confidential // case file // field intelligence // do not redistribute
section 05 — locations

Locations

The company's physical footprint, plotted on a map: headquarters and offices at a glance, so you read the geography instead of parsing a list of addresses.

Headquarters and offices, plotted on a map, so you can see the footprint at a glance instead of reading addresses. It's one of the nine sections in every dossier, and below is exactly what this one does — what it surfaces, where those facts come from, and who leans on it.

What this section reveals

Concretely, the locations section gathers:

  • Headquarters location and any additional offices or sites, pinned on a map.
  • The geographic spread — single-city, national or international — visible in one look.
  • Which markets the company has a real on-the-ground presence in versus where it's only remote.
  • Clusters that hint at where engineering, sales or operations actually sit.
  • Address-level detail where it's public, linked back to its source.

None of it requires the company's cooperation — it's all there in the open record, just scattered until the dossier pulls it into one place. You can see it rendered on a real business in the sample dossier.

How it's sourced

Location data is assembled from the company's own contact and office pages, public map and places listings, business registrations, and the office locations attached to job postings. The dossier reconciles the same site listed across sources and plots it, distinguishing a confirmed office from a single unverified mention. Map and places data can go stale when a company moves, so each pin links to its source and the section notes how recently it was seen — and it's careful not to mistake a registered agent's address or a coworking mailbox for a genuine office.

Who relies on it

This section earns its keep for anyone whose work turns on it:

  • Sales & BD — know which territory and timezone you're really selling into.
  • Procurement — confirm a vendor's real operating locations.
  • Recruiters — see where teams actually sit before you pitch a role.

See how the whole file fits together on how it works, browse the other eight sections, or open a dossier and read this section on a company that matters to you.

the fine print

Two quick questions

Q. Are the office locations verified?

The section distinguishes a confirmed office from a single unverified mention, and each pin links to its source. It's careful not to count a registered-agent address or a coworking mailbox as a real office.

Q. What if the company has moved?

Map and places data can lag a move, so each location notes how recently it was seen and links back to the source, letting you confirm anything that matters before you act on it.

Open me

See the whole footprint.

every office, pinned on one map.