Every Company Dossier is built from the same nine sections, each one answering a different question you'd otherwise chase across a dozen tabs. Here's what each section does, where its facts come from, and who leans on it most.
A dossier isn't a single report so much as nine short investigations stacked into one file. Read top to bottom and you move from what is this company through is it healthy and what is it doing now to what should I watch out for — the four questions almost every piece of company research comes down to. Because the structure never changes, you can open a file on a business you've never heard of and know exactly where to look.
Each section is assembled the same way: gathered from public sources, de-duplicated, reconciled, and written down with a link back to where every claim came from. That sourcing is the whole point. A line with no source is a rumor; a line you can click through to is something you can act on. The pages below break down each of the nine sections — the concrete data points it surfaces, how those facts are sourced and confidence-rated, and which kinds of readers rely on it most.
Nothing here requires the target company's cooperation, a login, or a paid data feed. It's all drawn from the open record — job boards, public filings, news, maps, reviews and company sites — which is exactly why a dossier is free and why you can run one on anyone. The nine sections are listed in reading order; start anywhere, but most people read straight down. When you want to see them rendered on a real company rather than described, the sample dossier shows all nine on one page.
Pick a section to go deep, or open the sample to see them working together.
What the company does, when it started, who owns it, how big it is, and the brand it goes to market under.
Leadership, notable hires and a sketch of how the org is shaped — who reports into whom, and where the depth is.
Open roles pulled from the job boards, what they're hiring for, and where headcount is quietly growing.
Funding rounds, investors, public filings and revenue signals — the financial shape, as far as the record shows.
Headquarters and offices, plotted on a map, so you can see the footprint at a glance instead of reading addresses.
The stack they build on and the tools they run — useful for a pitch, a partnership, or sizing up a competitor.
Press, launches and milestones laid out as a dated timeline — the company's story, in order.
Customers, partners and rivals drawn as a network, so you can read the company by the company it keeps.
Lawsuits, layoffs and reputation notes worth a second look — surfaced, not buried, so nothing surprises you later.
pick a business. read the whole file in minutes.