The marker tells you the story.
A headstone, a memorial bench, a veterans monument, a dedication plaque — every one stands for a life, and the stone only has room for a name and two dates. Put a small ScanThis tag on the marker, and it tells the whole story to anyone who scans — and answers when they ask.
Each memorial site — a cemetery, a garden, a churchyard, an honor wall — is $3 a month. Tag every marker inside it; the price doesn't change. Visitors and families never pay to scan, listen, or ask.
Scan the bench. Hear the life.

Eleanor “Ellie” Whitfield, 1938–2024 — a demonstration memorial, lovingly composed to show what a real one holds. Her bench has a page. Her page tells her story, in a voice. And her family’s memories are there — spoken, not just written.
Tom — her son
Maya — her granddaughter
Dorothy — her friend of seventy-two years
LEAVE ONE IN YOUR OWN VOICE — SPEAK A MEMORY AT THE MARKER, RIGHT ON HER PAGE
Companions belong here too — a memorial holds a beloved dog as naturally as a grandmother. Same tag, same page, same $3 site.
Every marker stands for a whole life.
Let it say more than a name and two dates.
The story outlives the stone
A marker holds a name and two dates. The life in between — the voice, the photos, the stories the family tells — lives with the marker now. Whoever stands there can hear it, this year and fifty years from now.
Visitors just ask
Who was she? What did he build? Who else is remembered here? Ari, the helper on every page, answers in plain words. No app to install, no account, no hunting through an office for a ledger.
Families add to it
A memorial isn't finished the day it's placed. Families can keep adding — a remembrance, a photograph, a story from someone who knew them — and the site's page quietly grows into the fullest record there is.
Four steps, and the story keeps itself.
Tag the marker
A small, weatherproof tag goes on the headstone, bench, plaque, or monument. It takes seconds and doesn't alter the marker.
The story gets a page
Each marker gets its own page: the life, the dates, the photos, the words the family chose — whatever deserves to be kept.
Anyone scans and hears it
A visitor points their phone and the marker tells its story — and answers questions, out loud or in writing.
It stays, generation after generation
Groundskeepers change, offices move, records fade. The story stays with the marker, for whoever comes to stand there next.
Operate many locations? A memorial provider runs on the Business plan — $27 a month — and adds each site for $3 a month on the same subscription. A hundred cemeteries is a hundred sites, each with its own pages, its own markers, its own stories. Families always scan free.
Want to see it on your own thing first?
We’ll walk you through a live one — your house, your shop, your fleet — and set the first one up with you. Real demos are rolling out soon.