
Story worth keeping
The house they grew up in
“The porch was her favorite room, even though it wasn’t a room.”
A memory you can hear, read, and print before it fades.
Make Memoir gives you a simple way to preserve the person you love while they are still here: weekly prompts, easy recording, editable stories, and a hardcover memoir at the end of the year.

Prompt + answer
“Tell me about the place that felt most like home.”
“The back porch at my mother’s house. We ate on folding chairs, and that was where everybody talked longest.”
A single prompt becomes a memory the whole family can keep.
Built to reduce the friction that keeps families from asking the next question.
What your money buys
Families buy Make Memoir because the result is not a feed or a folder. It is a private archive, editable stories, and a printed book that make the money feel small compared with the memory it protects.

Story worth keeping
“The porch was her favorite room, even though it wasn’t a room.”
A memory you can hear, read, and print before it fades.

Story worth keeping
“Bread, mostly. Mother baked every Wednesday and the whole street knew it.”
Small details become the things families treasure most later.

Story worth keeping
“The one I carried in my wallet for sixty years.”
The kind of line that turns a folder of files into a family heirloom.
What happens after the prompt
Families open Make Memoir because it is easy to use. They keep paying because the answers become more precious every week.
Step 1
A weekly prompt lands by text or email, so the family keeps moving without planning a call or coordinating a calendar.
Step 2
Video, audio, or text. The storyteller chooses the path that feels natural that day.
Step 3
Families get a readable story, the original recording, and a hardcover book they can keep forever.
Adult children
These families are not buying software. They are buying another chance to ask the right question while they still can.
Gift buyers
Birthdays, retirements, and holidays are easier to remember when the gift becomes a story that keeps unfolding.
Families after a loss
When the storyteller is gone, the recordings and written stories become the most valuable thing in the room.

A real family archive
The stories become something your family can revisit after the moment has passed.
Families who already started
“My mom passed away six months after we started. These recordings are now the most precious thing our family owns.”
“Dad never talked about himself. But somehow these questions got him going. We've learned more in three months than in forty years.”
“The best gift I’ve ever given. Grandma says she looks forward to the question every week.”

Ready when your family is
One annual subscription covers the prompts, the storyteller experience, the private archive, and the hardcover memoir. That is what you are buying: something the family will still care about later.
No writing required · Annual subscription