Choose the right console, lock the mode, and scope the work in one email thread
We are an investigative media network that publishes long-form, evidence-led dossiers as the primary output. Our public releases are structured for scrutiny: chronology control, records discipline, verification notes, and controlled publication pathways. The minimum dossier length is 15,000 words, with major files commonly running 40,000+ words when scope and evidence require it.
This guide exists to reduce decision fatigue. You do not need to interpret dozens of service names or compare three engagement modes inside every card. Use this page to choose the correct services console, keep Annual as the clean baseline view, and switch to Monthly or One-off only when your operating window requires it.
Live network: 1,000+ investigative outlets + 25,000+ media properties. Planned expansion: 2,000+ outlets by year-end.
Desk
Selector routes the email to the correct desk inbox.
Email Destination
This only shapes the email subject and starter brief.
If you want the fastest accurate recommendation, do this in order:
1) Pick a console based on how you think (solution, profession, industry, company type, area, or target category). 2) Keep Annual visible first (cleanest baseline view for full scope and compounding execution). 3) Switch mode only if needed (Monthly for recurring cycles, One-off for a single objective sprint). 4) Email one brief: objective, geography/markets, timeline, constraints, and any named entities or sensitivities.
Consoles // Choose Your Entry Point
Console
Investigative Conversion Engine
Best when you want a single menu containing service modules, intelligence outputs, and subscription/licensing lanes. Filter by outlet node, mode, and service module while keeping benefits readable.
Best when you already know the lane: crisis response, reputation, media relations, records support, legal liaison, evidence locker, licensing, intelligence feeds, and more.
Best for role-led positioning and decision dynamics: select profession, then select pack and mode. The deliverables read like they were built for that buyer seat.
Best for regulated or scrutiny-heavy sectors. Industry selection tightens benefit emphasis and governance posture while keeping the same pack structure.
Best when you need newsroom-grade documentation services by category (media, politics, corporate, government, finance, sport, organizations). Select category → service → mode; always one mode visible.
An Outlet Node is the routing and context anchor you are operating through. Switching the node does not change the fact that the engagement is scoped and delivered by the network. It changes the planning context: corridor, environment, and publication pathway the plan is designed around.
Definition
Pack vs Service vs Mode
Services are capabilities (what we do). Packs are operating lanes (how we run: Starter, Growth, Enterprise, Monopoly/Moat). Mode is the engagement shape (Annual, Monthly, One-off). Consoles show one mode at a time so you never compare stacked benefit rows inside the same card.
Service Pillars // What We Do (Mapped from Consoles)
Pillar
Placement & Media Operations
Strategic media relations, earned placement, press office outsourcing, events/panels, thought-leader placement, and spokesperson preparation—run with message discipline for scrutiny-heavy environments.
Pillar
Paid Media & Performance Execution
Media buying and programmatic execution with proof cues, context control, and clean sequencing—so performance does not come at the cost of credibility.
Pillar
Crisis, Reputation & Early Warning
Rapid response, reputation defense, monitoring, and early warning systems built around a controlled fact base and statement-safe language under pressure.
Pillar
Investigative Production (Dossier-Grade)
Dossiers, records work, evidence packaging, visuals, and controlled publication planning. Public investigative releases are built to hold up under challenge.
Pillar
Intelligence Products (Decision Support)
Market, industry, competitor, policy/regulatory, ESG, executive/investor, supply chain, macro/geopolitical intelligence—written to drive decisions, not dashboards.
Pillar
Secure Infrastructure & Licensing
Secure communications, client vault/portal delivery terms, evidence locker, white-label licensing, API/data licensing, and pre-publication review checkpoints where required.
A dossier is an evidence-led long-form file designed for scrutiny. Standard dossier length is 15,000–40,000+ words depending on scope and evidentiary depth. Dossiers are structured with chronology control, proof packaging, and clear separation between what is supported and what remains contested.
Typical dossier structure: executive summary, scope/limitations, findings, timeline, evidence/exhibits (publishable subset), methodology/verification notes, counterpoints/responses where applicable, right-of-reply record where applicable, and a version/update log.
Allowed (Private) Outputs
Briefings & Claims Audits
Private work is allowed where appropriate, while publication remains the major goal of the network. Private deliverables include board-ready briefing packs, claims audits for statements and releases, crisis briefing room outputs, stakeholder pressure maps, and records retrieval packs with provenance notes.
Secure delivery and review checkpoints are scoped in the onboarding email thread. Usage rights, licensing, and reuse boundaries are confirmed in writing before delivery.
Publication & Distribution // Network Routing
We publish across a distributed investigative environment. Outlet node selection is a planning anchor for routing and context. Distribution can be configured as master-site canonical publication, node-based releases, curated partner amplification, and embargoed scheduling where applicable.
Live network: 1,000+ investigative outlets and 25,000+ media properties, with planned expansion to 2,000+ outlets by year-end.
Workflow // Email-First Onboarding
1) Email intake (objective, markets, timeline, constraints, sensitivity). 2) Scope reply (recommended console lane + pack/service + mode). 3) Governance plan (review checkpoints, approvals, wording rules). 4) Production (records, verification, drafting, exhibit structure). 5) Right-of-reply and adversarial review where applicable. 6) Pre-publication risk review where applicable. 7) Publication & distribution (node routing + release plan). 8) Post-publication updates (corrections, updates, supplements).
Security // Confidentiality and Control
Do not submit sensitive details through insecure channels. Secure delivery options and handling constraints are confirmed in the onboarding email thread. Access to sensitive materials is limited on a need-to-know basis. Retention and deletion constraints are handled by engagement terms.
Policies // Public Standards
Policy
Publication-First Orientation
Publication is the major goal of this network. Private briefings, audits, and documentation packs are allowed where appropriate. Public release decisions depend on proof standards, safety, legal constraints, and editorial judgment.
Policy
Right-of-Reply
When individuals or entities are the subject of material allegations, we follow a right-of-reply process where feasible and safe. We provide a structured summary, a clear reply channel, and a response window. Responses are recorded and reflected fairly where applicable.
Policy
Corrections, Updates & Versioning
We maintain a corrections and updates protocol. If a material factual error is established, we correct it transparently and preserve version history where appropriate. Updates may be issued when new evidence materially changes the understanding of events.
Policy
Independence & Non-Predetermination
We do not accept engagements that require predetermined conclusions. Findings follow the evidence. Funding supports investigation and production capacity; it does not purchase outcomes.
Policy
Disclosure for Sponsored / Native Work
If content is sponsored or commissioned in a way that requires disclosure, disclosure is explicit. We do not present sponsored material as independent investigative findings.
Policy
Licensing, Usage Rights & Complaints
Ownership, licensing, and reuse rights depend on the engagement type and deliverables and are confirmed in writing before delivery. We review substantiated complaints and credible evidence of error. We do not remove content solely on request or reputational discomfort.
FAQ // Commercial + Legal
FAQ
Why is pricing not shown publicly?
Pricing depends on scope, jurisdictions, review constraints, timeline, records requirements, and distribution configuration. We confirm constraints first, then quote privately so you do not approve the wrong scope.
FAQ
Which console should I use?
If you know the exact lane, use Solution-wise. If your context is role-led, use Profession-wise. If sector constraints dominate, use Industry-wise. If approvals dominate, use Company Type. If geography dominates, use Area-wise. If you need target-category newsroom services, use News Agency.
FAQ
What should I include in the first email?
Objective, markets/geography, timeline, preferred mode (Annual/Monthly/One-off), constraints (legal/compliance), and any named entities or sensitivities. If you have a hard deadline, state it clearly.
FAQ
Do you guarantee outcomes?
We guarantee deliverables and execution standards. External outcomes depend on market behavior, third parties, approvals, and constraints.
FAQ
Do you publish everything you produce?
No. Some engagements are private documentation and briefing work. Publication depends on standards, safety, and legal constraints. Publication remains the major goal of the network.
FAQ
Which inbox should I contact?
Agency Services Desk is for agency execution, placement, reputation, intelligence products, licensing, and subscriptions. News Agency Desk is for category-specific newsroom services, briefing packs, claims audits, and documentation-heavy engagements.
Next Step // Desk Selector + One Action
Email-first onboarding with senior partners
Select the desk, select the topic hint, then send one brief email. We reply with a clean recommendation: the correct console lane, the correct mode, the deliverables that matter, the review checkpoints, and the publication pathway if the engagement is built to release publicly.