1. Strong proof, broad first promise.
YC, SOC 2, HIPAA, and production usage are useful trust signals. But "Go Live With Any Customer" is broad before it names the pain of brittle desktop automation.
The page has real trust signals. The likely leak is that the sharpest buyer wound appears after the broad promise.
This is a public first pass, not a customer report. The paid audit goes deeper with annotated screenshots and fix order.
One audit slot open today.
YC, SOC 2, HIPAA, and production usage are useful trust signals. But "Go Live With Any Customer" is broad before it names the pain of brittle desktop automation.
For legacy Windows, Citrix, and browser workflows, the problem is not writing scripts once. It is keeping them alive when vendor UIs change.
The full audit should rank which proof belongs above the first scroll, where the maintenance pain should land, and how the demo CTA can feel safer for operations and healthcare buyers.
Flat. The Minicor URL and visitor goal are attached to checkout.