Resources
Notes, releases, and field ops playbooks.
Smaller, practical reads for turning field work into company memory.
Launching Tempo
Tempo Team2mTempo is the first AI employee built to run CPG field teams, reviewing every visit live so reps can fix issues before they leave the store.
May 13, 2026 · Field OpsA practical starter kit for AI field teams
Tempo Team5mA sample resource post showing the shape Tempo can use for field operations playbooks, product thinking, and implementation notes.
May 12, 2026 · Field OpsWhat a field visit packet should contain
Tempo Team4mThe minimum context Tempo needs to turn a store visit into proof, coaching, reporting, and memory.
May 11, 2026 · PlaybooksHow to coach a rep before they leave the store
Tempo Team4mA practical guide to catching missing proof, display gaps, and next steps while the rep can still fix them.
May 10, 2026 · ReportingA daily action report template for field managers
Tempo Team5mWhat managers need each morning: what happened, what changed, what was fixed, and what still needs a decision.
May 9, 2026 · Field OpsTurning photos into proof without slowing reps down
Tempo Team4mHow to collect useful photo evidence while keeping the field workflow fast and natural.
May 8, 2026 · ProductHow Tempo learns what normal looks like in a store
Tempo Team5mStore memory turns approvals, dismissals, fixes, and repeat patterns into better future flags.
May 7, 2026 · OperatorsWhen to automate and when to ask for approval
Tempo Team4mA simple boundary model for deciding which field actions Tempo can draft, queue, recommend, or commit.
May 6, 2026 · PlaybooksThe first 30 days of an AI field pilot
Tempo Team6mHow to pick the right territory, measure the right outcomes, and expand from real field behavior.
May 5, 2026 · ProductA practical price book workflow for field teams
Tempo Team4mHow to build and maintain price intelligence from real store visits without a long setup project.
May 4, 2026 · ReportingRoute exceptions instead of reviewing every visit
Tempo Team5mHow to help managers focus on proof gaps, route risk, and account issues without reading every note.