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What Senserity does

An overview of what Senserity is, what it checks, and what it produces.

Senserity is a UK risk intelligence platform. You give it a list of companies (suppliers, customers, partners, acquisition targets) and it continuously monitors them across 25 or more public data sources, running hundreds of automated tests to surface anything worth your attention.

What it monitors

Senserity pulls data from UK public sources including Companies House, the Insolvency Service, the London Gazette, UK sanctions lists, the Charity Commission, the Health and Safety Executive, the Environment Agency, the Information Commissioner's Office, the National Archives case law database, and a number of commercial intelligence feeds covering credit risk and adverse media.

Most of that data is refreshed automatically on a schedule. Some enrichments, such as Creditsafe credit reports and Cyber Essentials certificate lookups, use credits and run on demand or at configurable intervals.

What it produces

For each company on your watchlist, Senserity produces:

An overall risk score. A number from 0 to 100, where lower is better. This is the headline output: a single number that reflects everything the platform found. See Understanding your risk grade for how it's calculated.

A risk grade. The score maps to a letter: A (lowest risk, 0–20), B (21–40), C (41–60), D (61–80), E (highest risk, 81–100). The grade is the fastest way to compare companies at a glance.

Category scores. The overall score is the weighted average of nine category scores, each covering a different area of risk: financial health, governance, compliance, and so on. See The nine risk categories for the full list.

Red flags. Critical and high-severity findings are surfaced as red flags on the company's summary page. These are the things the platform thinks you should look at first.

Alerts. When something significant changes (a new director appointment, a CCJ, a score drop, a sanctions match) Senserity generates an alert. Alerts appear in the top bar and on the Alerts page.

AI summary. A plain-English paragraph describing what the company does, how it's scoring, and what the most notable findings are. Generated by a language model from the enriched data.

PDF reports. On request, you can generate a formatted PDF suitable for sharing with colleagues or keeping for your audit trail. Six report types are available: Supplier Due Diligence, Customer Credit, Acquisition Target, Competitor Analysis, Partner Assessment, and Self-Assessment.

What it does not do

Senserity does not guarantee the completeness of UK public data. Companies House data is filed by companies themselves; filing quality varies. The platform flags anomalies and gaps (for example, overdue accounts or a missing confirmation statement) but it cannot create information that was never filed.

Senserity does not make decisions for you. It surfaces evidence and risk signals. Whether a given supplier relationship is acceptable is a judgement your organisation makes using that evidence.

Senserity is not a substitute for legal or financial advice. For material decisions such as mergers, acquisitions, or lending, the platform's output is a starting point, not a conclusion.

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