Site map · human-readable
Atlas.
Every public page on this site. What it covers, why it exists, who it’s written for. The human-readable counterpart to sitemap.xml.
Primary pages
What we do.
Three-line-of-business landing. Real estate / hospitality / labor. The first surface anyone sees. Links forward to every depth-page below.
Deep three-section page covering all three lines of business with the deliverables under each. Schema.org Service triple for SEO indexing per service.
The recurring documents shipped every month, each with cadence, audience, and Apple-tier layout details. The credentials page, in deliverable form.
Eight locked operating rules behind every packet, invoice, and decision document. Numbered card layout. Reads in ninety seconds.
Company governance and formation. Legal name, state, filing number, EIN, principal place of business. The page lawyers and accountants ask for.
What’s shipping this week and this month. Updated when something material lands, not on a schedule. Inspired by the /now page movement.
Contact + governance
How to reach us. What we don’t do.
Contact details. Hours. By-appointment-only visiting policy. Email is the canonical channel.
What we collect on this site (almost nothing), how we handle it, who we share it with (no one).
Use of the public information published on this site. Service-level commitments live in signed MSAs with counterparties, not here.
This page. Site map for humans.
Security posture, vulnerability disclosure policy, third-party data sharing posture (none).
Machine-readable
For crawlers and bots.
Standard search-engine sitemap with priority weights per page.
Machine-readable counterpart with richer metadata per entry. For programmatic consumers.
Crawler instructions. Sitemap pointer.
Updates as they land. Subscribe via any feed reader.
Authorship and stack credits. A small tradition.
RFC 9116 well-known location for security vulnerability reports.
Fallback
If you land somewhere that isn’t here.
Apple-tier 404 with a quicklinks grid back to every primary page. Try the link to test — you’ll see the fallback.