How REMI Thinks

A governed intelligence system for real estate investment teams.

REMI is designed to connect analysis and execution. It builds contextual memory, improves recommendations from your own decisions, and keeps human governance in control at each critical step.

Context Graph

Connects every deal, assumption, decision, and outcome so teams work from shared context instead of disconnected files.

Recursive Learning

Every approval, rejection, and override improves future recommendations using your firm’s own operating patterns.

Human Governance

Learning loops are controlled by your team’s decisions, permissions, and approval chains.

The Context Graph

Not a database. A living map of your firm.

The Context Graph is REMI's core data structure. It connects every deal, asset, fund, person, document, and decision into a single queryable knowledge layer — so AI agents can reason at the firm level, not just the spreadsheet level.

Entity Resolution

Every asset, sponsor, tenant, market, and covenant is normalized and linked — across thousands of documents, emails, and data sources.

Relationship Mapping

A deal is connected to an asset, which sits in a portfolio, inside a fund. The graph preserves these relationships so agents can traverse them instantly.

Decision Memory

Every IC approval, rejection, and override is recorded in the graph. Over time, the graph learns your firm's thesis, risk appetite, and preferences.

Temporal Awareness

The graph tracks how assumptions, valuations, and market conditions change over time — enabling comparisons across vintages and cycles.

Hybrid Retrieval

Combines graph traversal (structured relationships) with vector search (semantic similarity) so agents find the right context through multiple paths.

Firm Ontology

Your buy-box rules, IC rubrics, LP reporting preferences, and formatting standards are encoded as constraints that agents respect automatically.

The Context Graph is our moat. Competitors can copy features — they can't copy your firm's accumulated intelligence.

Proof Without Customers

Verifiable trust signals before case studies exist.

  • Replay mode against historical deals and reports
  • Source-linked outputs with citation and lineage
  • Decision diffs between model draft and final human-approved version
  • Shadow mode before any live workflow execution
Moat Demo Concept

Compounding Intelligence Loop

A future Remotion sequence can show how one approval decision cascades into better screening, tighter monitoring, and cleaner LP reporting over time.

Narrative arc: first run baseline to human override to improved subsequent decisions.

Hidden Alpha

Subtle signals that position REMI as a category-defining operating layer.

Institutional memory compounding across teams and vintages
Execution intelligence, not just document generation
Governed automation that improves with committee behavior