Plan the file
You name the company or paste a domain. The dossier resolves which entity you mean.
Every dossier follows the same pipeline: plan the file, gather public signals, assemble and de-dupe, source every claim, then read or export. Here's each step, in depth, and exactly where the facts come from.
Five steps. You do the first one. The dossier does the rest — and shows its work at every stage.
You name the company or paste a domain. The dossier resolves which entity you mean.
Seven public streams get pulled in one pass — jobs, filings, news, the open web and more.
Signals are reconciled, conflicts resolved, and facts sorted into nine clean sections.
Each line is pinned to where it came from, with a confidence read on what's solid.
Skim in minutes, then share it, save it, or drop it into your notes.
The brief is one line: a company name or a domain. That sounds trivial, but the first real job is resolution — making sure the file is about the company you actually mean. Names collide, brands differ from legal entities, and subsidiaries hide under parents. The pipeline pins down a single entity first, so everything that follows attaches to the right company instead of smearing two of them together.
With the target fixed, the dossier reaches out to its source streams in a single pass. Nothing here is private — these are all sources anyone could open in a browser. We just open all of them at once. The seven streams below each answer a different part of the story; read more about what each one contributes in the next section.
Gathering in parallel is what turns a week of tabs into a few minutes. It also means the file is a snapshot in time: it reflects what the public record showed when it was built, which is why a dossier always carries the moment it was assembled.
Raw signals are messy. The same office shows up with three different addresses; a funding round appears in two articles with slightly different numbers; an executive's title changed last quarter and both versions are floating around. The assembly step reconciles all of it: it merges duplicates, resolves conflicts toward the most authoritative source, and drops what can't be tied to the target with confidence.
What survives is sorted into the nine standard sections — overview, people, hiring, money, locations, tech, news, relationships and risk. Same shape every time, so a dossier on a company you've never heard of reads exactly like one you have.
This is the step that separates a dossier from a guess. Every fact in the file is pinned to where it came from, so you can click through, verify a line, and dig deeper on anything that matters. A claim without a source doesn't make the file.
Sourcing also drives confidence. Not every signal is equally solid — a number from an official filing is firmer than a figure inferred from a job posting. The dossier is honest about that distinction, surfacing how well-supported a claim is rather than presenting everything with the same false certainty. The guidance is simple and runs through the whole product: a dossier is a fast, sourced starting map, and you should always verify before you act.
The finished file is built to be skimmed. Charts, an org sketch, a map and a timeline carry the things that read faster as pictures; sourced prose carries the rest. From there it's yours — read it in place, share it, save it, or drop it into your notes and your own workflow. However you opened it, the file is the same.
Each stream answers a different question. Together they make one file — and every claim points back to the stream it came from.
Open roles reveal what a company is building, where headcount is growing, and which teams are under pressure — often the earliest signal of where a business is headed.
Registrations, funding records and regulatory documents give the financial and legal skeleton, straight from the official record.
Coverage, launches and announcements supply the timeline — the dated story of what happened and when.
The broad public web fills in context, cross-references and the long tail of mentions that no single source carries.
Public map and place data locates offices and footprint, so locations are plotted instead of buried in addresses.
Public reviews add an outside read on reputation, culture and customer experience — useful color the company can't edit.
The company's own pages anchor identity, product and positioning — the story it tells about itself, checked against everything else.
The pipeline is the same wherever you start it. Open the web app at everjust.app, install the VS Code extension, run the npm CLI (company-dossier), or use it through the ChatGPT app or as a Claude app and skill. It's free, and it uses public sources only.
Want to see the output before you run it? Open the sample dossier, or read what a company dossier is for the bigger picture.
name a company. the pipeline does the rest.