Shared support language
The phrases, redirects, and regulation cues that work are held in one place and delivered the same way by every supporter. Special needs support that doesn’t restart with every new person.
Not a symbol board. Not a replacement for AAC. Life’sPilot is the autism communication app that translates support strategies into clear, consistent guidance — so every supporter responds the same way.



The autistic person isn’t speaking a different language. The people around them are.
Mom uses one phrase. Dad uses another. The aide redirects differently than the BCBA. The substitute teacher has no idea what works. Each shift in approach reads as a brand-new demand.
Life’sPilot is the autism communication app for the supporters. It holds the shared support language — phrasing, sequence, regulation cues — and delivers it consistently in the moment.
Most communication apps focus on the autistic person’s output. This one supports the alignment around them.
The phrases, redirects, and regulation cues that work are held in one place and delivered the same way by every supporter. Special needs support that doesn’t restart with every new person.
Life’sPilot is not AAC. If the person you support uses an AAC device or app, this works alongside it — supporting the people around them so AAC output is met with consistent, predictable responses.
Grandparents in one language, school in another, providers in a third. The support language stays consistent across every speaker — the communication app handles the translation of the plan, not just the words.
When a parent updates the morning routine, the school sees it. When the BCBA shares a new strategy, the grandparent sees it. When the speech therapist logs a win, everyone celebrates.
No. AAC tools give the autistic person a way to communicate output. Life’sPilot is an autism communication app for the supporters around them — it holds the phrasing, sequence, and regulation cues so every supporter responds the same way.
Most apps build the autistic person’s vocabulary or output. This one builds the supporters’ consistency. Different problem, complementary tool.
Yes. Life’sPilot doesn’t touch the AAC device. It coaches the people around the AAC user so requests, refusals, and choices made through AAC are met with the same response every time.
Yes. Multilingual support is built in. The plan stays the same; the delivery adapts to whoever’s using it.
Parents, family, siblings, educators, aides, and providers who support the same autistic person. Special needs support that scales across the whole care circle, not just one supporter.
No. Life’sPilot is not therapy and not a clinical product. It carries the plan your SLP, BCBA, or behavioral team has built into the moments those clinicians aren’t in the room.