Someone askedfor your support
A Wado link in your inbox means a student is asking for your help with a letter or reference. Here’s what happens when you open it.
No account. No password. Nothing to install.
“Hi Prof. Mensah, I’m applying to the Rhodes Scholarship and would be grateful if you could write a recommendation letter...”
One request. Everything you need to decide.
- Who is askingTheir name, and how they know you.
- What and whenThe application, the material they need, and the deadline.
- Their message and filesResume, statement, transcript: all inside the request, not as attachments.
- How to submitExact instructions, in the applicant's own words.
“Hi Prof. Mensah, I’m applying to the Rhodes Scholarship and would be grateful if you could write a recommendation letter. I’ve attached my resume and personal statement...”
Fair questions,
straight answers
The link opens one request, nothing else
You see this request and only this request. Not the student's other applications, not anyone else's details.
You're not signing up for anything
Opening it doesn't create an account or sign you up for anything.
Declining is a real option
Can't help this time? Decline in one click. The student is told politely and the reminders stop.
Reminders are polite, and they stop
Just gentle nudges before the deadline. The moment you respond, they end.

Office hours, minus the inbox.
Every request arrives with everything attached.
Finish it the way the student asked.
Every request tells you how to submit. Upload the letter through your link, email it to the program, or use the program’s own portal. Whatever the application requires.
Submitting somewhere else? Just mark it completed when you’re done. The student stops worrying, and we stop reminding you.
Your letter stays between you and the program. We never read, score, or store anything you didn’t upload.
Point yourstudents here
Every request reaches you as one link, with the files, deadline, and instructions already inside. Tell your students to ask through Wado. It's free for them during early access.

