Features

Everything IDØ does, and why it's honest.

A competitor-intelligence engine built around one question — did the move land — with every answer traceable to its source.

01 — The engine

Deterministic scoring, never a guess.

Every observable move a competitor makes is turned into a numeric score by a deterministic engine — magnitude, reception, momentum. No LLM sits in the source-of-truth path, so nothing is hallucinated. Each score carries the exact features that produced it, versioned so you can audit how it was reached.

02 — Evidence-grounded signals

Every line traces back to a URL.

Launches, changelog entries, pricing changes, hiring waves, press, open-source activity — pulled continuously from each company's own public footprint. Every event links back to the source page and a timestamp. If you can't verify it in ten seconds, it doesn't ship.

03 — Did it land?

Reception, not just activity.

Anyone can tell you a competitor shipped. IDØ scores whether the market cared — adoption signals, the temperature of the reaction, momentum over the following days. That's the difference between a feed of noise and intelligence you can act on.

04 — The weekly brief

One page, ranked by what mattered.

Every Friday you get a digest: what shipped across your tracked set, whether it landed, and what it means for you — ordered by impact, not recency. Stop refreshing changelogs. Read one brief instead.

05 — Role-routed for teams

Each seat sees its slice.

Solo founders get the general feed. Teams get the brief routed by role — engineering sees technical and shipping signals, design sees product and UX moves, security sees breach and compliance events. Everyone reads what matters to them and nothing else.

06 — Read-only, by design

Look at anyone. Notify no one.

IDØ never tells a company you're watching it. No follows, no view receipts, no leaderboards of who's looking. Your competitive research stays on your side of the firewall — a deliberate product choice, not an oversight.

See it on your own competitive set.

Add the companies you watch. The first brief lands Friday.