A council for your industry.
Each workspace selects an industry. The council for that industry critiques every meeting from the angles that matter to it — the standards, the regulators, the liabilities, the trades.
How councils work
An industry council is a panel of analyst roles. When you submit a question or a meeting transcript, the council deliberates: each role examines the material from its own vantage — what it would notice, what would alarm it, what it would push back on — and a senior arbitrator synthesizes the panel into a single intelligence report. The roles are real personas with prompted expertise and named obligations, not placeholder labels. A compliance partner reads a contract differently than a litigator; an internal auditor hears a status update differently than a CFO. Felarity makes that difference legible on every meeting you run.
Selecting your industry at workspace creation does three things: it loads the appropriate council, it tunes the contradiction detector for the vocabulary and risk surface of that sector, and it shapes the post-session report so the findings land in language your team already uses.
The 30 industries
The list below is the current panel catalog. Cards with a "Read more" link have a dedicated industry page with worked examples, regulatory framing, and sample council output.
Legal
Privilege, conflicts, retention obligations, and the specific words that change the legal posture of a meeting.
Read more →Healthcare
Standard of care, PHI handling, clinical contradictions, and informed-consent language.
Read more →Pharma
Off-label promotion risk, trial-protocol consistency, adverse-event signaling, and FDA-facing language.
Read more →Construction
Change-order capture, schedule slippage, OSHA-relevant statements, and subcontractor commitments.
Finance
Forecast drift, control failures, material weaknesses, and the gap between stated assumptions and forward guidance.
Read more →Banking
Concentration risk, KYC red flags, underwriting exceptions, and regulator-facing posture on examinations.
Insurance
Reserving assumptions, claim-handling consistency, coverage-trigger language, and treaty exposure.
Asset Management
Mandate adherence, marketing-rule compliance, and the gap between stated thesis and actual positioning.
Technology
Roadmap commitments, architectural drift, and the difference between what was promised and what was scoped.
SaaS
Renewal risk signals, scope creep on enterprise deals, and the SLA language that gets quietly agreed to.
Cybersecurity
Breach-notification posture, control coverage gaps, and the framing of "known issues" in vendor calls.
Government
FOIA exposure, records-retention obligations, and the specific commitments made on the public record.
Read more →Federal Agencies
Acquisition-rule language, audit trail completeness, and the contradictions across briefings to different oversight bodies.
Defense
Controlled unclassified information handling, milestone commitments, and prime-sub coordination on classified programs.
Education
Title IX exposure, FERPA boundaries, and the public-meeting language that becomes the official record.
Higher Education
Tenure proceedings, research-conduct allegations, accreditation language, and Title IX matters at scale.
Energy
NERC/FERC posture, outage communications, and the gap between operational reality and external-facing statements.
Oil & Gas
Reserve estimates, incident-reporting language, and operator-partner contradictions on JV calls.
Utilities
Rate-filing consistency, storm-response commitments, and the language used in front of public utility commissions.
Manufacturing
CAPA commitments, supplier accountability, and the gap between ship dates promised and capacity actually available.
Logistics
Service-level commitments, lane-pricing changes, and the difference between quoted transit and actual performance.
Aerospace
Configuration management, FAA-relevant statements, and the trace between engineering decisions and certification evidence.
Consulting
Scope-of-work creep, independence threats, and the deliverable commitments made in steering committee meetings.
Accounting
PCAOB-relevant language, going-concern signals, and contradictions between management representations and supporting evidence.
Media
Sourcing standards, correction obligations, and the editorial commitments made in newsroom and source meetings.
Marketing
Substantiation for claims, channel-mix commitments, and the gap between agency promises and measured performance.
Nonprofit
Grant-restriction adherence, board-level commitments, and donor-facing statements that bind future operations.
Hospitality
Service-recovery commitments, brand-standard exceptions, and franchise-franchisor contradictions on the call.
Retail
Markdown commitments, vendor-allowance language, and the gap between buy plans and floor-set execution.
Real Estate
Pro forma assumptions, broker representations, and the lease-language commitments that get casually agreed to in tour walk-throughs.
Custom councils
Enterprise customers can commission a workspace-specific council. We build named personas matched to your actual org chart — your general counsel, your head of compliance, your CFO, your incident commander — and tune the contradiction detector to your internal vocabulary, your policy library, and your regulator. The council still arbitrates through the same pipeline; the difference is that the analysts speak with the obligations and instincts of the seats they hold at your company.
Book a working session at felarity.com/demo or email hello@felarity.com.
Don't see your industry? Most adjacent sectors fold cleanly into one of the panels above, and we add new councils on customer request. Tell us what you need.