Surface the high-potential assets others miss
Sleuth gives S&E teams a single workspace to scout, evaluate, and build defensible recommendations across therapeutic areas. From landscape creation to IC-ready output, the analysis is continuous, traceable, and built for the pace your pipeline demands.
Mandates are expanding but bandwidth isn't
The landscape decays overnight
A single readout or deal announcement can shift the competitive picture. The landscape you spent six weeks building is already a snapshot of last month's reality.
Depth or breadth, rarely both
A full landscape build takes a month. Your team gets maybe twelve shots a year to surface something worth pursuing. The non-obvious assets are the ones that slip through.
The IC finds the gaps first
Your investment committee pushes on logic, coverage gaps, and what you didn't consider. The sourcing trail lives across five databases and a dozen browser tabs.
Built for how S&E teams actually work
Current landscapes, not blank pages
Sleuth maintains living, asset-level views of your therapeutic areas. Refreshed continuously, tailored to your focus. You start from a current picture instead of spending weeks stitching one together.
Cover more ground without losing depth
Sleuth evaluates differentiation, risk, and competitive dynamics across hundreds of programs in parallel. Expanding into a new modality or earlier-stage assets doesn't force you to go shallow on the ones that matter.
Walk into the IC with the work already done
Sleuth produces decision-ready outputs with confidence ranges, sourced evidence, and explicit caveats. Your IC debates what to do with the analysis, not whether to trust it.
What teams are saying
“What makes Sleuth stand out is that it is both fast and credible. The output is factual and structured enough that we can take it straight into internal discussions and executive conversations without having to double-check everything. It has fundamentally shifted our expectations for how quickly we can move from raw data to a high-conviction strategic narrative.”