For teams that care about each other's time

Fair meeting rotation
for global teams

Parallel helps teams rotate late meetings

When teams span time zones, someone takes the early or late call. Parallel rotates who adjusts so the inconvenience is shared over time.

Start free
Built for distributed teams
Supports all IANA timezones
Auto-rotation every cycle
View as:
Parallel

Your teams

Create a team, invite members, and plan fair rotation schedules.

Product Team Sync
4 membersΒ·Mar 21, 2026
Global Engineering Sync
8 membersΒ·Mar 21, 2026

There is rarely a perfect meeting time across global teams.

Parallel finds the best possible schedule across time zones, working hours, and hard constraints.

When a perfect split isn't possible, Parallel rotates the burden fairly.

Why teams use Parallel

10Γ— faster scheduling

Stop manual time-zone math. Parallel analyzes everyone's availability instantly.

Generate weeks of meetings in seconds

Instead of endless Slack messages or polls, Parallel creates a fair multi-week schedule in one click.

Fair rotation built in

No one gets stuck with early mornings or late nights forever. Parallel rotates the inconvenience automatically.

Global meetings create invisible unfairness

Across time zones, someone always takes the early morning or late-night call. Over time, it's usually the same teammate.

Meeting burden

Someone always takes the late meeting

When teams span continents, one person often joins at 10pm so everyone else can meet during the day.

The same teammate keeps adjusting

Teams choose the time that works for most people β€” but over months, the same person often sacrifices every week.

Tool gaps

Scheduling tools don't track fairness

Tools like Calendly help find a time, but they don't track who has already taken the burden.

Managers want fairness but lack visibility

Leaders care about sharing inconvenience, but there is rarely a clear way to see who has already adjusted.

Default behavior

Teams default to "whatever works"

The easiest time gets picked again and again, even if it quietly disadvantages the same region.

Manual rotation doesn't scale

Trying to rotate meeting times across multiple time zones quickly becomes confusing and inconsistent.

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New York

UTC-5

9:00 AM
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London

UTC+0

2:00 PM
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Shanghai

UTC+8

10:00 PM
Late night call

Who takes the burden each week?

Week 1

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πŸ‡¬πŸ‡§2:00 PM
πŸ‡¨πŸ‡³10:00 PM

Week 2

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πŸ‡¬πŸ‡§2:00 PM
πŸ‡¨πŸ‡³10:00 PM

Week 3

πŸ‡ΊπŸ‡Έ9:00 AM
πŸ‡¬πŸ‡§2:00 PM
πŸ‡¨πŸ‡³10:00 PM

Week 4

πŸ‡ΊπŸ‡Έ9:00 AM
πŸ‡¬πŸ‡§2:00 PM
πŸ‡¨πŸ‡³10:00 PM
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Shanghai took the late call 4 out of 4 weeks

The same teammate keeps adjusting β€” every single time.

The solution

Fair scheduling for recurring meetings

Parallel adds visibility and rotation to recurring scheduling. Define your team, set availability, and let Parallel generate a rotation that spreads the cost across the team over time.

See who adjusts

See who has taken the inconvenient slot and how often. Parallel surfaces hidden patterns β€” so your team can make informed decisions.

Track over time

Track who takes late meetings and early calls β€” so it's visible, not hidden. A running fairness ledger for every teammate, updated automatically.

Intentional rotation

Rotate inconvenient meeting times so the cost is shared across the team over time. Not random, not manual β€” intentional and fair.

There is no perfect meeting time

Parallel doesn't try to find a perfect time. It finds the fairest rotation when no perfect time exists.

Across enough time zones, someone joins early or someone stays late. Parallel makes that tradeoff more transparent and more fairly shared.

Hard boundaries

Hard boundaries define times someone cannot attend at all β€” like sleep, school pickup, or other non-negotiable limits. Parallel never schedules meetings inside these ranges.

Burden

Burden measures how inconvenient a meeting time is. Early mornings and late evenings add more burden. Parallel rotates and distributes that burden across the team over time.

How It Works

Four steps to intentional rotation

Set up once. The algorithm handles the rest.

1

Create your team

Invite teammates and set up your workspace. Only the owner needs to start the plan.

2

Define meeting rules

Add meeting cadence, time zones, availability windows, and hard boundaries.

3

Generate a rotation

Parallel computes a meeting schedule that distributes inconvenient times across the team over time.

4

Review and publish

See who adjusts, understand the reasoning, and publish the final schedule with transparency.

Pricing

Simple pricing for distributed teams

Start free. Upgrade when your team grows.

Starter

Perfect for small distributed teams

$13/ month
14-day free trial
  • Up to 5 team members
  • Generate rotations up to 4 weeks
  • Up to 2 active teams
  • Rotation analysis
  • Export rotations to your calendar (.ics)
Start free

No credit card required

Most popular

Pro

For growing distributed teams

$49/ month
  • Up to 20 team members
  • Generate rotations up to 12 weeks
  • Unlimited teams
  • Advanced rotation analysis
  • Priority support
  • Everything in Starter

Enterprise

For large organizations

Custom
  • Unlimited team members
  • Unlimited rotation planning
  • API access
  • Enterprise security
  • Dedicated support

One owner pays. Invite your team for free.

Frequently asked questions

Parallel is a recurring meeting scheduler for global teams. It rotates meeting times across weeks so no one gets stuck with early-morning or late-night calls forever.

Unlike tools that find a single available slot, Parallel focuses on fairness over time β€” making meeting burden visible and distributing inconvenience across the team.
Feedback

Help us make Parallel better

Parallel is a new product built to solve a very specific problem: making meeting times fair across global teams.

Because this is still an early version, your feedback matters a lot. Tell us what works, what feels confusing, what you wish existed, or even what you don't like. Good feedback, bad feedback, weird feedback β€” all welcome.

We read every message. Thanks for helping us build a better scheduling tool for global teams.