An AI agent inside your org becomes a passive diagnostic. Every question reveals a knowledge gap. Every dead-end reveals an info silo. Every role it reshapes tells you where to invest next.
Most productivity tools answer a single question: did the team get more done? Franky lets you ask a deeper one — what was the team actually trying to learn?
Standard L&D: build one curriculum, push it to everyone, hope it lands. Annual surveys ask people what training they want. Onboarding docs get written once and rot for two years.
Knowledge silos are invisible until someone leaves or a deal breaks.
Install Franky. Watch what your team actually asks — every day, in real workflow, at the moment of friction.
Questions surface the gaps. Dead-ends surface the silos. Together they tell you exactly where to invest enablement, where docs are broken, and which teams are over-stretched.
Depending on which seat you're in, Franky reveals a different layer of how your org actually works.
How a person asks — what depth, where they stall, which words they don't know — reflects their current state: their grasp of the product, of company context, of where the lines run.
Training stops being one curriculum for 138 people. It becomes 138 targeted interventions, one per person, generated from real friction.
Franky's capability is bounded by what context it can access. If it can't answer about a project, that project lives outside your org's connected knowledge. That's not a Franky problem — that's an org problem.
Flip the lens: a person's daily work is either inside the company's "big context" or it isn't. The work that's missing from Franky's reach is the work nobody else can find, audit, or build on.
Product Marketing, Enablement, Product Ops, Revenue Ops, Global Marketing — anyone whose job is cross-team coordination, information assembly, and content production — these roles change first, and most.
This isn't single-tool productivity. It's an organizational rewire. Watching Franky usage by team is watching where AI is already changing how the work flows.
Our own research found something we didn't expect: nobody trains people on Franky. No LMS, no kick-off webinar, no enablement calendar. They learn by watching senior colleagues ask, then asking Franky how to ask Franky.
When the agent lives in the channel where work already happens, every question is visible. New patterns surface from the floor, not the ops team. The medium IS the enablement — and it scales without you doing anything.
Sample of the leadership view we ship to Crescendo Lab's executive team every Monday. Three signal types: training, gaps, on-ramping.
That's not productivity data.
That's
a training plan, an org-design map, and a leading indicator of where AI is reshaping
roles
— all written for you, by your own team.
Most leadership teams know within 30 days whether the signal is worth the investment.
Slack app install + 3 read-only data sources (Drive, GitHub, Asana). One afternoon. No code changes.
Let your team use Franky normally. We deliver the weekly leadership digest from week 2 onward.
At week 4, we walk through your org's training, gap, and on-ramping signals together. You decide what to act on.
30-minute call with the founder. No deck. We'll walk through the Crescendo Lab leadership digest and what your equivalent could look like.