AI that improves your multiple.
Find the workflows worth funding, contain the AI risk worth defending, and produce the value and risk read your IC, your audit committee, and the buyer's diligence team can rely on.
- Fundable workflows
- Contained AI risk
- Board-ready evidence
- 90-day portco plan
Deployed is not the same as working.
A portco can have AI in every board deck and still have nothing the IC can underwrite. The output becomes the number the deal team acts on before anything proves it earned the trust, and a quarterly review cannot keep pace with how fast agents now produce work. We make the AI reliable enough to act on, and produce the proof that holds at the next LP letter, IC re-underwriting, or exit.
The AI mandate is not the hard part.
Most portcos have AI activity. The missing piece is proof: what moves value, what creates risk, and what the board can defend this quarter.
- Value captureAI upsideWhich AI opportunities can move revenue, margin, cycle time, quality, headcount leverage, and produce legible value-capture proof the IC can underwrite.
- Risk controlAI riskWhich assets, workflows, vendor dependencies, shadow-AI exposures, and unread agents are eroding the asset or sitting on the buyer-diligence file.
- Operating readinessWorkforce fluencyWhether the portco's people can actually run the AI work, and where role redesign is the bottleneck, not the model.
- Board evidenceDefensible decisionsThe audit memorandum, the materiality threshold, the working papers. What the board, the audit committee, and the buyer can rely on at exit.
PE AI stalls between mandate and proof.
The stall is not a lack of tools. It is pilots without priority, risk without an owner, and no evidence the board can act on.
- Pilots without priorityTools and vendor demos multiply before the deal team names the workflows that matter to the value thesis.
- Risk without an ownerThe CIO owns the mandate. Security and hold-co IT contain exposure. The sponsor avoids new risk without clear upside.
- No board-ready proofThe board needs a value/risk read, not more AI activity.
The AI Audit turns activity into an underwriting file.
Each deliverable is grouped by the reader it supports: capture-side proof, risk-side proof, the audit-memorandum spine, and the workforce read.
Capture-side proof
- AI Value Capture Memo: revenue, margin, cycle-time, quality, and headcount-leverage opportunities, ranked by underwriting confidence.
- Workflow Prioritization Matrix: which workflows to instrument first and why.
- 90-Day Portco Sprint Plan: what ships, who owns it, what KPI moves.
Risk-side proof
- Portfolio AI Risk Register: vendor exposure, shadow AI, unread agents, data-handling gaps, framework-mapped to NIST AI RMF, ISO 42001, and the EU AI Act.
- Defensible Decisions Log: the working papers behind every audit exception and remediation step.
Audit-memorandum spine
- Audit Memorandum: first three pages structured the way every audit committee already reads. Opinion category, materiality threshold, scope, exceptions, remediation sequencing.
- Board / IC / LP Update Pack: the same memo, formatted for each reader.
- Exit Evidence Archive: what AI changed, what risk was contained, what proof supports the claim, assembled before the process starts.
Workforce read
- Role-redesign read on the workflows that actually changed. Where fluency is the bottleneck, not the model.
Replace the hold-period arc with a 90-day plan.
The old hold-period arc is gone. The first useful output is the two-week audit, followed by a 90-day portco plan and repeatable portfolio playbook.
1. Day 0-14AuditAudit usage, workflows, tools, data exposure, AI risks, and value hypotheses.
2. Day 15-30Read outBoard/IC readout, value-capture file, risk register, and 90-day plan.
3. Day 31-90InstrumentShip 1-2 instrumented workflows at a selected portco.
4. Day 91-180RepeatTurn first-portco evidence into a repeatable portfolio playbook.
Same evidence. Different buyer job.
Start at the portco. Roll the evidence up to the fund, board, and audit committee.
- CIOPortco CEO / CIONeeds a focused AI plan they can take to the board without creating security sprawl.
- OPOperating Partner / Portfolio OpsNeeds a portfolio view of where AI can move value and where risk is concentrating.
- CTOTech Operating PartnerNeeds the first workflows sequenced, instrumented, and shipped with contained technical risk.
- ACAudit CommitteeNeeds an audit-style read: opinion, materiality threshold, exceptions, and remediation.
We Build It, and We Read It.
We build the workflows that move the value thesis, and we are the independent read on whether they hold. The same harness that makes a portco's AI reliable produces the audit memorandum your IC and the buyer's diligence team can underwrite. An implementation partner cannot also be the arm's-length opinion on its own work. We can, because the audit runs as a separable service.
From the audit, AI Transformation and AI Governance run side-by-side. AI Fluency runs underneath as the workforce track where the workflow actually changes.
AI Audit
Two weeks. See AI value, AI risk, usage, and workflow reality across the portco. Issue the audit memorandum with opinion and materiality threshold.
AI Transformation
Ship the workflows most likely to move the value thesis. Revenue, margin, cycle time, quality, headcount leverage. Instrumented from day one so the IC can underwrite the lift.
AI Governance
Defensible decisions, framework-mapped evidence, continuous evals, and the working papers behind the opinion. What the board, audit committee, and buyer rely on.
AI Fluency
Raise role-level capability on the workflows that actually changed. Where fluency is the bottleneck, not the model.
Start where portfolio pressure is highest.
Put AI on the workflows that move the multiple, build fluency around the changed work, or get the independent read on what is compounding and what is exposing the asset.
Frequently asked.
No. The first useful output is the two-week AI Audit. The 90-day plan is about choosing and instrumenting the first workflows that can move value.
No. Implementation partners ship AI work. TrustEvals tells the fund and portco what is worth funding, what risk must be contained, and what evidence belongs in the board and diligence file.
Different layer. Those platforms map how the work runs: the process graph, the workarounds, the hand-offs. We read what the AI is doing inside those workflows, whether it is compounding on the asset or exposing it, and what proof an underwriter would accept. Discovery platforms feed implementation. We feed the value/risk read the board, the audit committee, and the buyer rely on. Many portcos will use both.
Value-creation OS platforms own planning, tracking, and reporting across every initiative in the portfolio. We are the AI-specific audit and evidence layer that feeds those systems. Where a value-creation OS asks whether the initiative is on track, we answer whether the AI inside the initiative is an asset or a liability, and what would survive an underwriter's read.
Yes. That is the default routing: portco-up. Start with one portco, prove the value/risk file, then roll the pattern up to the fund.
Nothing it does not want to. Engagements contain at the portco level and roll up to the portfolio for the Operating Partner view. The hold-co IT layer does not take on additional SOC 2 surface area.
A portfolio-readable summary: value opportunities, risk concentration, workflow priorities, and evidence suitable for IC, LP, audit-committee, and board review.
It creates a buyer-diligence story before the process starts: what AI changed, what risk was controlled, and what proof supports the claim. The audit memorandum is the same shape the buyer's diligence team is already trained to read.
The TrustEvals AI Audit delivers one of four opinion categories: clean, qualified with exceptions noted, adverse/do not extend, or scope limitation. This is a TrustEvals AI Audit opinion, not statutory financial audit assurance. Materiality threshold is set jointly with the customer at kickoff and lands in the engagement letter. A finding above the threshold is an audit exception; a finding below lands in the appendix.