A new Brand value proposition field on the Settings Company tab lets you give Stela a one or two-sentence summary of what your brand does and why creators would care. Stela's outreach drafts will weave that into the optional fit-pitch line — instead of either fabricating one or omitting it entirely. Plus a guardrail prevents drafts from inventing fake quotes or pitches when no value prop is supplied. Two changes to draft quality: Brand value proposition field — Open Settings → Company tab; you'll see a new 'Brand value proposition' textarea (max 600 characters, with a live character counter). Write 1–2 sentences telling Stela what your brand does and why a creator would want to partner — e.g. 'Independent label launching emerging hip-hop artists with a 60-day audience-building program.' Stela uses this in both the initial outreach draft and any follow-ups, so the optional fit-pitch sentence is grounded on real material instead of guessed. Leave it blank and Stela will simply omit the fit-pitch line — which is the safer behavior. Drafts no longer invent quotes or fake pitches — Before, the default drafting prompt could occasionally produce hallucinated quotes from your brand or invented details about your offer when the LLM had nothing concrete to ground on. The prompt has been tightened to forbid this — no fabricated quotes, no invented brand pitches. If you've supplied a value proposition (above), drafts can ground the fit-pitch line on it; if you haven't, drafts simply skip that line. Either way, what you read in the draft preview is what the draft actually contains — no surprise fabrications when the email arrives in the creator's inbox.