Linkd is the calendar app for students who actually have a life. Stop chasing five group chats for one rehearsal. Stop letting the networking coffee with that alum quietly die. We connect everyone’s calendars, surface when you’re mutually free, and put the people who matter on a cadence — so the plans just happen.
The five-shade heatmap is the move. Connect calendars across Google, Outlook, and Apple. We collapse 10 schedules into one picture — purple means everyone’s open, faded means nobody is. Then we pick a time.
Set a cadence with anyone — your mom every Sunday, that founder you met at the hackathon every other Tuesday, your study group on Wednesdays. Linkd suggests the next time, lines up calendars, and tracks the streak. The Garden is the quiet receipt of all the relationships you’re actually keeping.
Find anyone on Linkd by @handle. See mutuals from your school. Send a meet request that bypasses the “hey do you have time next week?” thread entirely. Once you’re connected, drop them on a cadence — every two weeks, or once a quarter, your choice.
The Linkd iMessage extension drops a smart card right into your group chats. Recipients tap once, Linkd cross-references the group’s calendars, and the time gets locked in.
The MVP ships with Connect, Cadence, Groups, and the iMessage card. These features are rolling out post-launch, in order.
Auto-attach meeting notes from Granola to every Linkd event, with cadence summaries you can scroll back through.
Pull alumni you’ve connected with on LinkedIn into your Linkd directory. One click to put any of them on a cadence.
Linkd watches for windows where you’re mutually free with someone on cadence — and quietly pings you both before the moment passes.
Bulk schedule across student rosters, recurring office hours, shift coordination — the screenshot calendar dies here.
We’re onboarding college students first, school by school. Drop your email and we’ll send you the invite the moment your campus opens.