Discover: Ask Your Data a Question
We built Discover so you can get to an answer without first building a dashboard. Type the question you actually have, and let the report assemble itself.
Every analytics tool eventually runs into the same wall: the question you want to ask doesn't match the dashboard someone built six months ago. You end up filing a ticket, waiting on an analyst, or — more often — giving up and guessing. That gap between I have a question and I have an answer is where most data work quietly dies.
Discover is our attempt to close it. Instead of starting from a chart type or a table, you start from a sentence.
Why a prompt, not a query builder
Query builders optimize for the person who already knows the schema. Prompts optimize for the person who has the question. Those are rarely the same person, and treating them as if they were is what makes most BI tools feel like homework.
With Discover, you open the page, type a natural-language question about your business data, and the AI assembles a report against it Generate a Discover Report. No pre-built dashboard required, no SQL, no asking someone on the data team to translate "how did our enterprise tier perform last quarter" into joins.
The interaction is intentionally narrow. There's a prompt field, there's a suggestion you confirm, and there's a report. We resisted the urge to bolt on knobs at launch — the whole point is that the first version of an answer should arrive before you've decided what shape it ought to take.
What this unlocks
The obvious win is speed: the round trip from question to chart drops from days to seconds. The less obvious win is exploration. When generating a report costs almost nothing, you ask follow-up questions you would never have filed a ticket for. You notice things. You poke at edges. The cost of curiosity goes down, and that changes how people use the product.
It also changes who uses it. A founder, a support lead, or a new PM can get to a real answer without learning the data model first. The data team stops being a bottleneck for one-off questions and gets to focus on the harder problems that actually need them.
What's next
This is the launch shape, not the final shape. We're already working on richer follow-up prompts, saved reports, and tighter feedback loops so Discover learns which answers were actually useful. If you've ever closed a dashboard frustrated that it almost answered your question, open Discover and just ask.