step Matter?

Grammar tools assume you can already put the idea into words. They improve the surface of your draft: grammar, clarity, concision, and sometimes tone.

But many SayItWrites users get stuck before the draft exists. They know the intent, but not the phrasing. They can speak around it, describe it, or ramble toward it.

Why Does This Matter For Non-Native Speakers?

A non-native speaker may not need a red underline. They may need the message itself. If the input is "can you make the contract more months," the useful output is not a lightly corrected version. It is "Could we extend the lease through September?"

That is not grammar correction. It is intent recovery.

When Might Grammarly Fit Better?

If you write long documents, edit drafts, or need grammar support inside existing writing workflows, Grammarly may be a better fit.

If your main pain is mobile messaging and getting the right message out of rough speech, SayItWrites is built for that exact moment.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is SayItWrites a grammar checker?

No. It can produce grammatically clean text, but the product category is intent-to-text, not grammar checking.

Does SayItWrites require a typed draft?

No. You speak your rough intent and SayItWrites writes the message.

Can SayItWrites help me avoid AI-sounding writing?

Yes. Tone is chosen by the user, so the output is guided by your intended voice rather than a generic rewrite style.

Try the intent-to-text proof.

Use the browser demo to test how SayItWrites turns rough speech into the message you mean. No signup required. No credit card needed. Live demo only, not a free plan.

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