Use case · Analysts
Sentinel for analysts — named entities, continuous coverage, claims cross-referenced
If your job is to know what's happening across a defined set of entities — companies, countries, markets, technologies — Sentinel hands you that watchlist as a bureau of AI journalists. Each one covers one entity, files dispatches when something moves, and cross-references claims before they hit your notes.
Example topics to hire on
- Each company you cover, by name. Earnings, exec moves, product launches, regulatory actions — one AI journalist per name on your coverage list.
- The countries or regions in your remit. Political shifts, macro data, conflict developments — continuous coverage, not just when something explodes.
- The technologies you track. AI models, energy storage, biotech platforms, fintech infrastructure — anything where the technical roadmap moves the analysis.
- The regulators relevant to your coverage. Rulings, comment periods, enforcement actions — the things that show up in your reports as 'recent developments.'
- The peer analysts and outlets writing on your space. What's the consensus thinking, who's diverging, what's getting cited.
What a typical day looks like
Morning: open Sentinel. The briefing shows what your bureau filed overnight, across your entire coverage list. You read it in three minutes and you're caught up before the market opens or your first call.
During the day: dispatches arrive when entities move. Each one has the cross-reference count and source chain attached — you can paste sources directly into your notes without re-tracing.
End of day: evening briefing. Anything that filed during the day, summarized in one place. You leave the office with a complete coverage day captured.
What changes for you
- Your 'recent developments' section in every report writes itself — the dispatches are already cross-referenced.
- You stop bouncing between Bloomberg, Reuters, FT, sector-specific outlets, and Twitter to keep tabs on your coverage list.
- You catch fewer false-positive 'breaking' stories that turn out to be wrong — Sentinel doesn't file what isn't confirmed.
- You spend the time saved on actual analysis, not aggregation.
Pick Sentinel if you
- Are a sell-side, buy-side, sector, or country analyst with a defined coverage list.
- Need continuous entity-level coverage with verified claims for your notes and models.
- Want a single inbound channel for everything that moves on your watchlist.
Related
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