Positioning

Claude is the model. Verdict is the engine.

Drop a deck into Claude and you get a confident answer that reads a little different every time. Verdict gives you the finished read instead: a partner-grade take on the company and on how it fits the specific fund, the market sized from real sources, the things most likely to kill the deal, and a record you can check. It reads like something a partner would forward, and it saves as a PDF.

A grade is the easy part

Anything can put a number on your deck in thirty seconds. The number is not the work. What you need is the reasoning a partner carries into the room: what is genuinely strong, what is shaky, the objection most likely to end your round, and a real move to make on each one before you sit down across the table. Verdict gives you all of it, in full, on every run.

When the model itself gets sharper

A more honest model raises the floor for everyone, Verdict included, because Verdict runs on Claude. What a sharper model does not hand you is everything Verdict builds around it: a read that stays steady from one run to the next, and a feel for the funds you’re pitching. A raw chat just sounds confident, and starts over every time.

Three dimensions where Verdict holds

What Verdict does that a chat window cannot.

Dimension 01

The same read every time.

Verdict gives the same grounded read on the same deck every time, with its reasoning shown and its sources sitting where the claims are. Open a fresh Claude chat with the same deck and you get a different answer every run, with nothing to hold it to.

See the contrast

Dimension 02

It learns from every memo it writes.

After each memo, Verdict checks its own work for weak spots, like a claim it did not back up or a number that does not add up, and remembers what it found. The next memo on your account comes back sharper for it. A fresh chat starts from zero and forgets everything the moment you close the tab.

How it learns

Dimension 03

It gets to know the funds you're pitching.

Verdict learns what a given fund tends to back and what makes them walk away, then reads your deck through that lens as well as on its own merits. You get two reads in one place: how strong the company looks, and how well it fits the specific fund across the table. A fresh chat knows none of that and starts blind every time.

Preview a fund profile