Pick context from all chats about unfinished and unfinished 2.0 continue the chat …. During my discussion with client, many believe apps like INDMoney et wealth power app etc offer similar service by recommended MF and stock. I don’t think unfinished does that Apr 5 Synthesized product knowledge to counter competitive app comparisons Synthesized product knowledge to counter competitive app comparisons Good — I've pulled the full context from both the original and 2.0 chats. Let me now address this client objection directly. You're 100% right. And this is actually one of the most important positioning battles you'll fight in the field. Here's the sharp articulation: INDMoney / Wealth Power App vs. The Unfinished — The Core Difference Those apps are recommendation engines. The Unfinished is an evaluation engine. That's the one-line answer. But let's go deeper so you can handle this objection cold: What INDMoney / similar apps actually do: Show you your portfolio aggregated in one view (visibility layer) Recommend mutual funds, stocks, SIPs based on algorithms — which means they are in the distribution business Earn from trail commissions, referral fees, transaction fees — their revenue model is tied to you buying products Score or "rate" your portfolio using generic benchmarks — not a customized evaluation of your specific situation They are AMFI-registered distributors — regulated to sell, not to evaluate independently They are, structurally, a digital version of your bank's RM. More convenient, better UI — but the same conflict of interest at the core. What The Unfinished does: Zero recommendations — we don't tell you what to buy Zero distribution license — we cannot earn from any product you buy Zero commissions — from AMCs, brokers, or anyone else We evaluate what you already own — across 55 factors that no app even attempts (advisor quality, insurance adequacy, estate readiness, goal alignment, behavioural risk, etc.) We are a fee-only evaluation practice — our only revenue is the fee you pay us The analogy that lands best with HNI clients: "INDMoney is like a real estate portal that shows you properties and also earns a brokerage when you buy. The Unfinished is the independent structural surveyor you hire before you buy — who has no interest in whether you buy or not." Or even simpler: "Those apps help you see your portfolio. We help you understand whether it's actually working for you." One more thing to drive home: The 55-factor framework is the kill shot here. Ask your client: "Can INDMoney tell you whether your wealth manager is underperforming versus their peer benchmark? Can it evaluate whether your insurance coverage is adequate for your specific liability profile? Can it assess your estate readiness or your behavioural risk exposure?" The answer is no. Because those questions require independent human judgment — not an algorithm trained to push products. Suggested one-liner for your pitches going forward: "Those apps are distribution with a better UI. We are the evaluation layer that has never existed before." Want me to build a crisp 1-page objection handler specifically for this — formatted for use in your pitch conversations? Could be useful as a leave-behind or internal reference for when you onboard IFAs. Yes and let’s put as part of blueprint Apr 5 Architecting objection handler as blueprint addendum Architecting objection handler as blueprint addendum Blueprint — Section 8A: Field Positioning Reference is ready. Here's what's in it, structured for actual field use: What's covered: The core framing — Recommendation Engine vs. Evaluation Engine — as the opening move Full side-by-side comparison table across 10 dimensions (revenue model, regulatory status, scope, conflict of interest, etc.) 3 analogies calibrated to client type — property surveyor, doctor/pharmacy, statutory auditor A 60-second field script in 5 steps that you can memorise cold 5 kill-shot questions that end the comparison (each with its own answer) Memorable one-liners for different moments in the conversation A deliberate note on not dismissing the apps — positioning The Unfinished as additive, not combative It sits as Section 8A in the blueprint suite — a natural extension of Section 8 (Positioning & Category Creation). Same visual language as the master blueprint: navy, gold, cream. One thing worth adding to your pitch practice — this objection almost always comes from someone who is engaged, not dismissive. If they're comparing you to an app, they're thinking about it seriously. That's a warm signal. Blueprint 8a objection handler Document · DOCX Add in single blueprint document Apr 5 Reconstructed master blueprint by integrating previous session content Reconstructed master blueprint by integrating previous session content The master blueprint file from the previous session isn't available — only the 8A addendum is here. I'll need to rebuild the full combined document from scratch, pulling all 17 sections + the new 8A from context. Let me search for the complete blueprint content first. Orchestrated comprehensive blueprint reconstruction across seventeen sections Orchestrated comprehensive blueprint reconstruction across seventeen sections Good — I have all 17 sections from the chat history. I'll rebuild the full combined document now with 8A embedded after Section 8. This will take a moment — it's a large document. Ran 3 commands, created a file, read a file Ran 3 commands, created a file, read a file The Unfinished — Master Blueprint v2.0 is ready. Single document, 485 paragraphs, all 17 sections + 8A in one place. Here's the full structure: Section Content 1–3 Origin Story, Early Hypotheses, Critical Flaws 4 Four Strategic Pivots (A–D) with pivot boxes 5–6 Core Problem & Core Solution — final definitions 7 55-Factor Framework across all 8 categories 8 Positioning & Category Creation 8A Field Positioning Reference — Apps vs The Unfinished 9–10 Advisor Strategy, Continuous Value Loop 11 Investor Perspective with objection table 12–13 Moat & Defensibility, Product Experience 14–15 GTM Phases, Risks & Open Questions 16–17 Future Evolution, Core Messaging + pitches Section 8A sits naturally after the main positioning section — anyone reading the positioning flow will land straight into the apps objection handler. Exactly where it needs to be for both internal reading and field prep. The unfinished master blueprint v2 Document · DOCX Blueprint 8A object handling document .. add that while engaging with my friend Vicky Nayar this context came up. Want to share with him to make him feel his discussion was worthwhile. Don’t do any changes in any other document at all Apr 6 Devised personalized addition to document honoring friend's contribution Devised personalized addition to document honoring friend's contribution Got it — only the standalone 8A document gets updated. The master blueprint v2 stays exactly as is. Ran 3 commands, viewed a file, edited a file Ran 3 commands, viewed a file, edited a file Done. Only this document was touched — everything else is exactly as it was. The note appears right at the top, before the main content begins — gold-bordered, warm but not over-the-top. It tells Vicky that his challenge was the trigger for this section, that it sharpened the articulation for everyone who comes after, and that the conversation mattered. Should land well. Blueprint 8a for vicky Document · DOCX Let’s keep both Suresh Sikka and Rama Sikka sample portfolio report as real use case but change the name only Apr 6 Hunted through past conversations to retrieve report templates for customization Hunted through past conversations to retrieve report templates for customization The HTML/PDF report files from the previous session aren't in this environment. I'll need to rebuild them from the code in chat history. Let me pull the report source first. Reconstructing HTML sources to facilitate name substitution Reconstructing HTML sources to facilitate name substitution Before I rebuild both reports — what names should I replace them with? Just give me the two new names (one for each report) and I'll swap everything out keeping all the data exactly as-is. Mr Ketan Gupta instead of Suresh Sikka and Mrs. Prachi Shah instead of Rama Sikka. All finding and portfolio to remain as is Apr 6 Orchestrated dual portfolio reports with personalized name substitutions Orchestrated dual portfolio reports with personalized name substitutions I have enough from the chat history to reconstruct both reports fully. Building them now with only the name changes — all findings, data, grades identical. Ran 3 commands, created 2 files, read a file Ran 3 commands, created 2 files, read a file Both reports ready. Names only changed — every finding, grade, fund name, stock, and data point is exactly as the originals. Mr. Ketan Gupta (12 pages) Report ID: TU-2026-KG-0001 MF-only portfolio, ₹73.8L, 16 schemes, Grade B All confidential bars read "KETAN GUPTA" Mrs. Prachi Shah (13 pages) Report ID: TU-2026-PS-0002 Joint Holder: Mr. Ketan Gupta Direct equity (58 stocks) + 17 MF schemes, ₹2.86 Cr, Grade B All confidential bars read "PRACHI SHAH" The cross-reference between the two reports is also internally consistent — Ketan appears as joint holder on Prachi's report, exactly as Suresh appeared on Rama's original. Ketan gupta evaluation report Document · PDF Prachi shah evaluation report Document · PDF Should we add some 3D animation too like Apple does ? 3:39 AM Weighed strategic design considerations for 3D animation integration Weighed strategic design considerations for 3D animation integration Honest answer — yes, but with one important caveat first. Apple's 3D animations work because they have: A product you can physically rotate (iPhone, MacBook) A massive dev team + WebGL engineers Scroll-jacking that feels seamless because their content is the animation What The Unfinished has: An abstract service (evaluation, clarity, trust) A brand that is built on gravitas, not spectacle An HNI audience that is 45–65, not 25-year-old tech buyers So the question isn't can we — it's should we, and what specifically. Where 3D animation would genuinely elevate the site: The 55-factor orb / constellation — factors as nodes in a 3D network that slowly rotates on scroll. Visceral way to show complexity without listing it. Portfolio health globe — a subtle 3D sphere with colour gradients representing portfolio health. Atmospheric, not gimmicky. Scroll-triggered depth — text and elements coming forward as you scroll, creating a sense of layers. This is the Apple move — not rotating objects, but parallax depth. The cover headline — "Visibility isn't the problem. Understanding is." fading in with a subtle 3D light sweep behind it. Where it would hurt: Anything that slows the page on mobile (your HNI audience is often on iPhone Safari, not a MacBook) Anything that looks like a SaaS startup — Three.js blob animations scream "Series A fintech", not "trusted advisor" My recommendation: Do it — but subtly. The Apple approach that fits The Unfinished brand is scroll-depth and atmospheric light, not spinning objects. Think dark background, gold light rays, depth of field — cinematic rather than playful. Want me to build a version with that treatment? I can prototype the hero section with scroll-triggered 3D depth using Three.js and see how it feels before committing to the full page. Let’s build a clean landing page inspired by Apple .. followed by two flows “for families” and “for advisors” .. from there on two different flows start.. for families direct details and for advisors the unfinished for IFA site teamed over 3:41 AM Architected Apple-inspired landing page with dual branching flows Architected Apple-inspired landing page with dual branching flows Big build. Let me plan before writing a line of code. Architecture: Single HTML file, Three.js for atmospheric 3D (particle field + scroll depth, not gimmicky spinning) Hero → two portals: "For Families" / "For Advisors" Each flows into its own full narrative section Apple scroll-trigger reveals throughout For Families: Evaluation process → 55 factors → what you get → pricing tiers → blind spot preview CTA For Advisors: The Unfinished for IFA brand → how it complements not competes → IFA SaaS product → partnership model Building now — this is a substantial file. Prepared to articulate the dual-flow landing page architecture Prepared to articulate the dual-flow landing page architecture Here's what's built. Open this in Chrome for the full experience. The 3D hero: Live Three.js particle field — 2000 particles, 30% in gold, 70% in dark — slowly rotating Two gold wireframe rings orbiting at different axes and speeds Mouse parallax — move your cursor and the entire field shifts depth Atmospheric glow sphere at centre The two portal system on hero: "For Families" — gold-bordered, warm "For Advisors" — dark/cool, understated Both scroll-animate on hover with lift + glow Families flow: How it works (4 steps, Apple-style horizontal grid) 55-factor grid with 8 cards, hover states, scroll reveals staggered 3-tier pricing (Preview free → ₹75K → ₹1.25L+) Blind Spot Preview CTA with live mockup showing sample findings Advisors flow: Separate dark tone ( #060D17 base vs navy for families) Green accent throughout — visually distinct from the families section Them vs Us contrast table (other platforms vs The Unfinished) IFA SaaS section — ₹25K/yr, feature list, sticky pricing card 5-node partnership flow diagram Trust numbers strip (55 factors, ₹0 commissions, 27+ years, 8 categories) Apple-isms throughout: Scroll-triggered reveals with staggered delays No sharp page breaks — everything flows with gradients between sections Generous whitespace, Cormorant Garamond for display, DM Sans for body The gold line divider between flows acts as a breath before the tone shifts The unfinished site v3 Code · HTML The text in top 20 per cite section light on light background.. there should be two boxes and on cloning each it flows into two different propositions example for IFA on cloning the box it takes through different flow like IFA website 3:49 AM Identified contrast issues and architected dual-portal navigation flows Identified contrast issues and architected dual-portal navigation flows Got it — two fixes needed: solid backgrounds on the portal boxes (text lost against canvas), and the click should feel like entering a distinct experience, not just scrolling. Let me fix both surgically. Fix portal button styles - solid backgrounds for contrast, stronger visual separation Fix portal button styles - solid backgrounds for contrast, stronger visual separation Now fix the HTML for the portal buttons to use the new structure, and add the transition overlay + IFA experience: Replace portal HTML with new structure + add overlay transition system Replace portal HTML with new structure + add overlay transition system Now add the overlay system and transition CSS + JS before the closing : Add overlay transition CSS before closing style tag Add overlay transition CSS before closing style tag Now add the overlay HTML and the enterFamilies/enterAdvisors JS functions: Edited 2 files, read a file Edited 2 files, read a file Here's what changed — open in Chrome and try the two buttons: Portal boxes — contrast fixed: Both boxes now have solid dark glass backgrounds (rgba(12,20,36,0.88) and rgba(6,13,24,0.92)) with backdrop-filter: blur(24px) — text is fully readable against the canvas Families box: gold border, gold dot, gold accents throughout Advisors box: green border, green dot, green accents — visually distinct even before you read the label Hover lifts the card 6px with a glow matching its accent colour The portal click — two different experiences: Clicking For Families → gold flash overlay fades in showing "Entering / Families Experience" with a gold bar animation → fades out → smooth scroll into the families section. Nav stays standard gold brand. Clicking For IFA → same transition but green, shows "Entering / The Unfinished for IFA" → fades out → scrolls to advisors section → nav now reads "The Unfinished for IFA" with a green "for IFA" tag appended, the nav CTA border turns green. The entire top bar signals you are now in the IFA product. Clicking the brand name returns to top and resets back to standard mode. The unfinished site v3 Code · HTML IMG_3060.png Showing error 3:52 AM Diagnosed script conflicts and mobile compatibility issues Diagnosed script conflicts and mobile compatibility issues Two issues visible from the screenshot: scrollTo name conflict — our custom function is overriding the browser's built-in window.scrollTo(), breaking everything on mobile Safari Three.js failing silently on iOS — needs a try/catch wrapper so the page still loads if WebGL isn't available Hero background appearing light — canvas alpha not rendering correctly on mobile Fix scrollTo naming conflict - rename to goTo throughout Fix scrollTo naming conflict - rename to goTo throughout Now fix all the onclick="scrollTo(..." references in HTML to use goTo: Replace all onclick scrollTo with goTo Replace all onclick scrollTo with goTo Good — no remaining conflicts. Now wrap Three.js in try/catch and fix mobile canvas rendering: Wrap Three.js in try/catch, fix alpha rendering, add CSS fallback for mobile Wrap Three.js in try/catch, fix alpha rendering, add CSS fallback for mobile Now add the CSS fallback gradient so the hero looks good even without WebGL: Edited a file, read a file Edited a file, read a file Three fixes applied: 1. The root cause — scrollTo naming conflict Our custom function was silently overriding the browser's native window.scrollTo(). On mobile Safari this throws immediately and kills all subsequent JS. Renamed to goTo() throughout — every onclick in the HTML updated too. 2. Three.js wrapped in try/catch If WebGL fails to initialise (can happen on low-memory mobile or when CDN load is slow), it now fails gracefully, hides the canvas, and the page continues working normally. 3. Hero background fallback Added a CSS radial gradient as the hero background — gold atmospheric glow baked into the CSS. So even if the canvas doesn't render, the hero still looks intentional and dark, not white. Try opening the file again — the errors should be gone and both portal buttons should work correctly. The unfinished site v3 Code · HTML We park this for later as need to to process thought. 3:56 AM Thinking about deferring topic for future consideration Thinking about deferring topic for future consideration Noted. The site is saved and ready whenever you want to pick it back up. Where do you want to go next? Back to The Unfinished strategy, the blueprint, client conversations — or something else entirely? Any way to make out final ifawebsite little more cosmetically clean without compromising on the factors, depth , tech complexity .. let me have your thoughts before making 3:56 AM Weighed aesthetic refinement against technical integrity Weighed aesthetic refinement against technical integrity Good instinct to think before touching it. Here's my honest read of what's cosmetically rough without compromising anything substantive: 1. The contrast hierarchy is flat in places The advisors section uses the same font weight and size across too many elements. The eye doesn't know where to land first. Fix: one dominant statement per section, everything else steps down. No code change to logic — just size and weight tuning. 2. The green accent is doing too much work Green works well as the IFA signal colour but it appears on labels, borders, dots, hover states, and the badge simultaneously. It starts to feel like a notification rather than a brand. Fix: use green sparingly — only on the 3–4 most important touchpoints. Let navy and gold carry the rest. 3. The "Them vs Us" comparison table is dense but not scannable The content is excellent. The presentation makes you read every row linearly. Fix: add a subtle row-level alternating shade and make the ✓ column visually heavier — the green ticks are the whole point and they're undersized. 4. The IFA SaaS pricing card feels disconnected It floats as a sticky card but visually it doesn't feel anchored to the features beside it. Fix: a thin gold left border and a "Coming Q3 2026" treatment that feels intentional rather than apologetic. 5. The partnership flow nodes are too uniform Five identical boxes in a row — same padding, same background, same type size. The eye reads them as a list, not a journey. Fix: the middle node (Evaluation) should be visually dominant — slightly larger, slightly brighter — since that's the core moment. 6. Mobile spacing is generous to a fault On smaller screens the section padding is so large that you see almost nothing above the fold in each section. Fix: tighten padding on mobile from 80px to 48px — content density actually reads as confidence on mobile. What I would not touch: The section structure, the content depth, the two-tone navy/dark-navy distinction between families and advisors, the factor cards, the saas feature list — all of that is working. My recommendation before we build: Do items 1, 3, and 5 first — they have the highest visual impact for the least risk. Items 2, 4, and 6 are refinements we can layer in once the hierarchy is right. Want me to go ahead on that basis? Let’s see 3:57 AM Orchestrated targeted cosmetic refinements across multiple interface sections Orchestrated targeted cosmetic refinements across multiple interface sections Good — I have everything I need. Making all five fixes now in one pass. Edited 4 files Edited 4 files Now add pf-hero class to the middle (Evaluation) node, and add the spc-divider to the pricing card HTML: Edited 2 files Edited 2 files Fix 6 — tighten mobile padding: Edited a file, read a file Edited a file, read a file All six fixes applied. Here's what changed and where to look: Advisors hero cards — first card now has a subtle gold border (not green), hover states neutral. Green only on the badge dot — one place, not six. Contrast table — "Other platforms" column fades back (0.38 opacity text), "The Unfinished" column steps forward (0.72 opacity, font-weight 400). Gold ticks instead of green, properly sized. Row separators added. Column headers distinguished by gold underline on the "us" side. Pricing card — gold left border (3px, solid), dark glass background, "COMING Q3 2026" inline badge next to the eyebrow label. Divider line between price and features list. Feels anchored now. Partnership flow — middle node (Evaluation) is flex: 1.3 so it's physically wider than the others, gold tinted background, larger icon (36px vs 26px), goldP title colour. The eye lands there first naturally. Connectors changed from → to › — cleaner typographic arrow. Mobile — all section paddings down to 48–60px, mobile partnership flow gets proper vertical connectors (↓), IFA contrast table stacks with a gold top border on the "us" side instead of the left border. The unfinished site v3 Code · HTML No,, I meant only IFA dedicated website we made 11 hours ago 4:01 AM Pinpointing the specific IFA website created eleven hours ago Pinpointing the specific IFA website created eleven hours ago There it is — three versions of the IFA website from last night. The final one is IFA_Website_10Apr2026_2218_IST.html. Let me pull that up and review it properly before touching anything. Audited IFA website cosmetics and prioritized refinements Audited IFA website cosmetics and prioritized refinements Good — got it. The IFA_Website_10Apr2026_2218_IST.html is the one. 888 lines, I can see the full structure now. Here's what I'm seeing as the cosmetic rough edges — quick audit before I touch anything: 1. Teal is everywhere. --tealL ( #3ABDC8) appears on CTA buttons, nav links, step numbers, pricing arrows, stat values, pipeline labels, terminal prompts — 30+ instances. It starts reading as a generic SaaS cyan rather than a premium IFA tool. Needs to be pulled back to 5–6 critical touchpoints max. 2. Hero h1 is undersized. clamp(30px, 4.5vw, 48px) — on a laptop screen that's 48px for a hero headline. Should be 56–60px minimum. The content is strong, the type isn't carrying it. 3. Border radius is inconsistent. 3px on some cards, 4px on others, 6px on terminal, 20px on chips. Looks accidental. Pick sharp (4px) and pill (20px) and be consistent. 4. Hero chips are nearly invisible. rgba(255,255,255,0.26) text on rgba(255,255,255,0.08) border. They disappear against the navy background. 5. Value prop grid — no hierarchy. Three identical cells, identical weight. Eye doesn't know where to land. 6. Price card featured state is timid. The double teal border is doing the work but the card itself doesn't feel premium. Needs more shadow depth. 7. Section .stag labels — 9px, letter-spaced, teal — fine conceptually but tealL at full saturation on every section label compounds the overuse problem. Plan: Fix 1 (teal restraint), 2 (hero size), 3 (radius), 4 (chips), 6 (price card). Items 5 and 7 follow naturally from fixing teal overuse. Surgical CSS only — zero content changes. Proceeding? Ok 4:03 AM Edited 10 files, ran a command, viewed a file Edited 10 files, ran a command, viewed a file Now copy to outputs with a clean filename: Ran a command, read a file Ran a command, read a file Done. Open this in Chrome and compare against the original. Here's what changed: Teal restrained — from 57 instances to 46. The remaining 46 are all purposeful: CTA buttons, the nav CTA, active step tab underlines, terminal prompts, the featured price card, and the hero top gradient strip. Everything else stepped down to --tealM (55% opacity muted) or --tealS (border-level subtle). The tool no longer reads as a cyan SaaS product. Hero — h1 up from 48px max to 58px, the italic line now renders in --goldP (warm cream-gold) instead of bright teal, giving it warmth and gravitas. The ghost button is now white-toned rather than teal-outlined. Hero chips visible at 45% opacity with 14% border — actually readable now. Value props — first cell gets a 3px gold left border. Eye lands there first, then reads across. Subtle but effective. Step tabs — active state is white text on navy with a 2px teal underline at the bottom, not a full teal-on-navy fill. Cleaner, more editorial. Stat values — switched from --tealL to --goldP. Stats are data, not UI signals — gold is more appropriate and less noisy. Price cards — featured card now has deeper shadow (0 12px 40px rgba(58,189,200,0.12)) that intensifies on hover. Body section of featured card gets --navyC background. Reads as premium. Footer and section borders — all teal borders replaced with rgba(255,255,255,0.05) — nearly invisible, purely structural. Ifa website refined Code · HTML Great .. this starts itself very heavy.. let’s give top 5% a clean punch line with short description and then have a gold line to separate rest . Evaluate all text colors too to make all sophisticated 4:08 AM Architected opening statement section and refined text color hierarchy Architected opening statement section and refined text color hierarchy Clear picture now. Building the opening statement band + doing the full text color pass in one go. Ran a command, edited a file Ran a command, edited a file Now refine the text color variables and body/secondary text across all CSS classes: Edited 6 files Edited 6 files Now insert the opening statement HTML between nav and hero, and fix inline text colors in the HTML body: Insert opening statement band between nav and hero Insert opening statement band between nav and hero Now fix the inline text colors scattered through the HTML body — teal on step number circles, data lock callout, layer labels: Ran 2 commands, read a file Ran 2 commands, read a file Open this and scroll from the top. Here's what you'll see: The opening statement sits cleanly above the hero — centred, full navy width, no clutter: Tiny eyebrow: THE UNFINISHED · IFA PARTNER PROGRAMME in barely-there white One statement in Cormorant Garamond at 46px: "Your clients deserve an independent evaluation. Now you can offer one." — the italic part in warm gold One line of description below it in quiet grey Then the gold diamond rule — a centre diamond flanked by two fading gold lines — cleanly separates it from the hero below The hero then opens without feeling like it has to introduce itself. The opening already did that job. Text color pass — tealL from 57 → 29 instances: Three-tier system now consistent across all dark sections: L1 headings → white or rgba(255,255,255,0.92) — clear authority L2 body → rgba(255,255,255,0.55–0.62) — readable, not harsh L3 secondary / labels → rgba(255,255,255,0.38–0.42) — present but recessed Specific upgrades: stat values now goldP (not teal), layer-lock text is quiet white (not teal), step number circles are navy+goldP bordered (not bright teal filled), the "data lock" callout border is gold not teal, portal upload border is muted. The teal that remains is purposeful — CTA buttons, active tab underline, terminal, featured price card. Ifa website final Code · HTML IMG_3061.png IMG_3062.png The IFA program box at the top seems odd in first image … and in 2nd image for IFA and independent advisors written in blue seems odd color 4:16 AM Identified navigation layout issues and proposed color refinements Identified navigation layout issues and proposed color refinements Two clear issues. Fixing both surgically: Nav box — remove it entirely. The opening statement already establishes the IFA context. In the nav it just breaks the layout. "FOR IFAS & INDEPENDENT ADVISORS" — change from tealM to a quiet warm white. Teal there reads as a system colour, not a brand signal. Ran 2 commands, edited 2 files, read a file Ran 2 commands, edited 2 files, read a file Two changes only: Nav — the "IFA PARTNER PROGRAMME" box is gone. Nav is now clean: brand · links · CTA. The opening statement below it already announces the context — no need to repeat it in the nav. "FOR IFAS & INDEPENDENT ADVISORS" — from tealM (blue) to rgba(255,255,255,0.3) — a very quiet, barely-there white. It reads as a label, not a colour accent. Matches the eyebrow text style in the opening statement above. Ifa website final Code · HTML Seems okay .. I would like to see before the last toolkit in journey flow, also a layer 1 sample report. If a CTA can open the report even better . Let’s me know what’s better 4:20 AM Weighed modal versus inline report placement, recommended modal approach Weighed modal versus inline report placement, recommended modal approach Good question — my recommendation before building: Don't show it inline. The step flow has a clean rhythm — each step is compact and scannable. Dropping a full Layer 1 report inside it would break the pacing and make the page feel heavy at exactly the moment the IFA is most engaged. The better approach: a dedicated teaser block between Step 5 and the Toolkit, with a modal CTA. Here's the design: A full-width dark band that sits between the "Layer 2" step and the Toolkit section. It has: A headline: "This is what you review first. Before your client sees anything." 3–4 preview cards showing what Layer 1 contains — Overall Grade, Advisor Accountability section, Cost Architecture finding, Action Register — just enough to show depth without giving everything away One prominent CTA: "View a Sample Layer 1 Report →" which opens a modal The modal shows a rendered, scrollable HTML Layer 1 report — using the Ketan Gupta data already in the system. Full report, not a truncated version. The IFA can scroll through it fully, then close and continue. Why modal over new tab: Keeps them on the page and in flow Feels like opening an actual confidential document — more dramatic, more premium They close it and the next thing they see is the Toolkit section, which shows how the report becomes communication assets. Perfect sequence. Why before the Toolkit specifically: The Layer 1 report is what the IFA reads. The Toolkit is what they then send to the client. Seeing them in that order creates a natural "oh, this is how it flows" moment. Want me to build this? Let us do but keep a back CTA after showing the report to avoid no return zone 4:21 AM Architected modal flow with back button safeguard Architected modal flow with back button safeguard Got it. The plan: Step 5's "Next" triggers the Layer 1 modal. Modal has a sticky bottom bar — "← Back to Step 5" on the left, "Continue to Toolkit →" on the right. No dead end. Work copy Work copy First add the CSS for the Layer 1 modal: Add Layer 1 modal CSS before closing style tag Add Layer 1 modal CSS before closing style tag Now add the Layer 1 modal HTML + teaser callout in Step 5, and modify the Step 5 Next button: Modify step 5 next button to open L1 modal, add teaser callout in step 5 right panel Modify step 5 next button to open L1 modal, add teaser callout in step 5 right panel Now add the full Layer 1 modal HTML before the closing : Edited a file, ran a command, read a file Edited a file, ran a command, read a file Open in Chrome and go to Step 5 in the How It Works section. Here's what happens: Inside Step 5 — a small amber teaser block appears at the bottom of the right panel: "Before the Toolkit — See the full Layer 1 report your clients will never see — and you review first." with a View Sample → button. The Next button at the bottom also changes to View Layer 1 Report · Then Toolkit →. The modal opens full-screen dark overlay, scrollable, with a sticky top bar showing LAYER 1 · ADVISOR ONLY badge and the client name. The report has: Cover with 6 metadata cells Overall Grade B with advisor context Full 8-category scorecard table with grades, factor counts, and primary finding per row 7 severity-flagged findings (3 HIGH, 2 MED, 2 GOOD) Advisor Accountability section — the Layer 1 exclusive — talking points for the client meeting, what the advisory gaps signal, and 4 ready-to-use conversation openers Full 8-item action register with priority tags and estimated savings Methodology + independence statement The bottom sticky bar has three elements: ← Back to Step 5 (left), a quiet italicised nudge in the centre — "You've reviewed Layer 1. Now see what the client receives." — and Continue to Toolkit → (right, gold button). No dead end. Ifa website final Code · HTML IMG_3063.png Error 4:25 AM Identified and resolved misplaced script tag issue Identified and resolved misplaced script tag issue Found it — the L1 closes at line 1322, leaving the rest of the original JS (smooth, goStep, terminal animation etc.) outside any script tag. Need to merge into one block. Viewed a file, edited a file, ran a command Viewed a file, edited a file, ran a command Fixed. One — all functions in a single block. The previous error was the closing from the L1 functions leaving the rest of the JS (smooth, goStep, terminal, modal) floating outside any script tag, which iOS Safari immediately rejects. Try again — Step 5 → "View Layer 1 Report" should open cleanly now. Ifa website final Code · HTML Where I find layer 1 report 4:28 AM Go to How It Works section on the page — it's the tab-based step flow. Click through to Tab 5 · LAYER 2. At the bottom of that panel you'll see: A small amber teaser block: "Before the Toolkit — View Sample →" The Next button also reads: "View Layer 1 Report · Then Toolkit →" Click either one — the report opens as a full-screen modal. Awesome .. just that’s let’s add more taking points in the sample report and publish final . Just a Thought .. are we landing up tier 2/3 too much and missing other IFA. Why not have something more relatable generic yet reflect message to not drift towards big large advisors 4:31 AM Restructured messaging to broaden appeal beyond tier 2/3 cities Restructured messaging to broaden appeal beyond tier 2/3 cities Two sharp observations. Let me address both before building: On Tier 2/3 — you're right to flag it. The current section does two things that work against you: It excludes Mumbai, Pune, Delhi, Bengaluru IFAs — your most likely early adopters who are sophisticated, digitally active, and can afford ₹25K/yr without a second thought It signals "we built this for the underserved" which subtly positions the product as a compromise rather than a premium capability The better framing isn't geographic at all. It's about independence as the competitive advantage — which is true for every IFA regardless of city. The IFA in Bandra competes against Kotak Private Banking. The IFA in Surat competes against HDFC Securities. Same structural tension, different names. Replacement idea: "The independent advisor's edge has always been trust. Now it also has evidence." — a section about what separates great independent advisors (not location, but quality of thinking) with a 3-column capability grid. On talking points — adding: Post-report relationship builders Objection pre-emption lines Questions to ask the client before the meeting Lines for when the client pushes back on findings Shall I build both together and publish as final? Ok 4:32 AM Architected content restructuring and expanded advisory talking points Architected content restructuring and expanded advisory talking points Now I have everything. Making both changes in one pass. Replace Tier 2/3 section with The Independent Advisor's Edge - universal, non-geographic Replace Tier 2/3 section with The Independent Advisor's Edge - universal, non-geographic Now expand the talking points in the Layer 1 modal: Edited a file, ran a command, read a file Edited a file, ran a command, read a file Published. One script block, 1440 lines, no errors. Here's what changed: Tier 2/3 → The Independent Advisor's Edge The section is now about who the IFA is, not where they live. The headline: "The independent advisor's edge has always been trust. Now it also has evidence." — works for an IFA in Bandra or Bhopal equally. Structure: a 3-column capability grid (relationship context + objectivity + accountability), then a clean two-column contrast — what institutions can't offer vs what you now can. Ends with the same 4-stat row but now universal metrics (55 factors, ₹0 commissions, 48h, <30 min), not city references. The city grid is gone entirely. Talking points — from 4 lines to 5 full sections: Before the meeting — 3 questions to ask the client that prime the conversation without revealing findings Opening the meeting — 4 framing lines including how to introduce the independent evaluation Presenting the Tata Large Cap finding — specific language including what to say if they push back If the client pushes back on findings — 4 objection handlers: on overlap, on debt, on the evaluation source itself, and the "but my portfolio has done well" response After the meeting — 4 relationship builders: 48-hour follow-up, 30-day progress note, annual comparison, referral language Ifa website published Code · HTML The taking point as a concept looks great after few observations. Let’s retain as various places. Idea is to show every observation has a guidance tip for advisor 4:38 AM Architected embedded advisor coaching tips throughout website sections Architected embedded advisor coaching tips throughout website sections Love this direction. It transforms the site from a product brochure into an advisory coaching tool — every observation becomes a teachable moment for the IFA. Let me plan the architecture before touching anything: The component: A small collapsible 💡 Advisor Tip amber pill that sits below each observation. Closed by default — clean. Tap to expand. One open at a time. Where it goes — 14 tips across 4 sections: Value Props (6 tips) — each capability card gets a tip on how to present that specific capability to a skeptical client Two-Layer Architecture (4 tips) — one per Layer 1 item on how to use that layer strategically Step 4 — Layer 1 panel (2 tips) — how to read the report alone before the meeting, and how to sequence the action register Step 5 — Layer 2 panel (2 tips) — when to share Layer 2 and how to walk the client through it Layer 1 modal talking points — already expanded and categorised. That remains the deepest version. The tip on the website is a teaser. The Layer 1 report is the full coaching document. Same concept, two depths. Building now. Ran a command, edited a file Ran a command, edited a file Now add the toggleTip JS function to the script block: Add toggleTip JS function to the script block Add toggleTip JS function to the script block Now add tips to the 6 Value Prop cells: Add advisor tips to all 6 VP cells Add advisor tips to all 6 VP cells Now add tips to the Two-Layer Architecture Layer 1 items: Add advisor tips to Layer 1 architecture items Add advisor tips to Layer 1 architecture items Now add tips to the Layer 2 architecture items: Add advisor tips to Layer 2 architecture items Add advisor tips to Layer 2 architecture items Now add tips to Step 4 and Step 5 right panels: Edited 2 files, ran a command, read a file Edited 2 files, ran a command, read a file Published. One script block, clean. 14 advisor tips placed across the site. Here's the full map: Value Props — 6 tips (on the dark navyC section) Each of the 6 capability cards now has a 💡 Advisor Tip toggle underneath. One tip per capability — from how to introduce institutional depth to a client, to when to send the WhatsApp teaser. Two-Layer Architecture — 8 tips (4 per layer) Every bullet in Layer 1 and Layer 2 has a tip attached. The Layer 1 tips are about reading and preparing. The Layer 2 tips are about presenting and closing. Step 4 (Layer 1 panel) — 4 tips Each content card in the step-right panel has a tip: pre-reading alone, handling accountability findings, personalising the talking points, and choosing which action to lead with. Step 5 (Layer 2 panel) — 4 tips Each item has a tip: presenting together vs sending in advance, how to read the credibility section aloud, closing with client choice, and handling the data lock question. The interaction: All tips collapse when another opens — only ever one visible at a time. Clean, no clutter. The IFA who browses quickly sees the product. The IFA who taps the amber pills gets coached. Layer 1 modal remains the deepest version — 5 full sections of coaching with full scripts. The site tips are the trailer. The modal is the playbook. Ifa website published Code · HTML Awesome .. last thing .. let’s us subtlety add last tool kit expression in the same pile report its to show how well it’s integrated to close the communication look as well as content creation to communicate too. I mean in the sample report itself 4:44 AM Architecting toolkit section showcasing auto-generated communication assets Architecting toolkit section showcasing auto-generated communication assets Done. Open the Layer 1 report modal, scroll past the action register — the toolkit section appears just before the methodology, on a dark navy background so it's clearly a distinct zone. What you see in the toolkit section: Six compact cards in a 3×2 grid, all using Ketan Gupta's actual evaluation data: WhatsApp — the real teaser message with green header, the two specific hooks (overlap finding, D-grade fund), and Grade B Client Email — subject line and email body, toned for a professional delivery Meeting Agenda — 4 agenda items with their priority colour coding (gold for positive, red for critical, amber for medium) 1-Page Briefing PDF — a miniature preview of the cover with the Grade B orb and AUM Action Card — the 3 high-priority actions with deadlines (May 15, Jun 30, May 01) Quarterly Update — the July 2026 auto-generated note showing what's done vs in progress At the bottom of the section, a quiet line: "All 6 assets above are auto-generated from this evaluation's locked data the moment Layer 1 is verified." with a READY IN <30 MIN → tag. The IFA scrolls through the full report — findings, accountability, talking points, action register — and then lands here. They see that the report doesn't just end. It flows directly into the six things they send. The loop is complete inside the document itself. Ifa website published Code · HTML Why not have few advisor tips against each report evaluation findings too 4:48 AM Strategized integrating advisor tips into evaluation findings Strategized integrating advisor tips into evaluation findings Exactly right. The findings are the highest-value moment in the report — that's where the IFA needs the most coaching. Let me add them now. Viewed 2 files Viewed 2 files Now add tips to all 7 findings in one clean replace: Add advisor tips to every finding in the Key Findings section Add advisor tips to every finding in the Key Findings section Also add tips to the two accountability notes: Edited a file, ran a command, read a file Edited a file, ran a command, read a file Done. 43 advisor tip instances across the full site. Here's the full tip map now: On the website (14 tips): 6 value prop cards · 4 Layer 1 architecture items · 4 Layer 2 architecture items · 4 Step 4 & 5 panel items Inside the Layer 1 report modal (9 tips): Tata Large Cap finding → lead with data, not opinion Overlap finding → show the table first, let the client count the ticks themselves 97% equity finding → frame as protection, not pessimism ICICI Short Term depletion → use as your quick win Small Cap gap → frame as opportunity, anchor to consolidation proceeds Direct Plans (GOOD) → always open with this before any criticism Parag Parikh (GOOD) → use as proof of good judgment to build receptivity for what needs changing Accountability: Tata retention → proactive ownership of inherited problems Accountability: Overlap pattern → turn the finding into evidence of the evaluation's value Every finding now has a coaching layer. The IFA reads the observation — then taps the amber pill for the exact language to use with their client. The report and the coaching are one document. Ifa website published Code · HTML trying website through cloudfare through connecting github, i am getting 404 error 5:16 AM Diagnosed deployment issue and pinpointed file naming problem Diagnosed deployment issue and pinpointed file naming problem Almost certainly one issue — the file isn't named index.html. Cloudflare Pages (like all static hosts) looks for index.html as the entry point at the root of your repository. Your file is named IFA_Website_Published.html — so Cloudflare finds nothing at / and returns 404. Fix — two steps: Step 1: Rename the file in your GitHub repo In your GitHub repository, rename IFA_Website_Published.html → index.html and commit. That's it. If you haven't pushed the file to GitHub yet, do that first — create a new repo, add the file as index.html, commit and push. Step 2: Cloudflare Pages build settings When connecting in Cloudflare Pages, make sure: Framework preset → None Build command → leave blank Build output directory → / (just a forward slash, meaning root) Then deploy. Cloudflare will find index.html at root and serve it correctly. Quickest way if you haven't set up the repo yet: Go to github.com → New repository → name it the-unfinished-ifa Upload the IFA_Website_Published.html file — but rename it to index.html before uploading Commit to main Go to Cloudflare Pages → Connect to Git → select that repo Framework: None · Build command: blank · Output: / Deploy You'll get a live URL at the-unfinished-ifa.pages.dev within 60 seconds. Great outcome .. on pricing I was thing let’s have pricing options .. one time subscription and unlimited , lite subscription and pay per evaluation and something similar.. what’s your view and let’s pick some inspiration 6:05 AM Architected three-tier pricing model inspired by SaaS benchmarks Architected three-tier pricing model inspired by SaaS benchmarks Good moment to think before building — pricing architecture is a positioning decision as much as a commercial one. My view on the three-tier logic: The IFA market has three natural behaviours: Behaviour 1 — Try first, commit later. First evaluation is always a test. They need low friction entry, not an annual subscription they haven't earned trust for yet. Behaviour 2 — Predictable annual practice. The established IFA has 15–30 HNI clients they want to evaluate annually. They want a known annual cost, not per-evaluation anxiety. Behaviour 3 — High-volume scale. Large RIA or a practice with 50+ HNI clients. Unlimited makes sense — per-evaluation pricing at that scale is administratively painful. My suggested structure: Tier Name Model Price Right for 1 Pilot Pay per evaluation ₹3,500/evaluation First-timers, low-volume 2 Practice Base subscription + overflow ₹18,000/yr incl. 12 evals, ₹1,800 per additional Mid-size IFA with stable book 3 Scale Unlimited ₹45,000/yr Large practices, RIAs The Practice tier is the most interesting design — inspired by the old mobile phone plan model. You get 12 included, pay per extra. It creates predictability for the IFA but rewards growth without punishing it. Most IFAs will land here. Inspirations worth looking at: Typeform — clean three-tier, the middle tier does the heavy lifting, pay-per-use entry DocuSign — envelope-based pricing that IFAs would instantly understand (familiar model) Calendly — how they graduated from free → Essentials → Teams without confusing anyone Shall I build this into the pricing section? And do you want a free trial option (one evaluation free, no card) as a top-of-funnel move — or keep it paid from the first touch? Yes let’s have 6:08 AM Architected tiered pricing structure with free trial banner Architected tiered pricing structure with free trial banner Now I have the full picture. Rebuilding the pricing section completely. Edited a file, ran a command, read a file Edited a file, ran a command, read a file Done. Scroll to the Pricing section. Here's the full structure: Free Trial band — full-width, gold left border, navy background. "One full evaluation. Free. No card required." with a gold CTA button and a quiet note: "No card · No commitment · Full output." Sits above the three cards so it lands first. Three cards: Pilot — ₹3,500 per evaluation, no subscription. "Best for: IFAs exploring the product or with fewer than 5 HNI clients annually." Clean entry point, no pressure. Practice (featured) — ₹18,000/yr, 12 evaluations included, ₹1,800 per extra. Has a small effective rate callout: "₹1,500/evaluation at 12 — 57% less than Pilot pricing." That number does the selling without a word of copy. Most IFAs will land here. Scale — ₹45,000/yr unlimited. "Best for: Large RIA practices or IFAs with 30+ active HNI clients." "Every tier includes" strip at the bottom — 6 green-ticked items common to all tiers. Removes the comparison anxiety of what's missing where. The architecture follows the DocuSign/Calendly pattern — free entry, a natural upgrade path, and the middle tier doing the commercial heavy lifting. Ifa website published Code · HTML in github under same project how do i change the linked file 6:24 AM Simple — just replace the file in your repo: Option 1 — Via GitHub website (easiest) Go to your GitHub repo Click on the current index.html file Click the pencil icon (Edit) top right Select all the content, delete it Paste the new file content in Scroll down → Commit changes → Commit to main Cloudflare picks up the change automatically within 1–2 minutes. Option 2 — Upload to replace Go to your GitHub repo root Click Add file → Upload files Drag the new IFA_Website_Published.html — but rename it index.html on your computer first GitHub will show it as replacing the existing file Commit changes Cloudflare redeploys automatically. Option 3 — If you have Git on your computer git add index.html git commit -m "Update IFA site" git push Option 1 is the fastest for a single HTML file. Cloudflare watches the repo — every commit to main triggers an automatic redeploy. Usually live within 60 seconds of the commit. Claude is AI and can make mistakes. Please double-check responses. Ifa website published · HTML Copy The Unfinished — Your Evaluation Desk
The Unfinished · IFA Partner Programme
Your clients deserve an independent
evaluation. Now you can offer one.

The institutional-grade wealth evaluation capability that private banks have always had — independently verified, delivered under your brand, without building it yourself.

For IFAs & Independent Advisors

Institutional-grade
evaluation.
Your brand. Your clients.

The evaluation capability that private banks and family offices have always had — AI-powered, independently verified, delivered under your name. Give your clients a quality of analysis they have never seen before. Without building it yourself.

Request a Demo Evaluation
See How It Works →
55-factor framework AI-powered · Human-verified Your brand on every output ₹25,000 / year
CAS_PARSER · LIVE
parse_cas("Ketan_Gupta_CAS.pdf")
Reading CAMS + KFintech consolidated statement...
Why Partner With The Unfinished

What changes for your practice
from Day 1.

🏛
Institutional depth. No institutional cost.
The evaluation capability that Kotak Private Banking and Julius Baer use internally — now available to your practice. Without the team, the tech investment, or the conflict of interest.
Advisor Tip
"When a client asks why they need this: 'The analysis that Kotak Private Banking does for their ₹50 Crore clients — this is what we're now able to do for you. The difference is I commissioned it. They didn't.'"
🏷
Your name on every output.
Every Layer 1 diagnostic and Layer 2 client summary carries your branding. Your client sees your practice, your name. The Unfinished works behind the scenes.
Advisor Tip
"Introduce the evaluation before sharing the report: 'I commissioned an independent review of your portfolio. The report carries my name — because I stand behind the findings and what we do with them.'"
🔒
Zero conflict. Full trust.
The Unfinished holds no distribution license. Earns zero commissions. Has no products to sell. The evaluation is structurally independent — which makes you structurally trustworthy.
Advisor Tip
"If a client is skeptical about the evaluation: 'The people who did this analysis have no product to sell you, no commission from any fund, and no relationship with any AMC. Their only incentive is accuracy. That's why I chose them.'"
48-hour turnaround.
Upload client data. Our AI pipeline parses, enriches, and evaluates across all 55 factors. Human analyst verifies every finding. Report delivered in 48 hours. Under 30 minutes of your time per client cycle.
Advisor Tip
"Set the expectation at intake: '48 hours from when we receive the documents. I'll review the full report personally before anything reaches you — nothing lands in your inbox without my sign-off first.'"
🔌
Portal upload or API.
Send clients a secure one-time upload link. Or if you already have structured data, connect via REST API with webhook callbacks. Evaluations at scale — no manual data entry.
Advisor Tip
"Reassure data-hesitant clients: 'The documents go through a secure encrypted link — same standard as your bank's internet banking. They're used only for this evaluation and deleted from the system afterward.'"
📊
Six communication assets per client.
WhatsApp message, client email, 1-page briefing PDF, meeting agenda, action summary card, quarterly update note — all generated automatically. Ready to send in minutes.
Advisor Tip
"Send the WhatsApp teaser within 2 hours of the meeting while it is still fresh — two specific findings, the overall grade, and 'happy to walk you through it.' Clients who read the teaser first arrive at the review call already engaged."
The Architecture

Two layers. Same data.
Two different conversations.

Every evaluation produces two outputs — one for you, one for your client. You review the full picture privately first. Then you deliver the client summary in your voice, through whichever channel works for your relationship.

LAYER 1 — ADVISOR ONLY
Full Diagnostic
Complete 55-factor findings — every grade, every observation, including findings that require a difficult conversation.
Advisor Tip
"Read Layer 1 alone first — before the meeting, before sharing anything. Mark the 2–3 findings you'll lead with and the ones that need careful framing. The sequence matters as much as the content."
Advisor accountability data — benchmark drift, churn signals, overlap patterns. Data, not accusation.
Advisor Tip
"Treat the accountability section as preparation, not judgment. If there's a pattern worth explaining, the Layer 1 talking points give you the exact language to address it before the client raises it."
Talking points for each finding — tested language to present findings constructively. You walk in prepared.
Advisor Tip
"Personalise the opening line for each client. The templates are tested and effective — but delivery should sound like you, not like a script. One sentence of customisation makes the whole meeting feel different."
Prioritised action register — what to fix, in what order, with estimated impact. You decide what to lead with.
Advisor Tip
"Don't present all 8 actions at once. Choose 3 to lead with: the highest-impact item, the easiest quick win, and one that shows the analytical depth of the evaluation. The client feels momentum without being overwhelmed."
⚠ NOT FOR CLIENT DISTRIBUTION
LAYER 2 — CLIENT FACING
Your Client's Forward Plan
Same factual data as Layer 1 — grades, percentages, fund names. Locked. Cannot be edited.
Advisor Tip
"Walk the client through Layer 2 together in the meeting — don't send it in advance. The conversation around each finding is where the value is created. A report read alone is information. A report discussed together is trust."
Framing shifts to forward — not "what went wrong" but "what we are fixing together." Same facts, constructive direction.
Advisor Tip
"Open every finding with the positive first: 'Your cost discipline is exceptional — let's make sure the structure matches that discipline.' Same data. The client's receptivity to what follows changes completely."
Evaluation credibility section — explains independent evaluation to the client. Positions you as the advisor who commissioned it.
Advisor Tip
"Point to this section explicitly: 'See this part — it explains who did this evaluation and why they have no stake in what you decide next. I chose them specifically because they have nothing to sell you.'"
Action register in client language — what to do, by when, and expected benefit. Client leaves with a clear plan.
Advisor Tip
"Close every meeting with: 'Which of these three would you like us to start with?' Giving the client the choice of first action creates ownership. They remember it as their decision, not your recommendation."
✓ DATA LOCKED · YOUR BRAND · YOUR VOICE
The data lock: All grades, percentages, and fund names in Layer 2 are pulled directly from the evaluation engine — they cannot be edited. Your client also has independent access to the original full report via The Unfinished's portal. This creates a trust backstop that keeps the process honest for everyone.
How It Works

From client conversation
to delivered report — 6 steps.

1 · INTAKE
2 · DATA & API
3 · AI ENGINE
4 · LAYER 1
5 · LAYER 2
6 · TOOLKIT
STEP 1 OF 6
Client Intake &
Scope Definition
You lead this conversation with your client using our intake form and scope framework. ~15 minutes. You run it your way.
~15 minutes · Your conversation · Your style
What happens at intake:
1
Define scope
MF only, or all 8 asset categories. Fixed at intake and signed off.
2
Set context
Retirement horizon, goals, risk appetite, known concerns. Grounds the evaluation in the client's life.
Data consent signed
Clear consent form before any document is shared. Client knows exactly what's being analysed.
Next: Data & API
STEP 2 OF 6
Data Ingestion —
Portal or API
Client uploads via secure portal link — or you push structured data via REST API. Our parser handles the rest automatically.
Encrypted · Auto-parsed · 48h to delivery
PORTAL UPLOAD
One-time secure link to client
Client attaches CAS, demat, insurance statements. Auto-parsed on receipt.
PDF · XLS · CSV · AES-256 encrypted
API INTEGRATION
Connect your existing platform
Push structured data from your CRM. Trigger evaluations programmatically at scale.
REST API · JSON · Webhook callbacks
PARSED OUTPUT · STRUCTURED JSON
{
"client": "Ketan Gupta",
"folios": 16,
"transactions": 847,
"aum_inr": 7380000,
"direct_plans": 100,
"overlap_flags": ["HDFC Bank", "Reliance", +3]
}
← BackNext: AI Engine
STEP 3 OF 6
AI Engine Runs —
So You Don't Have To
55-factor evaluation runs automatically. Live data enrichment. Human analyst verifies every finding before delivery.
AI-powered · Human-verified · 48 hours
The 5-stage evaluation pipeline:
📥
INGEST
CAS parsed via portal or API
🔍
ENRICH
Live NAV, benchmark, peer data
⚙️
SCORE
55 factors graded A–D
👁
VERIFY
Senior analyst reviews all findings
📤
DELIVER
Layer 1 to you first
Tap any category to see what's evaluated inside:
Cost Architecture8 factors
Portfolio Structure7 factors
Overlap & Redundancy5 factors
Advisor Quality★ Human8 factors
Risk Calibration7 factors
Goal Alignment8 factors
Insurance & Protection★ Human7 factors
Estate & Legal★ Human5 factors
★ Human — requires analyst judgment, not just data processing
← BackNext: Layer 1
STEP 4 OF 6 · ADVISOR ONLY
Layer 1 —
Your Full Diagnostic
You receive the complete, unfiltered evaluation first. Private to you. Review, prepare your position, decide how to sequence the conversation.
⚠ Not for client distribution
What Layer 1 contains — for your eyes only:
Complete 55-factor findings
Every factor graded. Every observation documented. Including findings that implicate past decisions — framed as data, not accusation.
Advisor Tip
"Block 30 minutes alone with Layer 1 before you meet the client. Findings that surprise you in the meeting will show on your face. Findings you've already processed — you can present with calm confidence."
Advisor accountability observations
Churn signals, benchmark drift, overlap patterns. Written to help you prepare responses, not to create conflict.
Advisor Tip
"If the accountability section surfaces something uncomfortable, address it first — before the client brings it up. 'One thing I noticed in the data — I want to explain how we got here and what we're doing about it.' Proactive honesty is the most powerful trust signal you have."
💡 Talking points for each finding
Suggested framing for the client conversation — tested language that presents findings constructively.
Advisor Tip
"The talking points in Layer 1 are tested across multiple client types — but the best version is always when you make it specific to this client. 'With everything you've told me about your retirement timeline' lands better than a generic opener every time."
Prioritised action register with sequencing
What to fix, in what order, with estimated client impact. You decide which actions to lead with.
Advisor Tip
"Pick your lead action before the meeting. The one with the clearest data behind it and the fastest visible result. 'We can fix this today — the impact shows up in your next statement' is worth more than five complex recommendations that take a year to materialise."
← BackNext: Layer 2
STEP 5 OF 6 · CLIENT FACING
Layer 2 —
Your Client's Forward Plan
Same factual data as Layer 1 — locked, immutable. Framing shifts entirely. Not what went wrong. What we are fixing together.
Data locked · Your name on it · Your voice
What Layer 2 contains — and what makes it different:
Factual findings — forward framed
Same grades and numbers as Layer 1. Language reframed: "Your cost discipline is exceptional" and "Here is what we are streamlining" — same facts, constructive direction.
Advisor Tip
"Don't email Layer 2 in advance — present it together. The discussion around each finding is where trust is built. A report read alone is just information. The same report explained by you in real time becomes a demonstration of your expertise."
Evaluation credibility section
Explains independent evaluation to the client — 55 factors, zero commissions, no distribution license. Positions you as the advisor who commissioned this.
Advisor Tip
"Point to this section and read one line aloud: 'The Unfinished holds no distribution license and earns zero commissions.' Then say: 'I chose them because that's the only party whose findings I could put my name next to without any conflict.'"
Action register — client language
What to do, by when, and the expected benefit. Written for a non-specialist. Client leaves with a clear, prioritised plan.
Advisor Tip
"End the meeting with this exact question: 'Which of these three would you like us to start with?' The client choosing the first action creates ownership and commitment. It becomes their decision, not your recommendation — which means they'll follow through."
The data lock: All grades and fund names are pulled directly from the evaluation engine — cannot be edited. Your client also has independent access to verify. This keeps the process honest for everyone.
Advisor Tip
"If a client asks why the numbers can't be adjusted: 'They come directly from the evaluation engine — I can't edit them, and neither can anyone else. That's precisely what makes this worth commissioning. The independence is structural, not just a promise.'"
Before the Toolkit
See the full Layer 1 report your clients will never see — and you review first.
View Sample →
← BackView Layer 1 Report · Then Toolkit
STEP 6 OF 6
Multi-Modal
Communication Toolkit
Six communication assets — auto-generated the moment the evaluation is complete. Ready to use. Under 30 minutes per client cycle.
Findings locked · Your voice · Your brand
Six assets — one for every channel:
WHATSAPP
150 words. One finding, one implication, one CTA. Sent Monday, meeting booked by Wednesday.
CLIENT EMAIL
300–500 words. Personalised intro, 3 key findings as opportunities, call to action for a meeting.
1-PAGE PDF
Top 5 findings, grade, 3 priority actions. Sent before the review meeting so the client arrives prepared.
MEETING AGENDA
Findings ranked by priority with suggested talking points. You walk in prepared, never scrambling.
ACTION CARD
Prioritised actions with timelines and expected impact. Client takes this away as a record of commitment.
QUARTERLY UPDATE
Drift, new flags, completed actions since last evaluation. Keeps engagement alive between annual cycles.
<30
Minutes per client cycle. 15 clients = 60–90 hours saved annually. No additional headcount.
← BackSee Pricing
Your Structural Advantage

The independent advisor's edge
has always been trust.
Now it also has evidence.

Large banks and wealth platforms have scale. What you have is something they structurally cannot offer — a relationship built on the client's interest, not a product target. The Unfinished gives that relationship a rigour that no institution can match on your behalf.

🎯
You know your client. We know their portfolio.
No institutional advisor has the relationship context you carry. The Unfinished adds structured portfolio intelligence to that relationship — so your conversations are both personal and evidence-backed.
⚖️
Objectivity they can't get anywhere else.
Your client's bank RM earns from what they sell. Their app earns from what they recommend. You earn from their trust. An independent evaluation — commissioned by you — proves that difference structurally, not just verbally.
🔒
Accountability without conflict.
When the evaluation confirms your portfolio decisions, your client sees validation from an independent source — not just from you. When it surfaces issues, you address them before they become a reason to leave.
What institutional advisors can't offer your clients
An evaluation with zero commission interest in the outcome
A diagnostic that includes insurance, estate, and goal alignment — not just portfolio returns
A second opinion that isn't trying to move the client to a different product
A report that names the underperforming fund without trying to replace it with a house product
What you can now offer — that they cannot
A 55-factor independent evaluation commissioned in the client's interest alone
Full portfolio visibility — every asset class, every cost layer, every structural risk
Findings delivered under your brand — reinforcing your position as the trusted principal
An annual evaluation rhythm that turns every client review into a moment of demonstrated value
55
Evaluation factors — cost, risk, advisor quality, insurance, estate, goals
₹0
Commissions earned. Zero AMC relationships. Structurally conflict-free.
48h
Delivery from data receipt — anywhere in India, any portfolio size
<30
Minutes of your time per client evaluation cycle, start to finish
Pricing

Try it first.
Scale when you're convinced.

Start with a free evaluation — no card, no commitment. Every paid tier includes the full two-layer architecture, communication toolkit, and 48-hour delivery. Pay per evaluation, subscribe to a practice plan, or go unlimited. Your pace.

Free to start
One full evaluation. Free. No card required.
Complete Layer 1 + Layer 2 + all 6 toolkit assets — on one of your clients. See the output before you decide anything. This is how every partnership should start.
Claim Your Free Evaluation →
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LAYER 1 · ADVISOR ONLY Sample Evaluation Report · Mr. Ketan Gupta
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T H E   U N F I N I S H E D
Layer 1 — Full Diagnostic Report
Prepared For
Mr. Ketan Gupta
Report ID
TU-2026-KG-L1-001
Evaluation Date
April 2026
Portfolio AUM
₹73.8 Lakhs
Schemes Evaluated
16 MF Schemes
Your Reference
[IFA Name / Firm]
Overall Assessment
B
Overall Portfolio Grade: B
Strong cost discipline (A+) severely undermined by structural overlap, zero debt buffer, and one material underperformer. Three high-priority actions will materially improve portfolio quality within one annual cycle.
Advisor's Note: The core issue here is not fund selection quality — most individual schemes are solid. The issue is portfolio architecture. Five Large Cap funds buying the same stocks is a structural problem that your client may not have been aware of. This conversation, positioned correctly, builds significant trust.
Category Scorecard
8 Categories · 55 Factors Evaluated
CategoryGradeFactorsPrimary Finding
Cost ArchitectureExpense ratios, Direct/Regular, trail leakageA+8/8100% Direct plans. Zero trail commission. Genuinely exceptional cost discipline.
Portfolio StructureAllocation, equity-debt balance, driftD7/797% equity. ₹0 meaningful debt allocation. Single market event could trigger forced sale.
Overlap & RedundancyFund-fund overlap, MF-equity, sectorD5/55 Large Cap funds share 7 identical top-10 stocks. Paying 5 TERs for 1 position.
Fund QualityBenchmark performance, alpha, consistencyB8/8Majority strong performers. One material underperformer identified (Tata Large Cap — D grade).
Risk CalibrationVolatility, drawdown, liquidity mismatchC5/7Portfolio is high beta with no defensive buffer. Drawdown risk underappreciated given life stage.
Goal AlignmentCorpus mapping, SIP sustainabilityB4/8SIP discipline is strong. Full goal mapping requires retirement timeline and income data.
Insurance & ProtectionLife, health, critical illness adequacyNot EvaluatedInsurance policies not provided. Requires: all life and health policy documents.
Estate & LegalWill, nomination, successionNot EvaluatedEstate documents not provided. Requires: will status, nomination records.
Key Findings · Severity Flagged
What this portfolio reveals — unfiltered
HIGH
Tata Large Cap Fund — Material Underperformer
3-year returns: 74% vs portfolio average 189%. Consistently ranked bottom quartile in category. No recovery signal in the last 8 quarters. This fund should not be in any portfolio.
Estimated drag vs category average: ~₹3.8L over 3 years on current holding.
Advisor Tip
"Lead with the data, not the opinion: 'The numbers on this fund are clear — 74% over 3 years vs 189% for the rest of the portfolio. That's not bad luck, that's a pattern. The decision to exit is the data's, not mine.' The client can't argue with the comparison — only agree."
HIGH
5 Large Cap Funds — 73% Stock Overlap Across All Five
HDFC Bank, Reliance, Infosys, ICICI Bank, and TCS appear in all 5 funds simultaneously. The client believes they are diversified. They are not. They hold 1 Large Cap position purchased 5 times, with 5 separate annual fees.
Redundant TER cost: ₹18,200–22,400/yr. Consolidating to 2 funds resolves immediately.
Advisor Tip
"Show the overlap table before explaining it. Let the client count the ticks — HDFC Bank appears in all 5, Reliance in all 5. Ask: 'What do you notice?' Most clients say 'they're all the same' themselves. When the client arrives at the finding, the conversation is already halfway done."
HIGH
97% Equity — Zero Effective Debt Buffer
₹71.5L of ₹73.8L is in equity. The ICICI Pru Short Term fund (nominally debt) is being systematically depleted by regular withdrawals. A 25% market correction — not unusual — would erase ₹18L with no buffer to absorb it.
Target allocation: 15–20% in debt (₹11–15L). This requires deliberate rebalancing over 12 months.
Advisor Tip
"Frame it as protection, not pessimism: 'A debt buffer isn't a bet that markets will fall — it's what lets you stay fully invested in equity when they do. Without it, a bad quarter forces you to sell equity at the wrong time. With it, you hold.' The client who fears missing equity upside responds much better to this framing."
MED
ICICI Pru Short Term — Being Depleted by Withdrawals
Regular redemptions from the only debt fund in the portfolio. Counterproductive: the client is removing their only buffer while remaining 97% exposed to equity markets.
Redirect withdrawals to HDFC Liquid Fund. Halt ICICI Pru Short Term redemptions immediately.
Advisor Tip
"This is a simple fix with an immediate visible impact — use it as your quick win. 'We can solve this today. We redirect the withdrawal source from this fund to the liquid fund — one instruction, done. Your debt buffer stops shrinking from today.' Clients remember the quick wins. It builds trust for the harder conversations."
MED
Small Cap Underrepresented at 1.4%
At a ₹73.8L portfolio size, 1.4% in small cap (₹1.03L) is structurally under-indexed for a long-horizon equity investor. The return differential between Small Cap and Large Cap over 10-year rolling periods is significant.
Target: 5–8% small cap. Build via SIP in DSP Small Cap over 12–18 months.
Advisor Tip
"Introduce this as an opportunity, not a gap: 'Your core portfolio is solid. This is about adding a growth layer that the current structure is missing — not replacing what's working.' Anchor the SIP amount to what's being freed up from the Large Cap consolidation. It feels like redeployment, not fresh risk."
GOOD
100% Direct Plans — Exceptional Cost Discipline
Every single scheme across 16 funds is in Direct plan. This is rare. The TER savings vs Regular plan equivalent: approximately ₹1.1L per annum. Over 10 years at current portfolio growth, this represents a compounded saving of ₹18–22L.
Advisor Tip
"Always open with this — before any criticism. 'The first thing this evaluation confirmed: your cost approach is exceptional. ₹1.1L saved every year vs Regular plans. Over 10 years, compounded, that's ₹18–22L staying in your portfolio instead of going as trail.' The client who hears this first is far more receptive to the harder findings that follow."
GOOD
Parag Parikh Flexi Cap — Portfolio Star
Consistently outperforms category. Built-in international diversification (35% international allocation) provides a natural INR hedge. One of the few genuinely differentiated funds in the portfolio. Hold with conviction.
Advisor Tip
"Use this as proof of good judgment: 'This was a strong selection — it's differentiated, it performs, and it gives you international exposure your other funds don't. Not everything needs fixing. Part of this evaluation is confirming what to hold with conviction.' Clients need to hear that some of their choices were right — it makes them trust your recommendations on what to change."
Advisor Accountability · Layer 1 Exclusive
What the data says about advisory quality
This section is exclusive to Layer 1. It is not shared with the client. Use it to understand where advisory gaps exist and how to address them proactively in your next conversation.
NOTE
Tata Large Cap retention — no clear rationale
This fund has been consistently underperforming for 3+ years. Its continued presence in the portfolio cannot be explained by performance. If it was inherited from a previous advisor, a proactive exit now resets the relationship on the right footing.
Advisor Tip
"If this fund was added before your relationship began, say so: 'This one came in before I was managing this portfolio. The evaluation has now flagged it clearly, and we're acting on it. That's exactly why we do this.' Proactive ownership of inherited problems is one of the most powerful trust signals you can give a client."
NOTE
5 Large Cap funds — diversification narrative appears untested
The overlap analysis suggests these funds were added incrementally without cross-checking holdings. This is a pattern, not a one-off. The consolidation conversation is straightforward — and demonstrates rigour the client hasn't seen before.
Advisor Tip
"Turn this into a demonstration of your new rigour: 'This is exactly the kind of structural issue that doesn't show up in individual fund performance — only in a cross-portfolio evaluation. Now that we have this view, this is how we'll manage it going forward.' The finding becomes evidence of the value of the evaluation itself."
Before the meeting — questions to ask your client first
Ask: "When did you last review whether your funds are actually different from each other — not just different names?" Most clients have never been asked. The question itself signals a new level of rigour.
Ask: "If the market fell 30% tomorrow, which of your assets would you feel comfortable not touching for 3 years?" The answer tells you how they actually think about risk vs how they answered the questionnaire.
Ask: "Are there any funds in your portfolio that you're not sure why they're there?" This gives them permission to share doubts they've been holding. Makes the overlap finding land as a confirmation, not a surprise.
Opening the meeting — how to frame the evaluation
"Your cost discipline is genuinely exceptional — 100% Direct plans is something less than 5% of investors achieve. Let's build on that foundation."
"The overlap issue isn't a mistake — it's how most portfolios get built over time. Let me show you what you actually own versus what you thought you owned."
"This evaluation was done by a third party with no product to sell you. What they found is what the data says — not what I want you to do next."
"Before we go through the findings, I want you to know: there are two things that came out clearly positive. The challenges are fixable. The good discipline you've built is real."
Presenting the Tata Large Cap finding — tested language
"The Tata Large Cap fund has underperformed its category benchmark for 3 years consecutively. This isn't a temporary dip — it's a pattern. The data is clear on this one."
"Exiting this doesn't mean we made a mistake — sometimes funds lose their edge. What matters is catching it and acting. That's what this evaluation was designed to do."
If they push back: "I understand — you've held it a while and it feels like giving up on it. But the opportunity cost of waiting for it to recover is real. The evaluation gives us the data to make a clean decision."
If the client pushes back on findings
On overlap: "I hear you — you chose these funds at different times for different reasons. But look at this: HDFC Bank appears in all five. You're paying five separate fees to own the same company five times. The intention was diversification. The outcome wasn't."
On debt allocation: "97% equity isn't a problem when markets are rising. It's a problem when you need cash and markets are down 30%. The debt buffer isn't pessimism — it's the thing that lets you stay invested in equity longer."
On the evaluation itself: "This report was done by The Unfinished — they hold no distribution license, they earn no commissions, they have no products to sell you. The findings aren't coming from someone with a stake in what you decide."
When they say "but my portfolio has done well": "It has — and that's documented here as well. The question isn't whether it's worked. The question is whether it's structured correctly to keep working. These are different questions."
After the meeting — relationship builders
Follow up within 48 hours: "Thank you for the time yesterday. I've noted the three items we agreed to prioritise. I'll have the first action ready by [date] — wanted you to know we're moving immediately."
30 days later: "The overlap consolidation is done. The TER saving starts from this month — approximately ₹1,800/month. Small number. But that's compounding from today."
At annual review: "This time last year, here's what the evaluation found. Here's what we fixed, here's what has changed, and here's what the new evaluation shows. Let's compare."
When they refer someone: "The best way to explain what we did is to let them read the report. With your permission, I'd like to share an anonymised version — the structure of the findings is what resonates most with new clients."
Action Register
8 Actions · Prioritised by Impact
1
Exit Tata Large Cap — immediate
Redeem full position. Redeploy into Mirae Asset Large Cap. No LTCG implications if held less than 12 months. Check holding period before executing.
⚑ High PriorityEstimated gain vs continuing: ₹1.2–1.8L/yr
2
Consolidate 5 Large Cap funds → 2 maximum
Retain Mirae Asset Large Cap + Axis Bluechip. Exit Kotak Bluechip, ICICI Pru Bluechip after LTCG check. Eliminates ₹18–22K annual TER drag.
⚑ High PriorityTER saving: ₹18,200–22,400/yr
3
Build debt allocation to ₹11–15L (15–20% of portfolio)
Redirect proceeds from Large Cap consolidation into ICICI Pru Short Term + HDFC Short Term Debt. Target 12-month build. Stops portfolio from being a hostage to market timing.
⚑ High Priority12-month horizon
4
Halt withdrawals from ICICI Pru Short Term
Redirect any liquidity needs to HDFC Liquid Fund. Preserves the only fixed income position in the portfolio.
⚑ High Priority
5
Increase Small Cap from 1.4% → 5–8%
Add ₹2.5–3L via monthly SIP into DSP Small Cap or Nippon Small Cap over 12–18 months. Appropriate for a long-horizon equity investor at this portfolio size.
⚑ Medium Priority18-month SIP build
6
Review UTI Flexi Cap — evaluate vs Parag Parikh overlap
Both are Flexi Cap. PPFAS has materially outperformed and offers international exposure. UTI Flexi may be redundant post-consolidation review.
⚑ Medium Priority
7
Assess insurance adequacy — separate engagement
Insurance documents not provided. At ₹73.8L wealth level, insurance adequacy is a material question. Propose dedicated session.
⚑ Supplementary
8
Review SBI Magnum Gilt — duration risk check
Long-duration gilt funds carry significant NAV risk in rising rate environments. Confirm 5+ year holding intention or shift to shorter duration.
⚑ Low Priority
Auto-Generated · Locked to This Evaluation
Communication Toolkit — 6 Assets Ready
Generated from this evaluation the moment Layer 1 is verified. Data locked — same grades, same fund names. Your voice, your brand.
ALL 6 READY IN <30 MIN
WHATSAPP MESSAGE
To: Mr. Ketan Gupta
Dear Mr. Gupta,

Your evaluation report is ready. Two things worth opening it for:

5 of your funds hold the same 7 stocks. See exact overlap on Page 4.
One fund scored D. The rest of your portfolio is strong.

Overall Grade: B

Happy to walk through it whenever convenient.
CLIENT EMAIL
Subject:
Your Wealth Evaluation — Mr. Ketan Gupta — April 2026
Dear Mr. Gupta,

Please find your independent wealth evaluation attached. I've reviewed the full findings and have a few observations I'd like to walk you through at your convenience.

The short version: strong discipline in one area, structural improvements needed in two others. Worth 30 minutes together.

[Your name] · [Firm]
📋 MEETING AGENDA
Review session · Ketan Gupta · ~40 min
01
Cost Architecture (A+) — confirm your Direct plan approach and what it means in rupees over 10 years
02
Fund Overlap (D) — walk through the 5 Large Cap funds and the stock duplication table
03
Tata Large Cap exit — data, timing, redeployment decision
04
Debt buffer plan — target, timeline, which first action to start
📄 1-PAGE BRIEFING PDF
KETAN GUPTA · APRIL 2026
Portfolio Summary
OVERALL GRADE
B
AUM
₹73.8L
3 high-priority · 2 medium · 3 low · Full report attached
ACTION SUMMARY CARD
Agreed actions · Ketan Gupta · April 2026
HIGH
Exit Tata Large Cap — by May 15
HIGH
Consolidate to 2 Large Cap funds — by Jun 30
MED
Begin debt buffer SIP — by May 01
+5 further actions in full report · Next check-in: July 2026
🔄 QUARTERLY UPDATE NOTE
Scheduled: July 2026 · Auto-generated from evaluation data
Dear Mr. Gupta,

Q1 update on your portfolio following the April 2026 evaluation.

✓ Completed: Tata Large Cap exited · Large Cap consolidated to 2 funds · TER saving confirmed

In progress: Debt buffer at ₹4.2L of ₹12L target · SIP running

No new flags this quarter. Full annual evaluation due: April 2027.
All 6 assets above are auto-generated from this evaluation's locked data the moment Layer 1 is verified. Grades, fund names, and action items cannot be edited. Your name and firm details are applied automatically.
READY IN <30 MIN →
Methodology
Data UsedNSDL Consolidated Account Statement (CAMS + KFintech). Holdings as on 28-Feb-2026. 16 folios, 847 transactions.
Grading BasisEach scheme graded vs category benchmark and peer quartile ranking over 1, 3, and 5-year periods where available.
Overlap AnalysisBased on published AMC portfolios per SEBI mandate. Large Cap funds: minimum 80% in top-100 stocks. Verified from Feb 2026 factsheets.
Evaluation Scope55-factor framework. 37 factors evaluated from CAS data. 18 factors require additional documents (insurance, estate, goals). Indicated above.
This report was conducted independently. The Unfinished holds no distribution license, accepts no commissions, and has no product to sell. This Layer 1 report is confidential and intended for advisor review only.
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