Questions, answered straight.
The eight things agencies ask before requesting access.
No. Your vault is yours alone. Answers are generated only from your own notes, nothing is shared across tenants, and your data is not used to train models. The retrieval layer reads your vault at answer time; it does not bake your knowledge into a model.
Docs store knowledge; they don't answer questions. The doc graveyard is the problem OFM-Brain exists to fix: it retrieves across everything you've collected, synthesizes one answer, and cites the exact notes it came from. Your docs become the raw material, not the interface.
It's a chat box, the same muscle they already use all shift. A chatter asks mid-conversation, gets a cited answer in seconds, and pastes from it instead of pinging a manager. No training course, no new workflow to learn.
Onboarding starts with a bulk ingest: your docs, drives, recordings and playbooks go through the pipeline and come out as linked, answerable notes. After that the team feeds it continuously through the add-resources flow, and the pipeline keeps filing.
Founding-cohort pricing is discussed on the onboarding call. There's no public price list while access is invite-only.
No. OFM-Brain is an internal knowledge tool for your team. It doesn't connect to OF accounts, doesn't automate platform actions, and doesn't send messages. It sits entirely outside the platform, the same as your docs and group chats do today.
Every answer cites the vault notes it drew from, so you can verify the source in one click. The system is instructed never to invent numbers, and when the vault doesn't cover a question it says exactly that.
Sam, founder of Zero Percent Models. OFM-Brain runs that agency day to day; the version you'd get is the version we use ourselves.
We onboard a few agencies at a time.
Access stays invite-only while founding agencies onboard. Request a slot and we'll reach out when one opens.