How PlacePilot builds a site-intelligence memo
PlacePilot is designed to support lease and expansion decisions, not to pretend certainty where the available data is thin. The report combines structured scoring, local evidence, confidence indicators, and practical diligence prompts.
What PlacePilot measures
PlacePilot evaluates candidate locations using public business listings, nearby competitor and complementary-business patterns, available demographic proxies, geography profile, market research, and report-specific data-quality signals.
How scoring works
The score is a structured decision signal, not a guarantee. It weighs base market conditions, co-tenancy fit, ecosystem strength, competition, available evidence, and risk factors into a comparable site score.
Confidence and coverage
Every report should be read with its confidence and data-coverage indicators. A high score with thin coverage is treated differently from a high score with strong local evidence.
What AI does
AI helps synthesize the evidence into a readable site memo: verdict, supporting rationale, risk flags, trade-offs, and next diligence steps. It does not replace broker, legal, financial, or operational diligence.
What PlacePilot cannot verify
PlacePilot cannot verify lease terms, landlord concessions, build-out cost, actual sales, unit economics, exact pedestrian counts, local permitting constraints, or private broker data unless those facts are provided separately.
How to use the report
Use the memo to pressure-test a site before committing capital: identify strengths, risks, open questions, comparison trade-offs, and what to verify in a site visit or broker conversation.
Decision-support caveat
A PlacePilot report should help decide what deserves deeper diligence. It should not be the only basis for signing a lease, funding a build-out, or rejecting a site with private information that public data cannot see.
Ready to pressure-test a location?
Run a site-intelligence memo or compare two candidate locations before committing capital.