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You Took a 10-Minute Quiz. It's Been Telling People Who You Are Ever Since.

DiSC, Myers-Briggs, and the Enneagram try to capture a person in a single afternoon. Daylogue builds the picture slowly, from the things you actually say over weeks and months, and it keeps updating as you change

Daylogue PressLOS ANGELES, CA, October 21, 2026 · 5 min read

LOS ANGELES, CA, October 21, 2026 / PRNewswire / Daylogue today introduced a new way to think about personality and self-knowledge: instead of a test, a conversation. While DiSC, Myers-Briggs, the Enneagram, and similar assessments give users a label from a one-time questionnaire, Daylogue learns your patterns from daily check-ins, the topics you keep returning to, how you respond to stress, the things that light you up or wear you down. No test. No labels. No locked-in result. Nobody else is doing this.

Personality tests have a problem nobody likes to say out loud: they ask you to describe yourself in the moment you take them, and then they freeze that description in place. If you took Myers-Briggs on a bad week, you are that letter combination forever. If DiSC labeled you a "D" at work, every team-building session for the next three years will treat you like one. The test doesn't know what you said in therapy last Tuesday. It doesn't know you've been sleeping better. It doesn't know the thing you keep circling back to every Sunday night. It captured a snapshot and called it you.

Daylogue takes a different route. A user opens the app, answers a few short questions about their day, and has a short back-and-forth with the AI about anything that's on their mind. Over weeks, the app notices what comes back. A topic that appears every Monday. A fear that shows up right before big meetings. A friend whose name appears in entries about good days. Slowly, without asking a single personality-test question, Daylogue builds a picture of a person that's more accurate than any assessment, because it's built from how they actually talk, not from how they describe themselves on a form.

"I've taken DiSC four times in my career. Myers-Briggs twice. The Enneagram whenever a friend got into it," said Brandon Bibbins, Founder and CEO of Daylogue. "None of them ever felt like me. They felt like me on the day I took them. The person I am at 10:00 AM on a Tuesday in September, answering questions as fast as I can. That's not who I am. Who I am shows up slowly, in the things I keep saying and the things I keep not saying. Daylogue watches for that."

The result is a kind of self-knowledge traditional assessments can't produce:

  • No labels, just patterns. Daylogue doesn't tell you you're a "D" or an "INFJ" or a "Type 4." It tells you what it's actually noticing, "you've mentioned your sister in five of your last seven entries" or "work stress goes up every time you skip a workout."
  • It updates as you change. A personality test freezes one version of you. Daylogue keeps watching. If you get a new job, start therapy, become a parent, or just grow, the picture updates with you.
  • It's built from what you actually say, not how you answer a test. Assessments capture how you describe yourself. Daylogue captures how you actually talk, day after day. Those two pictures are rarely the same.
  • It stays private. Entries written in the Daylogue app are end-to-end encrypted on the user's device before upload, Daylogue cannot read those. SMS and email check-ins, and the AI summaries Daylogue generates, are handled on the server and encrypted at rest. The full privacy map is published on daylogue.io/privacy.
  • It shows up where you need it. A user can read what Daylogue has noticed before a therapy session, a hard conversation with a partner, or a performance review, and walk in already knowing what's been going on for them.

"Workplaces spend real money every year to give employees a letter or a number and call it insight," said Marcus M., Head of Strategy and Partnerships at Daylogue. "What people actually want is to be understood. A test can't do that. It has no memory. It doesn't know what happened to you last month. Daylogue does, because you told it. That's the difference. We're not asking people to describe themselves. We're helping them notice themselves."

Daylogue is not a replacement for clinical assessment or professional evaluation. It is not a diagnostic tool. It is a private, daily reflection app that happens to produce, over time, a more honest picture of a person than any one-sitting test can. Users can read what the app has noticed at any point. They can share a summary with a therapist if they choose. They never receive a label.

Daylogue is live on iOS via the App Store and on the web at daylogue.io. Android is in active development.


About Daylogue

Daylogue is a pattern journal that reads your past entries and detects the emotional patterns running through them. Instead of a stack of separate journal entries, you get a short, plain-language summary that updates over time: what topics keep coming back, when a pattern is repeating, what's shifted in the last few weeks. Daylogue is not therapy and is not a replacement for professional care. It is a private space on your phone for honest reflection, a companion to therapy, to hard conversations, and to the days when you want to know yourself a little better. Entries written inside the Daylogue app are end-to-end encrypted on your device before upload, so Daylogue cannot read them. (SMS and email check-ins, and AI-generated summaries, are handled on the server and are not end-to-end encrypted. See Daylogue's privacy page for the full map.) Founded by Brandon Bibbins, Daylogue is independent and available on iOS and web at daylogue.io.


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SOURCE Daylogue

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