Early access now forming
Small, timely cues to help people with diabetes take action in real life.
A1Cue is an early-stage diabetes support platform built around micro-workouts, practical education, and community support for people living with Type 1 diabetes, Type 2 diabetes, prediabetes, and the caregivers supporting them.
Help shape the first version of A1Cue before public launch.
Today’s cues
Concept
Simple cue preview
Take a 2-minute walk
Try 10 bodyweight squats
Review: exercise & glucose basics
Check in with your goals
Concept-style preview. Features are still being shaped with early users.
Diabetes management happens between appointments.
Living with diabetes is not limited to checkups, prescriptions, devices, or lab results. It happens during meals, meetings, workouts, errands, school days, stressful moments, poor sleep, and unexpected glucose swings.
Even with better technology, many people are still left asking the same practical questions:
What should I do right now?
How do I build better habits without adding more stress?
How do I make movement, education, and support part of daily life?
Where can I find guidance that feels practical, human, and easy to act on?
A1Cue is being built to support those everyday moments.
What is A1Cue?
A1Cue is a practical diabetes support platform designed to deliver small, helpful cues at the moments when users may be most likely to benefit.
The first version of A1Cue will focus on simple actions, accessible education, and user feedback. Over time, the vision is to grow into a more personalized platform that can support movement, learning, coaching, and community.
Micro-Workouts
Short movement prompts designed to fit into real life — like a 2-minute walk, desk push-ups, squats, mobility work, or other simple actions that can help users build consistency.
Education
Short, practical diabetes education designed to answer real questions people face every day — from exercise and food to travel, technology, nighttime lows, parenting, and more.
Community
A future support layer for connection, encouragement, local and virtual cohorts, challenges, and shared learning among people living with diabetes and the families supporting them.
How A1Cue is being designed to work
1. Understand your context
A1Cue starts by learning about your diabetes type, goals, lifestyle, movement preferences, and the kinds of support you want most.
2. Deliver practical cues
The platform is being designed to provide small, timely prompts — like short movement ideas, education reminders, habit nudges, or future glucose-aware recommendations.
3. Learn what helps
Pilot users will help us understand which cues are useful, which ones are not, and how A1Cue can become more personalized, supportive, and effective over time.
Early versions may use surveys, manual inputs, simple prompts, and feedback loops before deeper app features or CGM integrations are built.
Help shape the first A1Cue pilot.
We are preparing an early pilot for people who want to help shape A1Cue before public launch. Pilot participants will help test early concepts, review movement prompts and education ideas, share feedback, and help us understand what kind of diabetes support is most useful in daily life.
Who we are looking for
Adults living with Type 1 diabetes
Teens with Type 1 diabetes, with parent or guardian involvement
Adults living with Type 2 diabetes
People with prediabetes
Parents or caregivers of children with diabetes
Diabetes educators, nurse practitioners, endocrinologists, and other clinicians interested in advising or reviewing future content
What pilot participants may be asked to do
Complete a short onboarding questionnaire
Review early A1Cue concepts
Test simple movement or education prompts
Share feedback through surveys or interviews
Help identify what feels helpful, confusing, motivating, or unnecessary
Built from lived experience.
A1Cue was founded by Matt Cunningham, who has lived with Type 1 diabetes since 18 months old.
Over the years, Matt has experienced many versions of diabetes care — urine strips, fingersticks, injections, pumps, CGMs, closed-loop technology, exercise, family life, work, and the constant decisions that come with managing diabetes every day.
A1Cue comes from the belief that people with diabetes do not just need more information. They need practical support, timely reminders, better education, and encouragement that fits into real life.
MC
— Matt Cunningham, Founder of A1Cue
What we’re building toward
Now
We are starting with research, surveys, pilot applications, early movement concepts, education topics, and user interviews.
Next
The first pilot will help us test micro-workouts, practical education, onboarding flows, and feedback loops with a small group of early users.
Later
The long-term vision includes more personalized prompts, deeper education, CGM-aware insights where feasible, community support, and access to qualified diabetes educators or providers for paid virtual sessions.
A1Cue will grow in phases, guided by real user feedback and reviewed carefully as the product becomes more advanced.
Want to become a founding early-access supporter?
Joining the waitlist and applying for the pilot are free. For those who want to show deeper interest, A1Cue may offer an optional $20 early-access deposit.
This deposit helps signal serious interest, supports early development, and reserves a founding-member spot for future launch benefits.
The $20 deposit is optional and is not required to join the waitlist, take the survey, or apply for the pilot.
$20
Details about launch benefits, timing, and refund terms should be provided clearly before payment.
Help us build the right thing.
Whether you live with diabetes, care for someone who does, or work in diabetes care, your feedback can help shape A1Cue from the beginning.
Join the Waitlist
Be the first to receive updates as A1Cue prepares for pilot testing and early launch.
Take the Survey
Share what kind of diabetes support, education, movement prompts, and community features would be most useful to you.
Apply for the Pilot
Interested in helping test early concepts and provide feedback? Apply to be considered for the first A1Cue pilot group.
Frequently asked questions
Is A1Cue available now?
Who is A1Cue for?
Is A1Cue medical advice?
Will A1Cue connect to my CGM?
What will pilot users do?
Is the $20 early-access deposit required?
How can diabetes educators or clinicians get involved?
A1Cue is being built with people who understand that diabetes support needs to be practical, timely, and grounded in real life.
If that resonates with you, we would love your input.