Summary

This free AI report generator turns a target company's stage, sector, and seven qualitative signals, technical founder, revenue, repeat founder, warm intro, competitive market, recent pivot, into a first-screen score out of 100, a fast-track, standard review, or pass verdict, and a draft memo opener you can paste straight into your IC notes. The scoring logic is transparent: it starts from a neutral prior and adjusts for each signal, the same way a junior analyst would triage a Monday inbox before a deeper look.

AI Report Generator for VC Deal Screening

Turn a target company's stage, sector, and 7 qualitative signals into a first-screen score, a verdict, and a draft memo opener, computed entirely in your browser with no signup and no data leaving your machine.

Screening report generator

Enter the target company, its stage and sector, then check the signals you have observed. The score, verdict, and draft memo opener update as you go.

Signals observed so far
40
Standard review

Draft memo opener

Fill in the fields above and generate a report to see a draft memo opener here.

    Using the tool

    From blank form to draft memo opener in three steps

    1. 1

      Name the company and pick stage and sector

      Start with the basics: the target's name, whether it is pre-seed, seed, or Series A, and which of the four sectors it falls into. These three fields set the neutral starting prior and the stage-specific adjustments.

    2. 2

      Check the signals you have actually observed

      Tick only what you can back up from the deck, the call, or a reference, technical founder, revenue, repeat founder track record, warm intro, competitive density, or a recent pivot. Guessing a signal defeats the purpose of a first screen.

    3. 3

      Read the score, verdict, and draft opener

      The score updates live, the verdict slots the company into fast-track, standard review, or pass, and the draft opener names the exact signals behind the number so a partner reading the memo later sees the reasoning, not just a score.

    What lands in the memo

    A draft opener you can paste, not a number you have to explain

    Most first-screen scoring tools stop at the number. This one writes the sentence that goes above it, naming the exact signals behind the score and splitting supporting evidence from flags to clear before the deeper look. It reads like a line a Monday-morning analyst would actually write, because the logic behind it is the same triage a fund runs on a crowded inbox.

    • States the score, the verdict, and the sector and stage in one sentence
    • Lists supporting signals separately from flags still to clear
    • Falls back to a neutral read when no signals are checked yet
    Analyst hands marking a printed one-page investment memo checklist
    How the score works

    What goes into the number

    Neutral starting prior

    Every company starts at 40 out of 100, the midpoint between a fast-track and a pass. Signals move the score up or down from there, so an empty form never quietly reads as a false pass or a false fail before you have entered anything real.

    Signals weighted by pattern

    Technical founder, existing revenue, repeat founder history, and a warm intro each push the score up by a fixed amount. Crowded, well-funded markets and a pivot inside six months pull it down, mirroring the tradeoffs a first screen actually makes on a Tuesday morning.

    Draft opener, not a black box

    The output includes a one-paragraph memo opener naming the exact signals behind the score and separating supporting evidence from flags to clear, so the next analyst or partner reading the memo does not have to reconstruct your reasoning from a bare number.

    Common questions

    Is this an actual AI report generator or a fixed formula?
    It is a transparent scoring heuristic, not a generative model. Every point is traceable to a rule you can see in the score breakdown, which is the point: a black-box score is not something you can defend in an IC meeting.
    Where do the scoring weights come from?
    They mirror the signals that come up most often in first-screen discussions, technical founder, revenue or LOIs, repeat founder history, warm intros, competitive density, and recent pivots, weighted the way a junior analyst would triage a Monday inbox before a partner look.
    Does this replace the IC memo process?
    No. It produces a first-screen score and a draft opener line, not a finished memo. Diligence, reference calls, and the data room still do the real work.
    Is any of my input sent to a server?
    No. The score, verdict, and draft text are computed entirely in your browser. Nothing about the company name or signals you enter is transmitted or stored, aside from an anonymous tool-run beacon with no company data.
    Why does a Series A company with no revenue signal score lower?
    Because a Series A round without a revenue or LOI signal is one of the most common reasons a first screen gets kicked back for more diligence. The tool applies a small penalty in that specific case to reflect that pattern.
    Can I use this for stages other than pre-seed, seed, or Series A?
    The current version covers those three stages because that is where fast first-screen triage matters most. Later-stage deals usually have enough data room material that a qualitative heuristic adds less value.
    What should I do with the draft memo opener?
    Treat it as a first sentence you can edit, not a final line. It states the score, verdict, and the signals behind it so the next analyst reading the memo does not have to reconstruct your reasoning.

    Want the sourcing and screening to happen before Monday morning?

    Accorata runs AI deal intelligence across 40+ sources with a 4-hour refresh, so the shortlist is ready before you open your inbox.