Assessor-view review system

See how your idea
looks from an assessor view

PilotForge gives founders a short assessor-view review built around how business plans are commonly rejected. Our AI-assisted system checks your idea across 28 review areas and highlights where it already looks weak, unclear, easy to question, or not yet strong enough.

How it works
Focus Weakness-first review. We do not score your chances. We show where the idea is weak.

Built around real rejection logic

28 review areas · assessor-view analysis · weakness report by email
28 areas We review the idea across the main areas an assessor typically questions.
Weakness report No false comfort. We point out where the idea already looks weak or unsupported.
Assessor view Structured using rejection-style logic and AI-assisted review output.

How it works

Step 1 — Start the review

Read the overview, then move to the second page to submit your idea details.

Step 2 — Submit your idea

Complete the form with the main information needed for the review. High-level detail is enough.

Step 3 — Complete payment

After the form, complete payment to confirm the review request.

Step 4 — Receive the report

We generate the report and send it to your email, usually within one hour of form submission and payment.

FAQs

No. We do not score chances. We highlight where the idea currently looks weak, unclear, unsupported, or vulnerable to challenge.

The review is built around assessor-style rejection patterns and 28 review areas commonly questioned in business plan assessments.

We understand this concern. You do not need to share source code, full technical architecture, or confidential implementation details. Submit only enough information for the review. If your idea is sensitive, you can provide a redacted version focused on the problem, target customer, innovation claim, and business model.

No. This is an independent idea review service only.

Only share what is needed

You do not need to disclose confidential technical details, full architecture, source code, or proprietary internal methods on the website form. High-level detail is enough for the review.