Structure for the work that needs it
Not everything fits in a document. Wyatt databases let you track projects, content calendars, customers, inventory, applicants — anything that benefits from structured records — with column types like text, numbers, dates, selects, people, and links.
See your data the way the work demands
The same records can be shown through different views and tables. Look at a project tracker as a list when you need detail, or as a board when you’re moving work through stages. The data stays the same; the view adapts.
Filter, sort, and focus
Filter and sort records to answer specific questions — what’s due this week, which items are blocked, who owns what — without losing the underlying dataset.
AI that understands your records
Because databases are part of the workspace, the assistant can read and update them. Ask for a summary of a table, find records that match a description, or create and update rows from a conversation.
Connected to documents and tasks
Reference a database from a document, link records to projects, and surface them in search. Structured data stays connected to the narrative and the work around it.