You already know what heals.
It's the moments of connection—attunement, insight, rupture and repair. We built a tool to help you see them.
The gaps in how therapy works
70–80%
Clients forget most of session content within days.
Insights encoded in session become inaccessible when stress hits. The breakthrough they had on Tuesday is gone by Friday.
1 in 40
Therapists identify only 1 in 40 deteriorating clients.
Without feedback, we overestimate our effectiveness by up to 65%. Experience alone doesn't make us better—deliberate practice does.
Clients work blind.
They experience therapy but can't see the patterns you see. The information asymmetry limits their agency in their own healing.
The best moments disappear.
That moment of attunement, the insight that shifted everything—there's no way to return to it, to let it settle deeper.
In Zimbabwe, grandmothers with nine days of training
delivered effective mental health treatment
by listening, connecting, and attuning.
Their clients showed an 80% reduction in depression at six months.
The secret technique: Empathy. The invitation to share a story on a wooden bench.
Decades of meta-analyses confirm what Dixon Chibanda discovered:
common factors account for 30–40% of outcome variance.
Specific modalities or techniques account for only 1%.
Alliance
The working relationship—
“we're in this together.”
Empathy
Deeper understanding—
“you actually get what this is like for me.”
Both predict outcomes. Both are measurable. They're not the same thing.
The therapeutic relationship isn't a nice-to-have.
It's most of what works.
Our framework integrates Carl Rogers' core conditions, Edward Bordin's working alliance model,
and three decades of common factors research—unified into a system you can actually see.
See the moments that matter
We analyze sessions through the common factors that actually predict outcomes.
See when a reflection landed—and when it missed.
Track your empathic accuracy: how often does your client respond “yes, exactly” versus redirect or go quiet?
Catch corrective emotional experiences.
The moments your client expected one thing and received another—the ruptures that became repair.
Watch self-efficacy build.
The shift from “What should I do?” to “Here's what I'm going to do.”
Notice your genuineness patterns.
Do you become more clinical when the content gets heavy?
You see your work reflected back with clarity—not judgment, but signal.
85%
Empathy
4
Key Moments
↑
Self-efficacy
Corrective Experience @ 16:42
“I expected you to judge me... but you didn't.”
The moments that rewire
Your client expects rejection. You offer acceptance.
They brace for criticism. You respond with curiosity.
They wait to be abandoned. You stay.
These are corrective emotional experiences—moments where your client's relational expectations are violated in a healing way. Research shows they're among the strongest predictors of lasting therapeutic change.
We detect them: the expectation (“You'll probably think I'm pathetic...”), the vulnerable risk, your counter-expectation response, their surprise or relief (“Wait—you're not mad?”).
Not just insight. Embodied change.
Built on the common factors
The elements that research shows actually predict therapeutic outcomes—
across all modalities. Measured, not assumed.
Authenticity isn't abstract
It's in the language.
High genuineness
“Yeah, I can really see how that would be confusing. I'm sitting here trying to imagine what that must have been like.”
Low genuineness
“I am perceiving some ambivalence in your description. Can you elaborate on the cognitive processes involved?”
We measure language naturalness, emotional congruence, spontaneity, and jargon density—especially during your client's most vulnerable moments.
Genuineness is the most trainable of Rogers' core conditions.
Now you can see where yours shifts.
Insight isn't enough
Your client can understand their patterns and still feel powerless to change them.
Self-efficacy is the bridge: the growing belief that they can act on what they've learned.
We track the shift. Strength-spotting. Attribution to client agency. Empowering questions instead of directive advice.
You're not just giving them understanding.
You're building their trust in themselves.
Feedback you can use
Not this
“Be more authentic.”
“Show more empathy.”
This
“Your genuineness score dropped during high-emotion content. You used clinical jargon 8 times when your client was most vulnerable.”
“Empathic accuracy: 85% of reflections validated. Here are the three that missed.”
“Self-efficacy building: 65% empowering questions. Consider shifting from advice to curiosity.”
Deliberate practice requires feedback. Now you have it.
Privacy is foundational
Zero-knowledge encryption. We cannot see your sessions—only you and your client can.
We exceed HIPAA requirements. We don't sell data. We will never train a model on your sessions.
We built this for ourselves first. We use it with our own therapists. Privacy isn't a feature we added—it's why we built the architecture this way.
What your clients experience
When they log in, they see their breakthrough moments from your sessions—summarized, contextualized, with a play button to return to each one.
Not just insights. The moments that mattered: when they took a risk and it was met differently than they expected. When something shifted in how they see themselves.
They can sit with these moments as many times as they need. They can do their therapy outside of therapy.
You give them something to take home that actually works.
“I realized I've been waiting for permission to feel okay about my choices.”
“When I said that and you didn't judge me... something shifted.”
“I can handle more than I thought I could.”
Try it with a session
Upload a recording from a session (with consent).
See what the analysis surfaces.
Decide if it's useful.
No cost. No commitment. No sales call.
Upload a sessionQuestions? Write us at hello@wetherapy.io