Discovery to delivered. One conversation.
One operating system for the whole engagement: from first discovery call to signed UAT, driven by talking to your AI assistant.
You work in chat. The web app shows you where things stand.
- A read-only mirror of where things stand
- Nothing new to learn
- No seat for someone who only checks in
- Works with Claude and ChatGPT
One deal, end to end.
Every stage professional services automation promises, in one system: discovery notes become a scope, the scope becomes a priced proposal, the signed proposal becomes delivery with tracked time, and the engagement closes with UAT and sign-off. Nothing is re-entered between stages.
Discovery
Structured fields capture the deal as you talk through the call.
- Goals, current state, project shape, and constraints captured as structured fields
- Confidence updates as the conversation fills in
- The call transcript attaches automatically

Your client sees the scope and the price. Never your cost, your margin, or your rate.
See your own operation run from one conversation.
Questions people ask about this.
What is a professional services automation system?
Professional services automation (PSA) software runs a services business end to end: pipeline, scoping, proposals, delivery, and time tracking in one system. Emerjent covers that lifecycle and adds an AI-native layer, so you run it by talking to an assistant instead of clicking through modules.
What is an agency operating system?
An agency operating system is one platform that runs every repeatable part of an agency: deals, proposals, client portals, delivery, time, and knowledge. Emerjent is an AI-native one, which means the system is operated from chat and AI agents do real work inside it.
What is the difference between ERP and PSA?
ERP manages a company's core resources like finance, inventory, and HR, and it is built for product businesses. PSA is built for services: pipeline, projects, utilization, and billing around client engagements. A lean agency usually needs PSA-shaped software long before it needs an ERP.