Before anyone paid out, the assayer weighed what a claim was really worth. Our vision for insurance: a Brain that reads the file and holds the book of risk on your own soil, measured, never shipped back East.
An assayer never took a claim on faith. The ore was weighed, on the spot, on a scale everyone in the room trusted, because the alternative — shipping it off and taking someone else's word for what it was worth — was how a fortune quietly disappeared. Underwriting has always run on the same discipline: the number only holds up if the party who weighed it is the party who's accountable for it.
Our vision is a Brain that reads the claim file, the loss history, the policy language, the way a senior adjuster does — on your own bench, in your own building, answerable to your own underwriting desk. It should carry the institutional memory a good adjuster builds over a career, without that memory ever having to leave the office to be useful.
We won't describe the scoring approach or the specific models here — that's outfitting, sized to your book of business, worked through privately once a claim is staked. What we will say: the file never trains someone else's model, and the risk book never leaves the room to be read by a stranger.
An assay office and a strongroom keep the same kind of promise in different rooms. A ledger is worth nothing the moment a stranger can alter it unseen; a claim file is worth nothing the moment its weighing happens somewhere you can't watch. Both trades learned the same lesson the hard way — you measure where you can stand and see it done.
We build one Brain. What changes is what's on the scale — a claim instead of a ledger, a chart instead of a filing — but never who's allowed to watch it get weighed. See how the same vision reads for accounting & finance or healthcare & clinics, or take in the whole map at the territories.
No strategy deck, no jargon. We'll listen to how your desk actually underwrites before we say a word about what we'd build.
Stake your claim See every territory