Market Intelligence
The problem is not access to information. Everything a competitor does publicly is, by definition, public. The problem is that checking twelve sources weekly is a job, and it is nobody’s job, so it happens for two weeks after a scare and then stops. Meanwhile the thing that would have mattered — a positioning shift, a pricing change, a hire that tells you where they are going — sat in plain sight for a quarter.
Skynet does the watching. It reads competitor sites, pricing pages, job postings, and industry sources on a schedule, and holds what it finds in memory so it can tell the difference between news and a change. Most weeks the honest answer is that nothing moved, and it will tell you that instead of manufacturing a briefing.
How it works
Name what you are watching
Your competitors, the sources you trust, and the changes that would actually matter — pricing, positioning, funding, the roles they are hiring for. Specific beats broad.
Let it browse on a schedule
An agent visits the pages and sources you named, on the cadence you set. It works from what is publicly published, and it cites every source so you can check any claim yourself.
Compare against what it already knew
Because prior findings are in unified memory, you get the delta, not a re-read. A pricing page that has not changed since March produces nothing. One that changed last week leads.
Connect it to your decisions
Skynet knows your priorities, so a competitor’s move can be tied to what it means for you — and it can flag when a finding contradicts an assumption your plan depends on.
Build it from a prompt
Point it at the handful of things you would check yourself if you had the hour.
You stop finding out from customers. The signal arrives while you can still act on it, with sources attached so you can verify rather than trust, and the weeks where nothing happened cost you thirty seconds instead of an hour.