Resources is the pillar that watches your own organization — strategy delivery, internal narrative, financial confidence, capital structure, and the people doing the work — and weighs all five against the world Intelligence is reading outside.
The pillar question is *what is our own house doing, and is it agreeing with itself?*
The five modules
- **Cadence** — the rhythm of the work that delivers the strategy. Strategic priorities flow down through projects to KPI signals, and those KPIs become first-class signals in the same lattice as external markets.
- **Workstream** — the connective tissue of internal work. Reads M365, Google Workspace, Slack, Teams, Notion, calendars, and document stores. Extracts signal; never stores raw content.
- **Finance Watch** — the forecast, weighed against the world. Treats the ERP forecast as a scenario the lattice pressure-tests continuously. Reads NetSuite, SAP, QBO, Pigment.
- **Capital Watch** — the refinancing window, read as signal. Reads Carta, Pulley, AngelList Stack, manual debt. Every capital decision becomes a window confidence score.
- **Charge** — what's been entrusted to your leadership. One Numen sentence per direct report. Aggregate by default; individual reads require explicit consent. No performance scoring, ever.
The architectural move
Every Resources module follows the same pattern. It reads from the system of record without replacing it. It extracts signal without storing raw transactional data. It treats every committed forward state as a scenario, and scores that scenario against the lattice — internal and external on the same canvas.
This is forecast-as-scenario generalized: the operating forecast (Finance Watch), every capital decision (Capital Watch), every strategic priority (Cadence), every person's commitments (Charge), and the narrative the team is writing (Workstream).
The non-position
Resources refuses to become more than thirty enterprise categories — ERP, EPM, cap-table tooling, file storage, chat platforms, HRIS, performance review, OKR grading, competency matrices. Each of those has $100M–$5B+ incumbents. Palanor wins by reading what they produce.
Where to start
The Resources overview at /resources reads across all five modules. Each module has its own surface; clicking through opens the operational view. Numen produces a sentence per surface that tells you whether the house is in agreement with itself today.