Buried in documents
Important facts live inside PDFs and attachments instead of readable, structured web content.
Structured publishing infrastructure
Aegisaur turns scattered public information into trusted web content people can find now, and answer engines can understand next.
Websites are no longer only browsed page by page. People ask search engines, AI assistants, voice tools, and summaries for answers. If your information is stale, buried in PDFs, or trapped in an unstructured CMS, those systems may miss it, distort it, or answer from somewhere else.
02 — The problem
Organizations publish important information every day: notices, policies, agendas, minutes, forms, alerts, events, staff contacts, services, and updates. Too often that information ends up scattered across stale pages, buried inside PDFs, duplicated in multiple places, or locked behind publishing workflows only one person understands.
The result is not just a messy website. It is a public trust problem. People cannot find what they need. Staff cannot keep information current. Search systems cannot understand what is authoritative. The organization loses control of its own public record.
Important facts live inside PDFs and attachments instead of readable, structured web content.
Staff have the information, but the CMS makes publishing slow, inconsistent, or overly technical.
Answer engines need clear structure, source pages, dates, relationships, and trusted metadata.
03 — The shift
People will still visit websites directly, but discovery is changing. Search summaries, AI assistants, and voice tools increasingly read public web content and turn it into direct answers. That makes the structure of an organization’s website more important, not less.
Aegisaur prepares public information for that shift by making content clear, current, accessible, structured, and tied back to the organization’s own trusted source.
04 — How it works
Staff provide a notice, event, document, policy, update, or public question.
Aegisaur maps the information into the right content type with fields, dates, relationships, and metadata.
Accessibility, formatting, link quality, and publishing rules are checked before anything goes live.
A human reviews the draft and clicks Publish. AI never publishes by itself.
The result is a clean public page that people can read and modern search systems can understand.
05 — Trust architecture
Aegisaur is designed around bounded publishing. AI can help create structured drafts, extract document content, and prepare metadata, but it does not edit raw HTML, rewrite live pages, or publish directly.
AI actions are limited to a fixed registry of approved publishing tools.
Every AI-assisted output becomes a draft, not a live page.
A person reviews and approves before publication.
Content is checked before it becomes public.
Publishing actions are logged so organizations can understand what changed, when, and why.
Content is stored as fields and accessible blocks, not arbitrary HTML.
06 — Founding design partners
Aegisaur is accepting founding design partners: organizations with public information that needs to be clearer, more structured, easier to maintain, and ready for the next generation of search and discovery.
07 — Apply
Help shape Aegisaur around real publishing problems, real documents, real workflows, and real public information needs.
Thank you. We review founding design partners individually and will be in touch about next steps.