Daily wrap-up and Friday wrap
End-of-day reflection that closes the loop on your check-in and builds your Mood Journey.
The wrap-up is the bookend to your morning check-in. It appears on your Today tab after 5pm and takes 2–3 minutes.
The daily wrap-up
The daily wrap-up asks you to:
- 1Rate how the day actually went (vs your morning intention)
- 2Name one thing that went well
- 3Name one thing you'd do differently
These three prompts feed your personal Mood Journey, giving you a longitudinal view of your work life over weeks and months.
The Friday wrap
Friday's version is richer. In addition to the three standard prompts, it asks:
- Your win of the week
- One person worth recognising this week
- How aligned you feel with next week
The Friday wrap is the one ritual that most packmates say they underestimated at first and now miss when they skip it.
What happens to your wrap-up data
Wrap-up responses are personal and private — managers and admins never see them. They feed only your Mood Journey and your personal trend strip. Think of it as a private journal with structure.
The 5pm gate
The wrap-up is deliberately time-gated to after 5pm (your local time) to reinforce the "end of day" signal. This isn't about clock-watching — it's about giving the ritual a natural place in the day's rhythm.
Top tips
Make the most of this feature
- 1
The Friday wrap is best done before you close your laptop for the weekend — not Sunday night.
- 2
Keep answers short. One sentence per prompt is enough.
- 3
If you can't think of a win, think smaller — even 'I shipped one thing clearly' counts.
Keep reading
How to do your daily check-in
90 seconds. Five pillars. The single habit that makes everything else on the platform work.
Understanding the five Wolf Logic pillars
Den, Howl, Pack, Hunt, Move As One — what each pillar measures and why it matters.
Your workplace's custom check-in questions
Up to three extra questions set by your admin — tailored to your team's goals, values, or culture.
Still stuck?
We'd rather hear from you than have you guess. Real human, one working day.