The Fortune AI difference

Most AI tools generate answers.
Ours calculates them.

The industry rushed to bolt chatbots onto client data. We built the opposite: a calculation platform that happens to speak English. The distinction sounds technical. In practice, it's the difference between an answer you can repeat to your banker and one you have to double-check.

How an answer is built

The engine does the math.
The AI only explains it.

I.

You ask

A plain-English question about your business, your portfolio, or your plan.

II.

The engine computes

Deterministic financial math runs on your actual numbers — never a guess.

III.

Every figure is traced

Each dollar figure is matched to a computed source. One untraceable number blocks the send.

Verified by Fortune

The answer, its assumptions, and an audit trail — in writing.

Engineered in

Six commitments, built into the architecture.

The AI never does the math.

Every figure is produced by a deterministic calculation engine. The language model's only job is to explain the result — it cannot invent a number, because it is never asked to produce one.

Verified by Fortune.

Before any report or briefing is sent, every dollar figure is traced back to a computed source. One orphan figure blocks the send. Verification is a gate, not a decoration.

No silent assumptions.

Every analysis declares its inputs before it runs — growth rates, tax brackets, horizons. Defaults are labeled as defaults, and you can change any of them.

Your data stays home.

The platform runs on dedicated hardware on our premises. Personally identifiable information does not leave the building — an architectural fact, not a terms-of-service promise.

Percentiles, not promises.

Projections are ranges of outcomes with stated probabilities — never "best case" theater. If a plan only works in the 75th percentile, that's worth knowing.

Everything on the record.

What was asked, computed, assumed, and sent — logged, with recordkeeping designed to the strictest standards in the room.

What that buys you

Confidence with third parties, mostly. When your banker asks how you got a number, there's a source. When your CPA asks what was assumed, there's a register. When you ask, six months later, "why did we decide that?" — there's a record. Advice you can audit is advice you can act on.

See what it does in practice