An honest view of where Batchrite is today and where it could go. What’s shipped is real and running with the pilot cohort. What’s in progress lands this quarter. Everything past that is a post-pilot candidate — the roadmap only extends as far as the pilot does. We’d rather tell you that up front than dress it up.
The core batch-record loop — design, run, review, lock — plus the audit and access controls a PD group needs to defend its numbers. All live with pilot members.
Draft any process as a graph, not a step-list. Branch, parallelize, and version without rewriting the record.
Describe a process in plain language and the assistant drafts it as a graph — for your review, over your own data only.
Protocols and batch records generated from your modality-aware templates — no rebuilding the document by hand.
Extract numeric readings from gauges and displays, and flag anomalies across run images automatically.
A lightweight scientist → process lead → head of PD review, with hand-drawn e-signatures bound to every event.
Every change logged with actor, timestamp, and before/after. Append-only and tamper-evident, so memory survives turnover.
Post-lock edits require a typed justification and a fresh signature. Locked records can’t be silently mutated.
Every lot, reagent, instrument, and operator threaded into a queryable history you can answer CMC’s questions from.
Organizations, teams, and fine-grained roles and permissions, scoped per project.
One-click archive of an entire project in open formats (Excel, CSV, PDF), or connect Batchrite to your own systems.
In active development and rolling out to design partners this quarter. These are the requests that came up most across pilot conversations.
Ask the assistant to analyze a set of runs and surface the factors driving your critical quality attributes — the 80% case for JMP / Design-Expert.
SAML single sign-on and SCIM provisioning with Okta, Entra, and Google Workspace.
Data is encrypted at rest today; the option to bring your own AWS or GCP keys is rolling out to design partners.
Not dated, not committed. These are the directions we’re most convinced by — the future tasks we’d take on once the pilot proves out and enough PD groups are on board. Pilot members rank them; the rest stays honest.
Turn a locked process into a tech-transfer package mapped to your CDMO’s format — or your own SOP / batch-record template.
Connect Batchrite to the AI agents you already run — query runs, draft processes, and log results without opening the UI.
Sequenced after GA so the controls we attest to are the ones actually in production — if the company gets that far.
Adapters for the two or three instruments our pilot members actually live on — built once we know which those are.
Adjacent science-driven industries — specialty chemicals, vitamins, medical devices — but only if the core proves out here first.
Batchrite is built for pre-GMP process development. These are out of bounds on purpose — and we’ll tell your QA group as much in writing.
We don’t claim Part 11 compliance, GLP validation, or commercial-GMP fitness. The PD floor is enough traceability to defend a process, without the GxP overhead.
When your process leaves PD, we hand off cleanly to a validated MES (Tulip, MasterControl, Veeva) with a full export of the development history.
We’re small on purpose, and the roadmap stays short on purpose. Every item earns its place against the same three questions.
Every decision starts with one question we can name: which PD group is this for, and what does it unblock for them this quarter? If we can’t answer that, we don’t build it.
Pilot members rank what jumps the queue. The order above is theirs, not ours — and it shifts as we learn what actually slows a process development group down.
Saying no is part of the roadmap. We name what’s out of bounds so you can plan the handoff to a validated MES when your process leaves PD.
Everything past Q3 depends on enough process development groups joining the pilot. If Batchrite would help yours, a 30-minute call is how it gets built — and how your requests go to the top of the list.