About
The baby book that finally gets filled in.
Most baby books sit on a dresser, mostly blank. The first six pages get filled out in the first week, and then life happens, and then the baby is four. The book is a monument to a small daily failure.
SaveTheirDays is the alternative: one sentence after bedtime, on the phone that's already in your hand. No streaks. No shame. No "today existed" guilt trip. Miss a week. Skip three. Tap the button when there's nothing to say.
Two weeks in, you'll have more written down than the dresser book has after a year. At year-end, your sentences become a soft paperback or hardcover. Your kid's name on the cover. The Book of August. The Book of Iris. A real artifact, not a JSON export.
Who's behind it
Built by Josh Kilen, the maker of SaveYourDays — the same product, but for adults journaling about themselves. SaveTheirDays is the parenting fork. Same maker. Same engineering. Different book.
It exists because a tester said, "If I had something like this for both of my kids, I would love it." Several months and a hundred parent interviews later, this is what shipped.
How it stays alive
A memory product is a fifteen-year promise. The full deal lives on the homepage and in our privacy policy — but the short version: lifetime is lifetime, no ads ever, no AI training on your kid's content, plain-text export anytime, six months notice if we shut down, refund if a major platform buys us.
Those aren't growth tactics. They're the contract.