Standard Terminal builds the infrastructure layer between the physical world and the machines that reason about it. The supply chain — its commodities, its suppliers, its contractors, its documents, its invoices — is the most consequential and least structured dataset in the American economy. We are changing that. One verified entity at a time. One provenanced record at a time. One recovered dollar at a time.
For decades, access to quality information infrastructure was rationed by budget. Enterprise platforms were built for enterprise clients. Every operator below that threshold navigated the same fragmented landscape — disconnected systems, unverifiable sources, no organizing standard, and no leverage when vendors inflated prices.
Artificial intelligence accelerated every dimension of that problem. AI systems answer questions with authority. The confidence is real. The provenance behind it frequently is not. When AI cannot find your business in structured data, it either invents you or ignores you. When AI cannot verify your pricing against a standard, overcharges compound undetected. When your documents are unstructured, institutional knowledge walks out the door.
Standard Terminal was built for this moment. Not to compete with the frontier — but to establish the layer beneath it. Structured. Verifiable. Permanent.
The window to be early is open.
The businesses that get found by AI systems in 2026 are not the ones that spent the most on marketing. They are the ones that declared themselves into the graph first. The operators who catch overcharges are not the ones with the biggest accounting teams — they are the ones running the right tools against the right standard. Standard Terminal gives every operator access to the same intelligence layer that used to be reserved for enterprises with eight-figure data budgets.