The record
Sources
Every figure in a brief traces to one of these. All public, all nameable, all openable by you — the receipts behind the read.
Revenue, margins, cash and runway, risk factors, and material events — the financial spine of the record.
Real disclosed salaries by role, level, and metro — actual government filings, not self-reported guesses.
Insider buys and sells, executive pay, and equity structure — signal on how leadership is treating its own stake.
Management's own words on trajectory, customer concentration, and what's driving the numbers — context the filings don't spell out.
State-filed notices of mass layoffs across 47 U.S. jurisdictions — an early, official read on workforce stability.
Litigation and regulatory actions of material weight — the red flags that anonymous reviews can't verify.
● Live corpus — these registries are re-ingested every day, and new filings land as the agencies publish them. Every brief is computed against that day's record, one time, for one person. Nothing here is a stale scrape or a shelf document.
If we can't cite it, it isn't in the brief.
Every serious claim carries a footnote to a named source you can open yourself. No aggregators, no anonymous reviews, no third-party people-data.
Revenue rose 18% to $1.28B1 with 14 quarters of runway.2