Newspilot serves four distinct types of organisations. Each has a different job to be done. The platform is the same — the value is specific.
Your communications team is reactive when it should be anticipatory. By the time a hostile framing is visible in English press, it has already been amplified in regional and foreign-language media for days.
Before a risk to a portfolio company or acquisition target appears in Bloomberg or the FT, it appears in local and regional press — in languages most tools don't cover. Most PE firms discover it too late.
Policy analysis requires understanding not just what is being reported, but how it is being framed — and how that framing diverges across geographies, languages, and ideological perspectives. No standard monitoring tool does this.
Under the Digital Services Act, VLOPs must assess systemic narrative risks. The Big Four audit practices running these assessments need tooling that can analyse narrative formation, framing patterns, and amplification dynamics at scale — in multiple languages. Most currently lack it.
Global intelligence at scale — across every market, every language
Enterprise-grade narrative analysis at mid-market pricing
Research-grade intelligence that lives inside your publications workflow
Open-source intelligence at scale, with full source provenance
Every organisation that needs to understand global news faces the same problem: critical coverage appears first in languages that most tools do not monitor well. By the time it surfaces in English, the narrative has formed. Decisions are reactive instead of anticipatory.
Newspilot was built to close that gap — at a price that mid-market organisations can afford, with the analytical depth that enterprise and government buyers require.
The Central Asia Board tracks coverage across Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, and Turkmenistan in local languages. In one month: 356 named narrative clusters identified automatically, a high-severity volume spike alert fired 48 hours before the Strait of Hormuz story peaked in English press.
A single Polymarket dashboard monitored market events, partnerships, security coverage, and regulatory developments across 10 sources, identifying 5 dominant narrative clusters including US regulatory scrutiny and Hong Kong legal uncertainty — before these became headline risks.
A dedicated dashboard for Iran war coverage tracked 1,080+ articles, measuring narrative concentration, dominant framing shifts (from military conflict frame to economic/sanctions frame), and tracking 118 Azerbaijan-tagged articles as a proxy for regional spillover risk.
Book a demo and see the difference in your first briefing.