Oversight by design. Sovereignty by default.
Most AI promises to replace your judgment. Dimbo earns a sliver of it at a time — and never takes your data hostage to do it.
The giants added AI to old software. We built the system the other way around.
The big platforms took products designed for something else and bolted intelligence onto the side — simpler, fragmented, a feature you switch on. It demos well. It rarely becomes a system you can actually run your company on.
AI as a feature
A chat box stapled to a tool that was never built to collect your data well or act on it. The intelligence is real; the foundation underneath isn't. The genuinely useful work leaks out through the seams.
A product born for the job
Not a restyle of an old product — designed from the first line to optimize how data is collected, how it's reasoned over, and how that becomes leaner, faster, more natural decisions. The data is the actual technology; the interface is a precisely calibrated instrument on top of it.
Trust isn't granted. It's earned, one level at a time.
Every process in Dimbo starts at Observe — passive, silent, no proposals. It climbs the ladder only by building a visible track record of correct calls. And the promotion is never automatic: you grant it, never the vendor.
Demotion runs the other way for free. A single human rejection or edit knocks a process back down one rung — no appeal, no override switch. Trust is asymmetric: slow to build, instant to lose.
This isn't a compliance checkbox we bolted on. Oversight-by-design at this granularity — per process, with a track record, revocable at will — is what the EU AI Act asks for. We built it because it's correct, and it happens to also be compliant.
Learns silently
No proposals surface. The system watches and builds context, nothing more.
Recommends, you approve
Every action is a proposal in the queue. Approve, edit or reject — always your call.
Executes, tells you
Runs the action, then gives you a window to undo before it's final.
Only where earned
No human in the loop for this process — but only after the track record justifies it, and revocable anytime.
The intelligence runs where you decide. Never where we decide.
Pick your posture. Every tier runs the same platform, the same intelligence, the same knowledge — the only variable is where the AI actually runs.
Nothing leaves the building
The whole platform plus local AI models on a box in your plant. In regulated supply chains — defense, pharma, food — this isn't a nice-to-have. It's the entry requirement.
Full GDPR chain, no CLOUD Act
Your own AI, run in the EU. No US CLOUD Act exposure, no ambiguity about who can subpoena your data — for teams that want isolation without owning iron.
Fastest, still guarded
The quickest path to value. PII is anonymized by the privacy gateway before any byte reaches an external model — confidentiality isn't a paid tier, it's the default.
Software can be copied. Your knowledge can't.
Any vendor can ship a chatbot over your ERP. What they can't ship is the years of your team's approvals, edits and rejections — the specific, local judgment that makes a proposal right for your plant and wrong for the one down the road.
Feedback compounds
Approve, edit or reject — each one is a labeled example of your judgment, folded back into the next proposal.
The connected knowledge is yours
Comms, people, machines and world knowledge fused into one connected picture, keyed to your clients, your projects, your commitments. It's proprietary to your company by construction.
No horizontal vendor gets there
A general-purpose AI tool starts from zero on every customer. Ours starts from zero too — then it never resets. That gap only widens.
We watch processes, never people.
Dimbo has no leaderboard of who answers slowest, who misses deadlines, who's "underperforming." It cannot — by design, not by policy toggle — surface individual performance metrics. It tracks whether the invoice is late, not who typed it. That line is a floor, not a feature flag, and it's the reason a plant floor lets us watch in the first place. Trust the system enough to give it eyes, and it has to earn that trust back every single day — not spend it on surveillance.
See why oversight and ownership win.
Point Dimbo at a slice of your real data. Watch it build the picture of your company and surface the first decisions — with nothing about how it works hidden from you.