AI Judgment Review

You completed the inspection. Now decide what deserves attention first.

The AI Judgment Review is a private review of your completed or partially completed Audit Kit.

Norm reviews what you found, looks at the prompts, workflows, customer language, and review gaps carrying the most weight, then sends you a focused Loom walkthrough with a priority list.

Not everything needs to be fixed now.

The Review helps you see what does.

$750 fixed-scope review

Private Loom walkthrough. Written priority list. Delivered after your materials are received.

Inspection creates visibility. It does not always create priority.

The Audit Kit may show you several exposed areas.

A prompt that needs limits.

A workflow with no clear reviewer.

Customer language that carries more promise than expected.

A summary people are treating as truth.

A process that became normal before anyone tested it.

A privacy choice that needs a boundary.

Seeing all of that is useful.

But it can also leave you with a new question:

What should I fix first?

That is where the Review begins.

Not with more analysis.

With judgment about order.

Because the wrong first fix can create more activity without reducing the real exposure.

The Review turns your Audit Kit into a priority decision.

Norm reviews the material you submit and looks for the places where AI-supported work is carrying the most consequence.

That includes:

  • Customer trust
  • Sales promises
  • Voice
  • Scope
  • Private information
  • Repeated prompts
  • Workflow ownership
  • Human approval
  • Data conclusions
  • Decisions already becoming habits

The Review does not treat every finding as equal.

Some areas may be safe.

Some may need a tighter prompt.

Some may need a stronger review rule.

Some may need a human closer to the work.

Some may need to stop until the business decides what it is willing to defend.

The work defines the risk.

The risk defines the boundary.

That order keeps the tool from deciding how the business should operate.

What goes under review

Your AI Use Inventory

Where AI is already being used.

Who is using it.

What it touches.

What gets saved, sent, published, or reused.

Your prompts

Which prompts are becoming repeated instructions.

What they allow.

What they omit.

What they may be teaching the business to accept.

Your workflows

Where AI enters the work.

Where human review happens.

Where ownership becomes unclear.

Where a shortcut may already be hardening.

Your customer language

What customers read, trust, buy from, or act on.

What the language implies.

What the business may later have to defend.

Your review gaps

Who owns the final answer.

What gets checked.

What is assumed.

What should never move without human approval.

Your supporting examples

Up to three real examples from the business.

A prompt.

A proposal.

A reply.

A workflow.

A summary.

A checklist.

Something already moving.

What you receive

A private Loom walkthrough

Norm walks through the most important findings in plain language.

You will see what is exposed.

Why it matters.

What is carrying the most consequence.

What does not need attention yet.

A written priority list

You receive a short list organized by order.

Not a long catalog of everything that could be improved.

The goal is to identify:

  • What needs attention first
  • What can wait
  • What should remain human-led
  • What needs a clearer rule
  • What should stop before it becomes harder to unwind

A recommended first correction

You leave knowing where to begin.

That may be:

  • A prompt
  • A workflow
  • A customer-facing message
  • A review standard
  • A privacy boundary
  • A decision rule
  • A human approval point

A recommended next step

The right next step may be:

  • No next step yet
  • A focused Sprint
  • A Buildout
  • A deeper Diagnostic
  • Continued self-correction

The Review does not force a larger engagement.

It tells you what the work is actually asking for.

This is not a general AI consultation.

It is not a live strategy call.

It is not a full audit of the company.

It is not a prompt-writing service.

It is not implementation.

It is not a legal, compliance, security, or technical assessment.

It is not a promise that every issue can be resolved inside one Review.

The Review is a focused judgment pass over the work you already inspected.

Its job is to tell you what deserves attention first.

This is for you if:

You started or completed the AI Judgment Audit Kit.

You found several areas that may need attention.

You are not sure which one carries the most risk.

You want an outside view before changing prompts, workflows, customer language, or review rules.

You want to know whether the issue is small enough to correct yourself.

You want to avoid spending time fixing the visible problem while the real exposure remains.

You are willing to submit real material from the business.

You want judgment, not more information.

This may not be for you if:

You have not started the Audit Kit.

You want a broad AI transformation plan.

You need technical model testing, cybersecurity review, legal advice, or compliance certification.

You want Norm to build the workflows for you inside the Review.

You need a high-stakes company-level classification before a major irreversible decision.

That last situation may belong in the Interpretation Gap™ Diagnostic.

The Review is for prioritizing exposed work.

The Diagnostic is for classifying a larger company problem before the next decision hardens.

How the Review works

Step 1: Complete or begin the Audit Kit

You do not need every page to be perfect.

But you need enough completed material to show where AI is being used and where the uncertainty sits.

Step 2: Submit your materials

Send:

  • Your Audit Kit
  • Your AI Use Inventory
  • Up to three supporting examples

Step 3: Norm reviews the work

Norm reviews the submitted material against the core judgment questions:

What is AI carrying?

What is the business assuming?

What becomes expensive if this is wrong?

Where is human review too far from the consequence?

What should be corrected first?

Step 4: Receive your Review

You receive:

  • A private Loom walkthrough
  • A written priority list
  • A recommended first correction
  • A recommended next step

The Kit shows the exposure. The Review decides the order.

The Audit Kit helps you inspect the work.

The Review helps you decide what deserves attention first.

That distinction matters.

Without inspection, the Review has nothing solid to examine.

Without priority, the Kit can leave you with too many places to start.

Together, they create a cleaner sequence:

Inspect.

Prioritize.

Correct only what carries weight.

What is included

  • Review of one Audit Kit
  • Review of one AI Use Inventory
  • Review of up to three supporting examples
  • One private Loom walkthrough
  • One written priority list
  • One recommended first correction
  • One recommended next step

What is not included

  • A live call
  • Workflow implementation
  • Prompt rewrites across the business
  • Technical testing
  • Legal or compliance advice
  • Unlimited follow-up
  • Ongoing consulting

Investment

$750 fixed-scope review

You are not paying for more information.

You are paying for a judgment pass over work the business may already be depending on.

A weak prompt can be replaced.

A weak promise that customers already expect is harder.

A missing review rule can be written.

A workflow the team already trusts takes more work to unwind.

The Review exists to find the first correction before exposure becomes routine.

One business. One Audit Kit. Up to three supporting examples.

Inspect the work before convenience becomes the standard.

AI can carry work.

It cannot carry consequence.

The Audit Kit helps you see where the business may already be handing over more than it intended.

Start with the tools.

Then the prompts.

Then the workflows.

Then the language customers see.

Then the places where review still depends on memory.

$97 one-time purchase

Self-guided inspection of your tools, prompts, workflows, customer language, and review gaps.