We make the phone calls you don't want to.
Hold music, phone trees (press 1 for billing information, press 2 for your account balance, and so on), endless waiting.
Rinno handles the call, talks to a real person, and tells you what happened.
Join the waitlistComing soon to iOS and Android.
Phone calls are the worst part of the to-do list.
You've been on hold for thirty-eight minutes. The menu keeps looping back to the start. You finally reach a person, then get transferred to a line that rings out.
Booking an appointment, sorting out a surprise charge, canceling a plan you forgot about. It all comes down to making a call you really don't want to make.
How Rinno works
Tell Rinno what you need
Type it like you'd text a friend: “Book a dentist cleaning next week” or “Find out why my bill went up.”
Rinno makes the call
It works through the phone menu, waits on hold, and talks to a real person on your behalf.
You get the result
The moment it's handled, Rinno sends you a clear summary of exactly what happened.
A look at what we're building
A short concept video of how Rinno will work, a preview of what we're building.
Built to be on your side
Your privacy comes first
Rinno keeps a written summary, never a recording, and you can delete your history whenever you want.
You stay in control
Want to talk to them yourself? Rinno waits through the menu and the hold, then hands you the call the moment a person picks up.
No tech-speak required
If you can send a text, you can use Rinno. Just say what you need in plain words.
A real person, handled
Rinno talks to an actual human on the other end and sees the whole task through.
Be first to know when Rinno launches.
No spam. Just one email when it's ready.
Tell us what you think
Thoughts on the idea? Any features you'd want to see? Words of encouragement? We want to hear them!

Hi, my name is Josh Yohannan, Founder and CEO of Rinno.
I spent years at engineering and consulting companies solving complex problems Monday through Friday, and then spending forty-five minutes on hold with my internet provider on a Saturday morning. That contradiction bothered me. I could fix complex problems for clients when they needed it, but I couldn't easily get a real person on the phone to fix a simple issue like an overcharged internet bill. And worse, the only hours they were open were the exact hours I was at work. The system seemed designed to make ordinary things hard.
I noticed I wasn't the only one. Friends, family, and neighbors all had a version of the same story. Most wealthy people don't have this problem because they have assistants who handle it. Everyone else just loses hours of their life to hold music and “press 1 for billing information, press 2 for your account balance”.
I built Rinno because I wanted my own time back. And because if there's technology that can give it back to me, there's no good reason it shouldn't give it back to everyone else too.