Layerpath is back.

Layerpath is back.

Layerpath is back.

Layerpath is back.

We went quiet for the first half of 2026 because we believed the product needed to earn another introduction before we talked about it again.

We went quiet for the first half of 2026 because we believed the product needed to earn another introduction before we talked about it again.

We went quiet for the first half of 2026 because we believed the product needed to earn another introduction before we talked about it again.

We went quiet for the first half of 2026 because we believed the product needed to earn another introduction before we talked about it again.

For the past few months, we have been rebuilding Layerpath around a simpler idea: creating a useful product walkthrough should not depend on starting from a browser recording. Sometimes that workflow already exists as screenshots, a video, a Loom, or media already inside Layerpath. Other times it still needs to be captured directly from the product. Either way, the result should land in the same place: one editable tour that can be improved, shared interactively, presented as a guide, or exported as video.


That shift touched nearly everything: where a project begins, the way the editor behaves, how Agent helps without taking control away, what Brand Memory carries in terms of identity and voice, and where the finished work ends up.

We went quiet for the first half of 2026 because we believed the product needed to earn another introduction before we talked about it again.

For the past few months, we have been rebuilding Layerpath around a simpler idea: creating a useful product walkthrough should not depend on starting from a browser recording. Sometimes that workflow already exists as screenshots, a video, a Loom, or media already inside Layerpath. Other times it still needs to be captured directly from the product. Either way, the result should land in the same place: one editable tour that can be improved, shared interactively, presented as a guide, or exported as video.


That shift touched nearly everything: where a project begins, the way the editor behaves, how Agent helps without taking control away, what Brand Memory carries in terms of identity and voice, and where the finished work ends up.

Six people shaped that work.

  • Karnesh has been with Layerpath since the beginning and has influenced nearly every part of how the product looks and feels.

  • Madhu grew from web development into full-stack product ownership while rebuilding the editor.

  • Bharath joined as an intern and now carries much of the launch and customer-facing experience.

  • Sudhanshu spent six months moving between classes and some of the hardest creation and Agent work in the product. He finished college last month!

  • Kirupa joined four months ago and helped turn scattered product decisions into a coherent direction, design system, and editorial standard.

  • My own part was pushing, redirecting, and bringing those five efforts together into one product.

Six people shaped that work.

  • Karnesh has been with Layerpath since the beginning and has influenced nearly every part of how the product looks and feels.

  • Madhu grew from web development into full-stack product ownership while rebuilding the editor.

  • Bharath joined as an intern and now carries much of the launch and customer-facing experience.

  • Sudhanshu spent six months moving between classes and some of the hardest creation and Agent work in the product. He finished college last month!

  • Kirupa joined four months ago and helped turn scattered product decisions into a coherent direction, design system, and editorial standard.

  • My own part was pushing, redirecting, and bringing those five efforts together into one product.

Over the next few days, each of them will introduce one part of Layerpath through the work they actually owned:


  • Create with Agent, and how it changes where a project can begin

  • Brand memory, and why it matters beyond logos and colors

  • The editor, and why direct control still matters in an AI product

  • Edit with Agent, and how it helps people improve a tour by asking

  • Voice, Guide, video export, and how they carry a tour from creation to use


One story a day at https://launch.layerpath.com. Each goes live at 10:00 PDT.

This is not a list of features released this week. The changelog already shows how much changed over the last several months.

This is our decision to make the work visible again. We want to know where it still breaks down.

Start anywhere. Improve by asking. Share everywhere.

Over the next few days, each of them will introduce one part of Layerpath through the work they actually owned:


  • Create with Agent, and how it changes where a project can begin

  • Brand memory, and why it matters beyond logos and colors

  • The editor, and why direct control still matters in an AI product

  • Edit with Agent, and how it helps people improve a tour by asking

  • Voice, Guide, video export, and how they carry a tour from creation to use


One story a day at https://launch.layerpath.com. Each goes live at 10:00 PDT.

This is not a list of features released this week. The changelog already shows how much changed over the last several months.

This is our decision to make the work visible again. We want to know where it still breaks down.

Start anywhere. Improve by asking. Share everywhere.

Vinay Chandrasekaran

Jul 15, 2026

Workflow training ideas worth stealing.

Product updates, news, and walkthrough examples.

Workflow training ideas worth stealing.

Product updates, news, and walkthrough examples.

Workflow training ideas worth stealing.

Product updates, news, and walkthrough examples.