Use cases

Who Resources is for

A board is a list of resources you trust. People come to read it on their own time. Here is how three kinds of curators use it.

For individuals

Keep what you find. Find it again later.

Stop losing good links in a browser graveyard. Sort them into boards you actually open.

A second brain for your reading

Paste a URL, get the title and image for free. One board per topic you care about.

A shortlist you can trust

You read the article so others do not have to. Share the board instead of ten tabs.

A starting point on Discover

Follow creators who curate what you study. Pull their boards when you need them.

Solo boards are free. Start with what you already have.


For creators

Send people to one place, not a feed.

Your audience scrolls past your best links in five seconds. A board holds them for good.

A link in bio that keeps working

One board for every tool you recommend. Update it once, no broken posts.

See what your audience opens

Views and clicks per resource tell you what lands. Curate toward what people use.

Charge for your deep cuts

Keep a private board for paying readers. You set the price, we handle access.

Private boards, stats, and creator monetization on Standard.


For teams

One source of truth your team will reread.

Onboarding docs, vetted tools, design references. Kept current by the people who use them.

An internal knowledge base

A private board per project or process. New hires read it on day one.

Roles that match how you work

Admins curate, contributors add, readers read. No edit-by-accident on shared boards.

A handoff that survives turnover

The board stays when people leave. Knowledge lives with the team, not an inbox.

Private team boards, roles, and unlimited invites on Enterprise.

Start curating

Find your own way to use a board.

Every curator starts with one list. Pick a topic you know well and see who comes to read it.