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Working prototype — not for sale yet

The diligence memo that shows its work.

Snoop researches a private company across the open record — hiring, filings, pricing pages, press — and returns a structured memo where every claim carries a verbatim quote and its source. Inferences show the evidence they rest on. Anything unsupported gets stripped before you see it.

Built for boutique M&A advisory. You can't buy Snoop yet — but you can email us, and we'll show you what a memo looks like.

Exhibit A — Inferred finding Revenue proxies

Target's enterprise segment likely passed mid-eight-figure annualized revenue in Q1, ahead of stated hiring pace.

Confidence: verifying…
now serving more than 1,200 enterprise customers, up from 700 a year ago Press release · March 14, 2026 Grounded ✓
typical enterprise contracts start in the mid five figures annually Pricing page · fetched June 2, 2026 Grounded ✓
Provenance check · deterministic 2/2 evidence grounded
Method

Four stages. The last one is the point.

A private company's real numbers are exactly what diligence is trying to triangulate — there is no ground-truth document to check against. So Snoop holds itself to the next best standard: nothing reaches the memo without provenance.

Confidence ladder

Every finding tells you how much to trust it.

Three rungs, printed on every finding in the memo. Verification can only move a finding down the ladder — never up. Nothing gets dressed as more certain than its evidence.

Directly sourced

A fact with a receipt.

A verbatim quote plus the exact URL it appears in. The deterministic check confirms the quote exists, character for character, in the fetched page — or the citation is stripped.

Inferred

A leap that shows its footing.

A reasoned claim — revenue posture, implied runway — attached to the evidence it rests on. Each piece is a verified quote-and-source pair, grounded independently. Lose the evidence, lose the rung.

Speculative

Labeled conjecture, never costume.

Anything that loses its support in verification lands here — visible, flagged, and impossible to mistake for fact. The memo tells you what it doesn't know.

Coverage

Six dimensions of the open record.

Each memo section is researched independently, then synthesized against a shared evidence base — so a quote that grounds in one section grounds identically in every other.

Hiring signals

Job postings, team-page deltas, seniority mix — growth posture in plain sight.

Direct

Market position

Press, competitive mentions, customer logos, category language over time.

Direct

Funding history

Announced rounds, investor statements, filing trails.

Direct

Revenue proxies

Customer counts, pricing-page anchors, and expansion signals, triangulated into a revenue posture.

Inferred

Burn & cost signals

Footprint, infrastructure spend signals, funding cadence against headcount — implied runway.

Inferred

Management & ownership

Investor roster, board composition, key-person concentration.

Direct
Status

Where Snoop is today: a working prototype.

The engine is real and runs end-to-end. The product around it is early, and we'd rather say so plainly than dress it up. Here's the honest state of things.

Working now
  • End-to-end memo runs with full evidence chains
  • Deterministic provenance check on every quote
  • All six research dimensions
Not here yet
  • Pricing or plans — Snoop isn't for sale
  • Self-serve signup
  • A public launch date
Want in early?

Email us. We'll talk through your use case and show you what a real memo looks like — and early users get a say in what Snoop becomes.

Get in touch
FAQ

Fair questions, straight answers.

Can I buy Snoop today?

Not yet. Snoop is a working prototype — the engine runs and produces real memos, but it isn't for sale and there's no pricing. If you want early access or a look at a memo, email us at trysnoopai@gmail.com.

Where does the information come from?

The open record only: job postings, press, pricing pages, public filings, and the wider web. Snoop never accesses private data rooms, paywalled databases, or anything behind a login. If it isn't public, it isn't in the memo.

How do I know it isn't making things up?

That's the whole design. Every direct fact carries a verbatim quote and source URL, and a deterministic check confirms the quote actually appears in the fetched page. Inferred claims expose the evidence they rest on. Anything that fails verification is downgraded to speculative or removed — it can't pose as fact.

How long does a memo take?

Minutes, not analyst-weeks. You give it a company name and minimal deal context; it researches all six dimensions and synthesizes a structured memo while you watch the search trace.

Why private companies?

Because that's where the record is thin and the triangulation is hard. Public companies file audited numbers; private targets leave proxies — hiring pace, pricing anchors, footprint, funding cadence. Reading those proxies rigorously is exactly what Snoop is built for.

Is this investment advice?

No. Snoop is a research tool that organizes and verifies the public record. Judgment, verification of conclusions, and the decisions themselves remain with you and your team — the memo just makes sure the inputs come with receipts.

What does Snoop deliberately not do?

It doesn't pretend confidence it hasn't earned — uncertain findings are labeled speculative, not hidden. It doesn't touch non-public data. And it isn't a database, a data room, or a replacement for counsel; it's the analyst-hours of open-source triangulation, done with discipline.