decision intelligence platform

Disciplined Process Accelerates Speed & Quality

 
 

We’re designing visualization scenes tailored to different modes of thinking.

Your mind is a powerful engine spotting patterns and contextualizing anomalies.

Our graphics integrate individual rows and columns of numbers into easy to process scenes, so experts can do their best thinking assessing, selecting, and developing performance.

We render data into jet fuel, supercharging our users’ natural curiosity and expertise.

 
 
 

monitor

These designs integrate multiple streams of data so leaders can quickly get a view of recent performance.

Whether the update requires daily, weekly, or quarterly views, we’ve designed layouts that let leaders quickly parse a dense amount of information to pick up insights they need to provide direction.


explore

Whether a user is doing basic exploration of a new data set, or conducting a review of past draft decisions to identify lessons learned, experts often need to sift through datasets to discover patterns and anomalies that hadn’t previously been identified.

These visualization designs can be used for surveying periods of performance in individuals and teams in a similar way to a scout watching games. Users scan the data, allowing their mind’s stored expertise and mental models to react and diagnose different timescales and groupings of performance data.


analyze

Experts notice something that nags at them in practice - body positioning, or maybe a subtle but worrying trend in performance; data scientists can’t square some anomaly in the model.

Whether the discontent stems from real world behavioral observations or deep statistical analysis, performance experts need a visual interface to dive deep into their data.

These visualization designs help users resolve questions like: This amateur player seems to be aggressive at bat - will that be a strength as they make their way through the minors, or is this a liability that have Majors level pitchers run him out early? Or, hockey players from Europe and Russia seem undervalued in the draft. Are we spreading our scouting department resources between North America and Europe appropriately?