01·for families

When everyone sees the same picture, the invisible work becomes visible.

Two adult siblings sitting side by side on a couch looking at a tablet together, with their mother in the background.
02·the family fracture

Different family members see different things. Nobody has the full picture.

"My brother calls every Sunday and thinks everything is fine. I'm there three times a week and I can see the decline."

The primary caregiver carries the weight and can't prove it. The score makes the picture shareable.

03·how shared visibility works

Everyone sees the same score, the same timeline, the same trends.

When perspectives diverge, the data surfaces it constructively. You don't have to explain what you're doing or justify what you need.

01

Accept the invitation

Your sibling opens a link. That's the bar.

02

Take their own check-in

Five minutes. They answer from what they actually see.

03

Check the timeline

Score history, score changes, notes. The shared record.

04·multi-assessor benefit

Where you agree, and where you diverge. Both are useful.

When two people assess independently, the family sees the overlap and the gap. That's the conversation starter, not the argument.

See your family's first InPlace Score.