ClarientInvestor relations platform

About Clarient

Why this product exists.

Small listed companies are expected to communicate like large public companies, but most don't have a large investor relations team.

The problem today

Small caps are held to big-company standards.

Continuous disclosure, a steady stream of announcements, and investors who expect answers, with none of the headcount a large investor relations team takes for granted.

Answered one at a time

The same questions arrive by email, phone, and message. Someone writes the same reply again, and the company loses a useful record of what has already been said.

A page that drifts

The public Investor Centre is built once and rarely revisited, while announcements keep landing and questions keep coming.

Tooling for the top end

Dedicated investor-relations software and agencies are built and priced for larger companies, so smaller boards make do with spreadsheets and inboxes.

Why we built it

Management keeps answering the same questions, while the Investor Centre falls behind.

A question like “what does this quarterly mean for cash runway?” arrives by email, LinkedIn message, or phone call. It gets answered once, then the next investor asks the same thing a week later. Clarient exists to fix that: clear, source-backed replies your team can reuse, with management still in control.

Answers use public sources

Answers are based on company information you have already released: filings, reports and announcements.

Investor work stays organised

Questions, follow-ups and team notes sit in one workflow, so the next reply starts from what your team already knows.

Nothing public without approval

Drafts can be prepared for review. Sending or publishing an answer is always a human decision, by your team, on the record.

What we believe

A few principles we don't bend on.

These aren't slogans. Each one shows up as a constraint in the product itself.

Principle

Reply directly, reuse the answer

The investor who asked should get a reply. If the answer is useful more broadly, your team can also make it easy for other investors to find later.

Principle

Plain English, always

Announcements and answers should be readable by any shareholder, not only the analysts who already speak the jargon.

Principle

Built for ASX reality

Continuous disclosure and the announcement cycle are first-class parts of the product, not features bolted on later.

Principle

Conservative by default

Connected services stay unavailable until you switch them on, and the product says what it cannot answer instead of guessing.

Principle

The company stays in control

Management decides what is sent, published, and reused. The platform prepares the work; people approve it.

Principle

Start small, expand when proven

Begin with your public Investor Centre. Add the question inbox and the rest of the day-to-day system once you have seen it work.

See it running on your own announcements.

Give us your ASX ticker and we'll walk you through your Investor Centre, plain-English announcement summaries, and the answer process, built from your company's public record.

About — Clarient