Our mission and methodology
Finding memory care for a loved one is emotional, time-sensitive, and rarely linear. Families are often asked to make a high-consequence decision while sorting through scattered listings, incomplete details, and referral-first directories.
Memori is meant to feel different. We are building a calmer, comparison-first resource that helps families research local options, understand meaningful differences, and move toward a shortlist with more confidence. Today the directory covers 388 facilities across 6 metro areas in 11 states, with the same goal on every page: better information before a family has to commit to the next step.

Why Memori exists
Broad senior living marketplaces often flatten memory care into a generic category and turn every page into a referral step. That structure can make families feel rushed before they have even established what matters most.
Memori takes a narrower approach. We focus on memory care specifically so the research experience can emphasize daily fit, transparency, and apples-to-apples comparison instead of generic inventory.
What families should expect
Families should be able to search by location, compare communities with more context, and understand what is known before they reach out. That includes useful basics, review and pricing context when available, and a cleaner path from first search to real shortlist.
We also believe trust comes from being specific. That means avoiding inflated claims, separating stronger facts from softer signals, and designing pages that support calmer decision-making.
What we stand for
The site should earn trust through restraint, clarity, and usefulness rather than volume, urgency, or marketplace noise.
We would rather show families the shape of the decision clearly than rush them into a lead form. The product is designed to support independent research first.
Memori is built to surface the details that change daily life: care approach, setting, transparency, and fit. We trim away the marketplace noise that makes choices harder to compare.
Families making a memory care decision are already carrying enough stress. The site should feel measured, legible, and trustworthy rather than aggressive or sales-led.
Every page is judged by one question: does this help a family make a better shortlist? If the answer is no, it does not belong in the experience.



How the methodology works
We pull listing data from public datasets, licensing records, facility websites, and other public-facing sources that families would otherwise have to piece together manually.
Closed locations, duplicates, and listings missing critical information are filtered out so the directory starts from a cleaner base than a generic aggregation feed.
We manually spot-check listings, resolve inconsistencies, and tighten the data where source material conflicts or important details are unclear.
Where possible, we add structured details such as service categories, geographic context, review signals, pricing context, and contact information that help families compare more sharply.
We aim to present useful information with clear boundaries. Families should be able to see where the data is strong, where it is directional, and where direct confirmation is still needed.