Navigator
The acquisition hub for buyers who need a clearer next step than “book a call.”
Use Navigator to compare pricing, proof, FAQ context, guided reviews, and direct strategy work. The goal is to create useful clarity before anyone is pushed into a meeting that is not yet the right move.
Use Navigator when
Entry paths
Three clean ways to start.
Choose the route that matches your current level of clarity. Navigator is useful precisely because not every serious buyer needs the same first move.
Talk it through with Navigator
Use the AI-guided route when the pressure is real but you still need help separating fit, pricing, proof, workflow diagnosis, and next-step options.
Open the advisorGo straight into a guided review
Choose AI Readiness Review or Workflow Review when the current-state problem is concrete enough to diagnose with discipline.
Start a reviewCheck pricing and procurement first
Use public ranges, onboarding logic, and packaging notes when commercial clarity is the blocker before a meeting makes sense.
See pricingWhat Navigator routes toward
The public assets that should do real qualification work.
This hub exists to make the site more useful before a form fill. If one of these routes answers the buyer's real question, Navigator should say so clearly.
Proof posture
Public proof stays specific enough to be useful and restrained enough to stay credible.
These anonymized case studies are part of Navigator because proof should help buyers self-select without forcing client leakage or fake certainty.
Commerce transformation
Specialty retail commerce environment
An anonymized commerce engagement spanning technical architecture, AI-assisted buyer guidance, lifecycle automation, and launch governance in a sensitive purchase environment.
Healthcare-adjacent product audit
Clinical platform deployment environment
An anonymized product and deployment audit focused on authentication failures, UX blockers, security and privacy risk, and a prioritized remediation roadmap for a healthcare-adjacent platform under scrutiny.
FAQ routing
Common fit and process questions should not require a sales conversation.
Navigator should use the FAQ as a real routing asset, not as filler content buried at the bottom of the site.
Engagement fit
Use these answers to determine whether KRLR is the right operating partner and which entry path makes sense first.
What types of companies does KRLR work with?
Organizations with real execution pressure, cross-functional complexity, or commercialization risk. The common thread is seriousness about deployment rather than company size alone.
How is KRLR different from a typical AI consultancy?
Most firms split strategy, build, and go-to-market across disconnected teams. KRLR keeps those functions closer together so the public story, system design, and rollout plan do not drift apart.
Process and delivery
These answers clarify how work is scoped, how long it tends to run, and how KRLR operates alongside internal teams.
How long does a typical engagement take?
Guided reviews move quickly. Broader architecture and delivery engagements depend on scope. Every phase still produces a deliverable and a decision gate before advancing.
What does the discovery process look like?
Start with the real blocker, the current state, or the target outcome. KRLR will tell you quickly whether the work is strategic, operational, technical, or some combination of all three.
Pricing and commercials
Pricing stays range-based and scope-aware because the work changes materially depending on the risk, integration load, and rollout pressure involved.
How is pricing structured?
Project-based for guided reviews, diagnostics, and architecture engagements. Monthly retainer pricing applies when the work requires ongoing advisory or operating support rather than a one-off deliverable.
Do you publish pricing ranges?
Yes. Phase 9 adds a dedicated pricing page with ranges, strategy-session pricing, packaging logic, and onboarding guidance so buyers do not have to infer commercial fit from general copy.
Start with the route that removes the most ambiguity.
If you need guidance, open the advisor. If you need commercial clarity, review pricing. If you already know the issue is live and concrete, go straight into a guided review or book the session.