NRT–001 / Documented7 min · 5 sources

How a company’s words become a narrative

How Narratics reads public material, separates fact from analysis, and builds a verifiable profile.

By Narratics Editorial · Published 2026-07-14 · Updated 2026-07-14

Dossier summary

  • Search results and AI answers are discovery tools, never final evidence.
  • Every factual claim connects to a source object and a location in the original.
  • Fact, analysis, and scenario are separated in prose and on the page.
  • Instead of rewriting one article’s language and structure, we build a new structure from atomic facts across multiple sources.

The starting point is the record, not the story

Companies explain themselves. Founders recount origins in interviews, press releases announce turning points, and financial documents show the numbers left after those declarations. But arranging those materials chronologically does not, by itself, make a narrative.

Narratics begins by breaking the record apart. Corporate records, filings, official announcements, interviews, independent reporting, and criticism are stored as distinct source objects. We extract only verifiable facts and do not count articles with the same underlying origin as independent evidence.

Read in three layers

Documented — verified fact

Dates, people, products, and figures are externally verifiable statements. The more consequential the fact, the more we seek both primary evidence and independent context. A company announcement is evidence that the company made the statement—not independent evidence that the whole statement is true.

Analysis — editorial interpretation

Analysis explains patterns and turning points among facts. It must point to its factual premises and address other plausible explanations. We do not fill unknown motives or inner states merely to make a sentence flow.

Scenario — a possible path, not a factual prediction

Future paths and symbolic narrative experiments remain separate from reported profiles. We disclose inputs, assumptions, method version, alternatives, and the conditions under which a scenario could be wrong. This is not a service for divining fate or facts; it is an experiment in exploring uncertain choices structurally.

We do not copy one article

We do not feed an article to AI and merely change the wording. Researchers extract atomic facts, exact quotations and locations, limitations, and counterevidence across sources. Writers receive a verified claim ledger and editorial questions, not the source prose.

This is slower. In return, readers can see which sentences are record and which are interpretation. The unit of scaled publishing is not “one AI-written article,” but an auditable chain: source object → factual claim → classified paragraph → independent review → public version.

We leave the unknown unresolved

A good profile does not pretend to know everything. Where sources conflict or the public record cannot resolve a point, we mark it Unresolved. When corrections or new evidence arrive, we preserve update dates and correction records rather than silently overwriting the original.

We await the next record

Before becoming an agency that promotes companies, Narratics aims to be a publication that records the stories companies have actually made. If you know evidence or context that would change the record, tell our editorial desk.

Sources

The record behind this article

  1. SRC-2026-0001
    Journalism Trust Initiative Standard — Reporters Without Borders
    Reference for editorial transparency and accountability. Retrieved 2026-07-14.
  2. SRC-2026-0002
    SPJ Code of Ethics — Society of Professional Journalists
    Reference for verification, context, accountability, and minimizing harm. Retrieved 2026-07-14.
  3. SRC-2026-0003
    Schema.org Article — Schema.org
    Reference for machine-readable article metadata. Retrieved 2026-07-14.
  4. SRC-2026-0004
    Google Search: Article structured data — Google Search Central
    Reference for implementing Article structured data. Retrieved 2026-07-14.
  5. SRC-2026-0005
    Copyright and Artificial Intelligence — U.S. Copyright Office
    AI and copyright policy reference; jurisdiction-specific limits apply. Retrieved 2026-07-14.
Know a fact that needs correction or a better primary source? Tell the editorial desk →