This is a working call, not a pitch. Bring the system you are about to ship, the failure mode you are worried about, or the prototype you need to harden — a link to the product, a demo, or an architecture sketch is plenty. You talk to the engineer who would run the work, not a salesperson.
Move the review forward
If the product is near launch or a buyer is waiting, pick a time.
The call is for one decision: what must be assessed, fixed, or packaged so your AI product can move forward with real users or procurement.
What happens on the call
- You show us what you built. Five minutes of context beats any form.
- We ask the seven questions we always ask: what the AI workflow does, live or beta, who uses it, what a wrong answer costs, what it can touch (data, tools, payments), whether a buyer is asking for security proof, and what's blocking a confident ship.
- You leave with a straight answer — where systems like yours usually break first, and whether an assessment, hardening, or nothing at all is the right next step.
Pick a time
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Prefer async? Use the scheduler note field and include the product, deadline, and security review you are preparing for.
Worth reading first
Not required — but if you want to arrive calibrated, the production-readiness checklist is what we assess against, and the sample report shows exactly what an engagement hands you. Everything runs under NDA-first rules — see how your code and data are handled.
What to bring
- The AI surface. A demo, workflow sketch, API route, agent diagram, RAG source list, or MCP/tool inventory.
- The deadline. Launch date, buyer security review, procurement questionnaire, or internal go/no-go meeting.
- The trust boundary. What the AI can read, write, retrieve, call, send, or decide — and which users or tenants are involved.
- The proof you need. Whether the output has to satisfy your engineers, a buyer security team, a board, or an insurer.
If the call turns into a real scope, we can share the evidence format under NDA before signing: sample trace structure, report sections, retest criteria, and exactly what would stay out of scope.