Our story
About Sylly
Built by someone who actually survived college.
Sylly was built by a recent college grad who knows exactly what it feels like to open Canvas and immediately want to close it again.
I went to a big party school, was involved in Greek life, graduated with honors, and somehow learned how to balance classes, deadlines, social plans, late nights, internships, and everything in between.
And honestly? Staying organized should not be the hardest part of college.
That is why I built Sylly.
Sylly turns your syllabus into a clean, simple semester plan so you can see what is due, what is coming up, and what actually needs your attention this week. No more digging through five different Canvas pages, random PDFs, calendar tabs, and screenshots from the group chat.
Just upload your syllabus, review your dates, and let Sylly help you stay on top of school without making your life feel like a spreadsheet.
Work hard. Play hard. Stay organized.
College is not just about assignments. It is also about football games, formals, coffee runs, work shifts, study nights, random plans, and trying to have a life while keeping your GPA together.
Sylly is made for the student who wants to do well, but also wants to enjoy college.
The goal is simple: help students stay organized enough to work hard, play hard, and not spiral every Sunday night.
Why Sylly exists
Most school tools are built for institutions, not students.
- Canvas is where assignments live.
- Google Calendar is where events live.
- Notion is pretty, but takes forever to set up.
- Your planner is cute until you forget to update it.
Sylly brings it together in a way that actually feels student-friendly.
You get:
- Syllabus upload
- Extracted due dates
- Weekly planning
- Class dashboards
- Personal to-dos and events
- A cleaner way to see your semester
Because school is already stressful enough. Your planner should not be.
Made for the chaos of real student life
Sylly is for the student who has a paper due Monday, a chapter meeting Tuesday, a quiz Wednesday, a shift Thursday, and a party Friday — and still wants to feel like they have their life together.
It is not about being perfect. It is about having a place to land, plan, and keep moving.
The mission
Sylly's mission is to make college organization feel lighter, prettier, and actually useful. So students can stop wasting time trying to organize school and start spending more time living it.