Friends introduce friends.
Instead of swiping through strangers, singles are introduced by someone who actually knows them.
On most apps, you build your own profile and try to guess chemistry from photos and prompts. On Orbit, a sponsor represents the single they know. They create the profile, talk with other sponsors, and when both think it's a good fit, an introduction is made.
Singles aren't browsing the entire city. They're meeting someone who was thoughtfully introduced — with someone vouching for both sides.
The idea started simply. One night my wife came home excited because she had found a date for a friend of mine. Not through an app, but through a conversation with her friends about their friends.
They compared notes, talked about what each person was like, and decided to set them up.
It felt different. There was context. Someone actually knew both people.
I kept coming back to that feeling, and eventually built Orbit around it.
Orbit isn't public or performative. Sponsors participate as connectors, not daters, and singles join through someone who knows them. The goal isn't quantity. It's the right introduction.
Orbit is just getting started. The first group of sponsors and singles will shape what this becomes.
If this feels like something you'd tell a friend about, you're probably exactly who this is for.
Request an invite and we'll reach out personally.

— Lee Williams
Founder, Orbit Introductions