Decision Intelligence for the CFO and IR Office

Rehearse earnings remarks, guidance updates, M&A announcements, and IPO roadshow narratives against simulated investor cohorts. See exactly how the room will trade on each candidate sentence.

The CFO and IR office runs on a tight clock — quarterly earnings, capital markets days, M&A announcements, IPO roadshow stops, regulatory financial communications. Each release is the most expensive sentence the company will write that quarter, and the audiences that will trade on it are heterogeneous: institutional long-only, hedge funds, retail, sell-side analysts, buy-side analysts, activist holders, fixed-income holders, the financial press. Isaiah simulates how each cohort will receive a candidate message before it ships, so the IR team and the CFO can refine the language, anticipate analyst Q&A, and decide what to lead with — based on evidence about how the room will react. Where the CFO office also sponsors back-office automation (financial close, vendor management, invoice processing, compliance reporting), Beth's enterprise-safe managed AI agents are the complementary product.

What CFOs Care About

01

Pre-release rehearsal of earnings calls, investor day announcements, M&A communications, and IPO roadshow scripts against simulated investor cohorts

02

Materiality-disclosure decisions on litigation updates, regulatory communications, and corporate actions — surfaced and tested before they ship

03

Cross-artifact consistency across the press release, the SEC 8-K language, the analyst Q&A prep, and the customer notification when the same announcement spans multiple audiences

04

Back-office automation across financial close, AP/AR, compliance reporting, vendor management — Beth-aligned where applicable

05

Audit-grade decision trails and CISO-reviewable security posture for any AI tooling adopted in the finance organization

Metrics That Matter

Days → hours
Pre-release rehearsal cycle compression
8–20+
Investor cohorts modeled per release
4+ artifacts in lockstep
Cross-artifact consistency check
2–4 weeks
Time to first pilot value

Common Concerns

Our IR team already runs mock Q&A sessions before earnings. Why add another layer?

Mock Q&A surfaces what the prep team can imagine. Isaiah surfaces what each investor cohort will actually do — based on simulated reactions across institutional long-only, hedge funds, retail, sell-side, buy-side, and the press. The two complement each other: mock Q&A is good for executive practice; Isaiah is good for catching the language risk and the cohort coverage gaps the mock missed.

Our financial data is highly controlled. We can't ship pre-release numbers to a vendor.

Isaiah supports cloud SaaS, dedicated VPC, on-premise, and air-gapped deployments. Pre-release financials can be rehearsed inside the same security perimeter as the consolidation tools and the IR-owned data room. Explicit permission scopes per user, full action logs, SOC 2 path, and ISO 27001 path. Most enterprise CFOs land on a VPC or on-premise deployment for this reason.

How is this priced and how do I budget for it?

Isaiah is enterprise-priced — typical engagements start in the six figures annually with consumption tied to the simulation volume and cohort complexity, not a per-seat license. The pricing reflects the buyer profile (CFO/IR office, decision intelligence on financial communications) rather than a SaaS martech model. Pricing details are shared during the pilot scoping conversation; start at huper.technology/engage.

We work with an IR firm. How does Isaiah fit alongside that?

Most enterprise IR teams keep an outside IR firm for relationships, perception studies, and roadshow logistics. Isaiah doesn't replace any of that. The IR firm brings the perception layer and the relationships; Isaiah adds the pre-release rehearsal layer for the specific candidate language. Many of our enterprise customers run Isaiah alongside their IR firm on the highest-stakes releases.

Why CFOs Choose Huper

Rehearse earnings remarks, investor day decks, M&A announcements, and IPO roadshow scripts against simulated cohorts of institutional investors, sell-side analysts, retail, and the financial press

Build the executive Q&A prep doc directly from simulated cohort reactions, including the follow-up sequence after the first answer

Catch the inconsistency between the prepared remarks, the deck, the SEC 8-K language, and the analyst Q&A prep before sophisticated investors do

VPC, on-premise, and air-gapped deployment options keep pre-release financials inside the existing security perimeter

Singapore-headquartered enterprise contracting; founding team responds within one business day to /engage submissions

Frequently Asked Questions

Where should the CFO and IR office start?

Most CFO-office pilots start with a single upcoming release — earnings call, investor day, M&A announcement, or IPO roadshow — and a defined set of investor cohorts. Pilot typically runs in 2–4 weeks including security review and cohort design. The fastest payoff is on the next earnings cycle.

Can Isaiah model sell-side analyst reactions specifically?

Yes. Sell-side analyst cohorts are configurable by sector, by firm, and by analyst archetype (the bull, the bear, the technical, the thesis-driven). Isaiah models how each archetype will frame the release in their note, what they'll likely raise on the call, and which numbers they'll over- or under-weight in their model update.

What about Beth for the back-office side of the CFO organization?

Beth (in build) is enterprise-safe managed AI agents for high-stakes operations — relevant for the back-office side of the CFO organization: financial close automation, AP/AR, vendor management, internal compliance reporting, contract analysis. Beth shares the parent brand's security and governance posture (CISO-reviewable, deployment options, audit-grade decision trails). Beth and Isaiah serve different parts of the CFO organization but ladder under the same enterprise contracting.

How does Isaiah handle materiality decisions on litigation, regulatory, or corporate-action communications?

Isaiah's litigation and regulatory use cases (see /use-cases/litigation-and-settlement-communications and /use-cases/regulatory-testimony-rehearsal) directly support the materiality-disclosure decisions the CFO office is responsible for. The simulation surfaces how each cohort — including parallel regulators and shareholder-derivative plaintiffs — will read the candidate disclosure language, helping the CFO and General Counsel decide on disclosure scope with cohort-level evidence.

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