Boardroom Reports
Long-form written decision memos on any strategic question — backed by tens of thousands of simulations, written in the voice of your industry's best operators. The single feature most teams use most often.
What you get
A boardroom report is a board-grade decision memo on a specific strategic question you bring. "Should we raise prices?" "Is this acquisition a yes?" "How do we win the enterprise segment?" — you type the question, Mijoro produces the memo.
Every report is structured like a McKinsey field memo: executive take at the top, supporting analysis in the middle, recommended action plan at the bottom with owners and deadlines. Every claim is grounded in your real data. The math behind every recommendation is the result of up to forty thousand Monte Carlo simulations against your real numbers — not a guess based on what the model has seen elsewhere.
When to use it
A boardroom report is the right artifact when you have one specific question and want a single decisive answer with the work shown. Use it for:
- Major pricing decisions (raises, restructures, segmentation changes)
- Acquisition and partnership evaluations
- Hiring plans and headcount allocations
- Market entry decisions and geographic expansion
- Competitive response strategies after a competitor's move
- Product launch go / no-go calls
- Funding round prep and investor narrative work
For quick, conversational questions ("how is AR aging trending?" "summarize last week's competitor moves") — use the CMO Advisor or Mijoro Assist chat. For a one-time strategic profile of your business — that's the dossier, auto-generated from your intake. For a specific strategic decision that needs a full written analysis with the math behind it — that's what boardroom reports exist for.
How to generate one
Type the question
Plain English. The same way you'd ask a senior advisor. "Should we raise prices 20%?" — not "Pricing analysis Q3 deliverable."
Pick the depth
Fast read for the call you're walking into in an hour. Standard memo for the next board meeting. Detailed write-up for the deal team. Full doctrine for the playbook your team works from for months.
Mijoro runs the pipeline
A nine-stage research and synthesis pipeline fires in parallel — subject profiling, web research across your competitive landscape, evidence synthesis from your uploaded data, up to forty thousand Monte Carlo simulations of the decision, game-theory modeling of competitor responses, outline generation, batched section writing, executive summary composition.
You read the verdict
The executive take lands first — the single decisive answer in two sentences. Then the supporting analysis. Then the action plan, with named owners, timelines, success metrics, and the specific signal that would tell you to stop.
You ship it
Export to PDF in any of ten branded themes. Email directly to your board or deal team. Generate a token-protected public share link. The hash is signed — nobody can edit the document after the fact and pretend they didn't.
Every recommendation in every boardroom report is the answer to tens of thousands of simulations of your decision. The math isn't surfaced as raw numbers — but it's there. If you'd raise prices on the strength of one consultant's opinion, raising them on the strength of tens of thousands of simulations is a much better bet.
Choosing the right depth
Match the report depth to the seriousness of the decision. Quick reads are perfect for tactical questions. Full doctrines are the right call for decisions you'll live with for a year.
- The fast read — three to five minutes to write, five to ten minutes to read. For the call you're walking into in an hour.
- The standard memo — six to ten minutes to write, fifteen to read. For the next board meeting or leadership sync.
- The detailed write-up — twelve to twenty minutes to write, thirty-plus to read. For the deal team, the investor diligence, the consultant you would have hired instead.
- The full doctrine — twenty to forty minutes to write, an afternoon to absorb. For the playbook your team works from for months.
Sharing & exporting
Every boardroom report can be exported as a themed PDF in your brand colors, emailed directly to a recipient list from inside the platform, or shared as a token-protected public link with an expiry date and an optional view-count cap. Recipients are recorded; access is revocable in one click. The cryptographic signature on every export means you can prove later that nothing was edited after the fact.