Multi-store retail
Approval-safe operations
Give Monday a better source of truth.
Taz designs a human-approved weekly business pulse from the systems a team already uses, so the next conversation starts with facts, exceptions, owners, and actions rather than a blank page.
The process
Turn the week into a small set of decisions.
Taz Business Pulse starts with the tools a team already uses and produces a human-reviewed view of the work that needs attention.
- 01Connect
Agree the business sources and the questions that matter this week.
- 02Read
Collect the available operating signals into one reviewable picture.
- 03Prioritize
Highlight the exceptions, drafts, and decisions that need attention.
- 04Review
A person approves the next actions before anything leaves the business.
What the pulse holds
- Cash, receivables, pipeline, customer issues, and operating exceptions that deserve attention.
- Explicit input sources and the owner who can confirm each one.
- Drafts for follow-up work that humans review before anything is sent.
- A smaller, more repeatable operating rhythm rather than a new dashboard for its own sake.
The first operating loop
You receive a workflow map, a weekly pulse template, source and owner definitions, approval points, and the first set of useful follow-up drafts. The design works around the tools already in use.
weekly_pulse: cash | receivables | pipeline | customer watchlist | owner | next approved action
Human approval remains the control
Taz does not autonomously send emails, post externally, charge customers, or sign contracts. It helps turn information into a reviewable next move; people remain accountable for the action.
What we make visible
Start the week with a reviewable picture, not a blank page.
Taz shapes a human-approved operating rhythm from systems a team already uses, with sources and owners left visible.
Industry scenarios
See the service in the work it is meant to support.
Illustrative planning scenarios, not client case studies or performance claims.
Professional services
Weekly utilization and close pulse
Open scenarioLogistics and supply chain