DevEcho connects to your GitHub and turns every commit into plain-English briefings, answers, reports, and alerts — automatically. So you're always in control without sitting in a single status meeting.
Setup in 5 minutes · Free forever on the starter plan
If any of these happen to you regularly, DevEcho exists for you.
You put them on hold while you frantically Slack three developers. You get back with something vague like "we're making good progress." The client is not reassured. Neither are you.
You have no independent way to verify that. You rely entirely on what your team tells you. When the deadline is missed, you're the last to know and the first to be asked why.
Three standups, a sprint review, a monthly demo. Half your week is spent gathering information that should just exist. You are the most expensive status-updater in the company.
Every piece of this is generated automatically from your team's real GitHub activity. No developer input. No forms to fill. No meetings.
Good morning, Amaka. Your team shipped 6 updates yesterday.
Google login now works on Safari — the OAuth redirect bug has been fixed
Invoice PDF template updated for Nigerian tax compliance
Dashboard loads 40% faster — data is now pre-fetched on login
Payment failure emails now include a direct retry link
Export feature — in progress, expected tomorrow
Mobile push notifications — foundation laid, not yet live
Based on 12 commits across 2 repositories · View full digest →
“What did James work on this week?”
James completed 4 items this week:
Answered from real commit history · Ask your own question →
Backend team has gone quiet — 72 hours with no commits
No commits from your backend developers since Monday morning. This may mean they're blocked, working on something large, or waiting for a review. You set this alert because it happened unnoticed last quarter.
You were notified via email at 9:04 am · Manage alerts →
For: Merchant Solutions Ltd
Your team shipped 23 updates this month. Key highlights:
Share via link, export as PDF, or publish to a branded client portal — in one click. Your clients see polished progress. You spend 2 minutes, not 2 hours.
All examples generated from real GitHub commit data. Names changed for illustration.
You set it up once. DevEcho works in the background forever.
Install the DevEcho GitHub App on your repositories. You choose which repos and branches to monitor. Takes about 2 minutes.
Every commit is read and translated — from raw code changes to plain-English explanations of what was built, fixed, or changed. Optionally enable code analysis for deeper understanding.
Morning briefings in your inbox, answers to any question you type, alerts when something needs your attention, one-click reports for clients. No new habits required.
Every feature in DevEcho was designed for one person: the manager, founder, or client who needs to know what's happening without needing to understand how.
A scannable summary of everything your team shipped, waiting in your inbox before the workday starts. Your Monday morning standup, replaced.
"What did the team ship last month?" "Has the login bug been fixed?" "Is the mobile app ready?" Type the question. Get the answer. No developer involvement needed.
Set rules for what matters to you: no commits in 3 days, a developer going quiet, a deadline approaching. Know before it becomes a problem.
Generate a professional, readable progress report in seconds. Export as PDF, share via link, or publish to a branded client portal. Your clients look at you differently.
When you grant code access, DevEcho reads the actual changes — not just the commit message. Summaries go from "updated auth.js" to "fixed the session timeout bug affecting Safari users".
See what each team member has worked on over time. Useful for performance conversations, investor updates, and knowing who to call when something breaks.
“I used to spend the first hour of every Monday chasing developers for updates. Now I open my email and it's just there — clear, specific, and actually useful for the day ahead.”
Marcus T.
VP of Product, Series A SaaS startup
“We manage 12 client projects. Writing monthly reports used to take one full day. DevEcho got that down to 20 minutes. The clients love the new format — it's specific in a way our old reports never were.”
Priya S.
Founder, software consultancy
“My developers were skeptical at first — they thought it would feel like surveillance. After a week, they started using it themselves to check how their work was being described to the rest of the business.”
Daniel K.
CTO, e-commerce startup
The free plan gives you real value. Upgrade when your team grows or your clients need reports.
Currently in beta — paid plans are activated manually. Email hello@devecho.app after signing up and we'll get you set up within 24 hours.
Try DevEcho with one project.
For small teams shipping consistently.
For teams that need full visibility.
For agencies running multiple client projects.
By default, DevEcho reads commit metadata only — commit messages, file names, and change sizes. If you want richer summaries, you can optionally enable "Include code in AI analysis" in your settings. When enabled, DevEcho reads the actual code diffs and understands what the changes do, not just which files were touched. Either way, nothing is stored on our servers beyond the summaries we generate.
With metadata only: "Updated auth.js". With code analysis: "Rewrote the session token refresh logic to prevent race conditions under concurrent logins — this fixes the intermittent logout bug reported last week." The difference is significant for non-technical readers.
DevEcho is not a surveillance tool — it describes work, not time. Developers tend to appreciate it because their contributions are explained accurately to non-technical stakeholders without requiring them to write reports. Many teams find it reduces the pressure of status meetings.
Every generated summary is editable by any admin or owner. Edits are tracked so you always have the original alongside your correction. Enabling code analysis significantly reduces inaccuracy.
Under 5 minutes. Connect GitHub, select your repositories, and DevEcho starts processing commits immediately. Your first summaries appear within minutes of the next push.
Yes. You can generate a professional progress report with one click and share it via a private link, export it as a PDF, or publish it to a branded client portal. On the Agency plan, clients get their own login and can only see their project.
Connect your first repository in 5 minutes and get your first digest tomorrow morning. Free plan, no credit card required.
Get started free →Setup in 5 minutes · Free plan · No credit card