Pressure-test a deal before you wire the money
Every deal arrives wrapped in its own best case. The pitch is polished, the numbers are flattering, and the risk that actually matters is the one not on the slide. A single AI, handed the deck, tends to summarise the upside rather than dig for the buried downside.
Decidi analyses the opportunity through a panel of analysts and sceptics — a value investor, a risk officer, a forensic analyst and a contrarian — across four frontier models. They interrogate the assumptions behind the numbers, surface the risks the pitch omitted, and deliver a verdict on whether the deal earns your capital and at what price.
- The downside risk the pitch conveniently left out
- Assumptions behind the projections interrogated, not accepted
- Bull, base and bear cases argued, not just the bull
- Valuation and terms pressure-tested against the risk
- The contrarian view on why this deal could be a mistake
- A proceed, renegotiate or pass verdict with the reasoning
Part of: How Decidi works
A deal verdict: proceed, renegotiate or pass — with the omitted risk, the assumptions that break it, and the price that makes sense.
Common questions
Is this financial advice?
No. Decidi provides decision support — a structured, sceptical analysis of a deal’s assumptions and risks to inform your own judgement. It is not regulated financial advice, and the final call and any professional counsel remain yours.
What can it analyse?
An equity raise, an acquisition, a property deal, a private investment or any opportunity with a pitch and numbers. Attach the deck, model or memo and the panel reasons over the actual material rather than a summary.
How does it avoid just repeating the pitch?
The panel is adversarial by design — a risk officer, a forensic analyst and a contrarian whose job is to find what the pitch omitted. It argues the bear case as hard as the bull case, so the verdict reflects scrutiny, not salesmanship.
Try it on your own decision
Put your question to a council of GPT, Claude, Gemini and Grok — they debate it, a Final QA audit reviews it, and you get one clear verdict. 1,500 free credits to start — no sign-up, no card required.
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