Use Case
Transactions

Every party deserves a record they can trust.

Diligence takes too long because trust has to be rebuilt from zero at every deal. Building changes that default.

The friction

Diligence starts from scratch on every deal. Buyers, lenders, and their counsel assemble the same information independently, from different file packages, with no shared standard for what's been verified and what hasn't. Each party repeats the work of the last.
Information doesn't survive ownership transfer. When an asset changes hands, the record resets. The new owner gets files — sometimes organized, sometimes not — but not the history: prior valuations, verification events, compliance decisions, or the context behind any of it.
Counterparties can't calibrate confidence. A document in a data room is either present or absent. There's no signal for whether it's been reviewed, whether the figures reconcile, or whether anything has changed since it was uploaded. Counterparties take on informational risk they can't see.

How Building works here

Provenance

Documents carry their verification status, attestation history, and source linkage into the diligence process. Counterparties see what's been confirmed, by whom, and when — not just what files exist.

Asset Record

A structured, continuously maintained record means the seller isn't assembling a data room under deadline. The record was already there.

Live Markets

When ownership transfers, the full Asset Record transfers with it: files, verification history, model outputs, and prior attestations. The new owner inherits intelligence, not just documents.

Workflow Intelligence

Pre-transaction gap analyses surface missing requirements and inconsistencies before counterparties find them. Diligence starts from a stronger position.

Who this is for

Deals move faster when the record is ready.
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