For tonight's dinner, this weekend's plans, and the trip you keep meaning to take. Tell us what you love — we'll book it, remember it, and have the next idea ready.
For anyone who'd rather spend Saturday on the thing than on planning the thing.
Most evenings still start with the wrong question: "what should we do tonight?" Asked of Google, of Maps, of TikTok, of the group chat. Five tabs and an hour later, you settle.
Perfect Day is a concierge — for tonight's dinner, this weekend's plans, the trip you keep meaning to take. You tell us what you're in the mood for. We find the place, hold the table, arrange the car, remember what you loved, and have the next idea waiting before you ask.
Every recommendation is shaped by individual taste, refined over time, and delivered with the tone of a handwritten note.
The more we work together, the less you'll have to tell us.
"I'm hungry but I don't want to think about it."
A reservation, the right vibe, the right neighborhood. Held in your name.
"Find us something good — for the four of us, Saturday night."
A plan that works for the group, sequenced and booked. The car is sorted.
"Two weeks in Italy in October. We've never been."
An itinerary that reads like a friend wrote it — every reservation, every train, every quiet recommendation between them.
A small note for the curious.
Every restaurant you loved, every trip that worked, every room you didn't like. The concierge keeps the kind of notes a great one always has — and uses them to make the next decision better than the last.
One choice, not a list of ten. The concierge picks the place, holds the table, arranges the car, and tells you what's been done. You can always change your mind. Most of the time, you won't want to.
We're building Perfect Day with the people who actually know — chefs, hoteliers, sommeliers, the people who always pick the right place in every city. Some are quietly with us already. The rest will be by the time we open. So you get the version of a city the locals get — not the version the algorithm shows.
"The oldest idea in hospitality is coming back: someone who knows you, knows the city, and has already taken care of it."
Terry started Perfect Day after years of watching the same thing happen in his own life: family trips falling apart in the planning, dinners chosen by the loudest review, weekends that disappeared into tabs. He spent a decade at AT&T building data systems at the scale of millions. He's now building the one he wishes had existed for him — a concierge that remembers.
James has been Terry's closest collaborator since the sixth grade — they were best men at each other's weddings. He leads the operations, partnerships, and business relationships that will bring Perfect Day to the first hundred members and beyond.
Nadirah leads the engineering work behind Perfect Day's taste memory and concierge interface. She's spent her career building systems where reliability and personality both matter — the kind of product that has to feel calm even when it's doing a lot underneath. She's building the one she wants to use.
Perfect Day opens with one hundred members in Dallas and Atlanta this June. The first hundred get the concierge before anyone else does — and they get to shape what it remembers, what it suggests, what it becomes.