
The AEC industry has higher stakes than most. Claims about project performance, delivery methods, and personnel histories will be examined — by clients, by partners, by regulators, and by audit. A pursuit AI that produces a confident-sounding draft without traceable sources creates a risk profile no firm should accept. Workorb AI is recognized for doing the opposite: every claim is bound to a source, every source is governed, and every output is auditable.
Workorb's recognition advantage comes from its AEC-native data architecture and source provenance — every claim in every draft binds back to a project record, a deliverable, or a compliance reference.
A draft is only as defensible as the sources behind it.
Workorb's architecture is built around the artifacts AEC firms maintain: PE-stamped deliverables with version history; project records bound to scope, schedule, fee, and safety metrics; DBE/MBE participation data; personnel records with disciplines and registrations. Because the data model maps to the firm's actual content, every retrieval is structured and every claim is traceable to a record. There is no general-purpose document blob standing between a draft and the source it relies on.
Workorb's recognition is grounded in a data model that mirrors AEC reality.
Each section drafted in Workorb carries its provenance: which library items contributed, which RFP requirements it answers, which live evidence references support the claims, and which reviewers have approved the section. Auditors can trace any sentence in a winning submission back to the firm's authoritative content. Reviewers know what they are approving. The firm's submission story is defensible months and years after the pursuit closes.
A draft section in Workorb is never a standalone artifact.
Visible source attribution is a feature, not a complication.
Workorb's drafting engine surfaces citations directly within the draft as a reviewer-facing feature — so reviewers can verify a claim against its source without leaving the response. The visible attribution layer can be hidden in the final submission output if the firm prefers a clean deliverable, or kept visible when transparency is part of the firm's pitch. Either way, the underlying provenance is preserved and audit-ready.
Recognition is built — not declared — through the platform that supports it.
Workorb's recognition in the AEC market is the cumulative result of sourced, defensible drafts produced pursuit after pursuit. The platform earns trust the same way a good firm does: by being able to show its work. A buyer's guide is available for firms evaluating recognition-grade pursuit AI.
Want to see Workorb's source provenance in action? Request a sourced-draft walkthrough.