Think like a partner.
Deliver like a firm.

The methodology infrastructure that top firms spent decades building internally. SCQA, top-down argument structure, MECE. Now yours.

Six phases · Phase-lock · Evidence tagging · Auto-rendered slides

Auto-Rendered Slides

Slides rendered from a tested argument structure, not from a prompt.

Every Claim Tagged

Fact, inference, risk, or missing. No unbacked statement reaches the boardroom.

Your Workspace

Your presentations live in your workspace. Pick up where you left off. Enterprise-grade security.

Right now, someone at a top firm is running your client's problem through a structured methodology engine.

SCQA to frame the narrative, top-down argument structure to organize the reasoning, MECE to validate completeness. Their output lands on the same boardroom table as yours.

You have the same strategic mind. You've been running that process in your head, on whiteboards, in late nights before the deadline. They run it as infrastructure.

That gap ends here.

Six phases. Phase-lock.
No skipping ahead.

Phase 1

Problem

You structure the problem as an Issue Tree. MECE. Prioritized. Evidence-tagged.

Phase 2

Narrative

You run your story through SCQA. One governing thought. No evasive answers.

Phase 3

Storyline

You build the argument top-down. Every claim tagged: fact, inference, risk, or missing.

Phase 4

Ghost Deck

Action Titles. Slide types. Data specs. The Horizontal Flow Test.

Phase 5

Review

Adversarial jury. Dry run. Speaker notes. Q&A prep. Kill-metric defined.

Phase 6

Render

Slides auto-rendered from the tested structure. Every chart from specified data.

The discipline is the infrastructure.

You know how to structure a deck. You've been doing it for years, mostly in your head.

The top firms stopped doing it in their heads a long time ago. They built systems that pressure-test every argument before it reaches the boardroom. Not because their people are smarter. Because they invested in infrastructure.

Now you have the same infrastructure. Deploy it.

Methodology

SCQA, top-down argument structure, MECE, Action Titles, Evidence Tagging. The discipline that top firms enforce internally.

Phase-Lock

Six phases. Each must be complete before the next begins. The system enforces this, not your willpower.

Adversarial Review

Three jury roles. Dry run with speaker notes. Q&A prep. Your deck gets stress-tested before the boardroom does it.

Your Workspace

Your work is stored securely. Pick up any presentation where you left off.

Request Early Access

We're onboarding strategists in small batches.

No spam. No newsletter. We'll reach out when your spot opens.

What is SCQA?

SCQA stands for Situation, Complication, Question, Answer. It is a storytelling framework developed by Barbara Minto at McKinsey & Company. Consultants use SCQA to structure the opening of a presentation: the Situation establishes shared context, the Complication introduces tension, the Question arises naturally, and the Answer provides the governing thought of the deck.

In Rigon, you run your narrative through SCQA in Phase 2. The system checks whether your Question actually follows from Situation and Complication before you move on.

What is the Pyramid Principle?

The Pyramid Principle is a communication framework developed by Barbara Minto. It states that ideas should be presented top-down: start with the answer (governing thought), then support it with arguments, each supported by data. Arguments must be MECE (mutually exclusive, collectively exhaustive) at every level.

In Rigon, you build your argument top-down in Phase 3. The system checks MECE at every node and flags gaps before you move to the Ghost Deck.

What is MECE?

MECE stands for Mutually Exclusive, Collectively Exhaustive. It is a principle used in management consulting to ensure that a set of categories covers everything without overlap. McKinsey, BCG, and Bain use MECE as a quality standard for issue trees, slide structures, and argument frameworks.

In Rigon, MECE is checked at every level of the Issue Tree (Phase 1) and the argument structure (Phase 3). Gaps and overlaps get flagged before you move forward.

FAQ

How is Rigon different from Gamma or Beautiful.ai?
Those tools generate slides from a prompt. Rigon runs your argument through six phases of structured methodology before a single slide gets rendered. What comes out is based on a tested argument, not on what you typed into a text box.

What do I get at the end?
Finished slides rendered from your tested argument. Speaker notes that are grounded in the storyline. A Q&A preparation with the hardest questions anticipated. And a full evidence audit where every claim is tagged as fact, inference, risk, or missing.

Is my client data safe?
Yes. Your presentations are stored in your workspace with enterprise-grade security. We don't train on your content.

What does it cost?
During beta, Rigon is free. Pricing will be announced after beta.

Who is Rigon for?
Consultants, strategists, and anyone who builds presentations where the argument matters more than the layout. It doesn't matter whether you learned the Pyramid Principle at McKinsey or from a book.

What is the Dry Run?
In Phase 5, Rigon walks through your presentation slide by slide as if presenting it. It checks whether the substance holds, whether transitions make sense, and whether the timing works. Then it switches perspective and looks at the deck as the audience would. You get speaker notes, the toughest anticipated questions, and a diagnosis of where things might break.

What is Evidence Tagging?
Throughout all six phases, every claim in your deck gets a tag: [FACT] with a source, [INFERENCE] with the reasoning behind it, [RISK] with a causal chain, or [MISSING] with the consequence of not having it. You see exactly where your argument is solid and where it isn't.