Flight schools already have tools for scheduling, billing, and flight tracking. What they lack is a structured way to see how training quality is actually being delivered. Brief-CC is that layer.
Every role in a flight school feels the same gap from a different seat. The cockpit is high-workload, progress is hard to see, and oversight happens after the fact — in periodic meetings, not in real time.
Instructors can keep their own teaching style. The school should still have a consistent standard for what is taught, observed, recorded, and reviewed.
This isn't a paperwork problem. It's a visibility problem — and standardizing the observation layer doesn't mean standardizing the instructor.
Brief-CC is not just an AI comment generator.The instructor flies and grades on the iPad — offline if needed. Evidence syncs field-by-field into an immutable, multi-tenant backbone. The school runs roster, fleet, roles, and curriculum from the web console and exports a TC-aligned PTR — without replacing instructor judgment.
Standardizes what is taught, observed, recorded, and reviewed — a structured training-quality data layer, not a replacement for the instructor.
The entry point is structured in-flight observation. Instead of writing it all down afterward from memory, the instructor records what actually happened — as it happens — in a few cockpit-safe taps.
Per exercise: the maneuver performed, practice mode, student result, instructor input, any safety issue and intervention, the verbal cue given, overall performance, and notable observations — turned into consistent, comparable evidence.
Brief-CC captures it during the flight, as structured evidence the school can review and compare.
The status quo reconstructs it after the flight, from memory — which is exactly where detail and consistency are lost.
From onboarding to the management dashboard, every stage feeds the next — and the in-flight observation at the centre is what makes the whole chain trustworthy.
Students, fleet, and per-school curriculum loaded as data.
Where each student stands against the syllabus.
Advisory next-lesson guidance — never an order.
The wedge: structured evidence captured during the flight.
Draft debrief from real evidence. AI is assistance, not authority.
Locked records + amendments — not silent edits.
The school finally sees training quality as data.
This isn't a deck-only idea. The product is running in a real flight school, gated behind a comprehensive automated test suite. The remaining work is hardening and onboarding — not a rebuild.
The same record serves four different needs at once — which is what makes adoption stick across a whole school, not just one enthusiastic instructor.
A funded U.S. player proves schools will pay for structured training quality. The opening is a Canada-first platform built around Canadian regulation, beachheaded in Ontario through founder-led sales.
“FlightSense validates the U.S. market. Brief-CC is building the Canada-first training quality assistance platform for Canadian FTUs.”
| Dimension | Brief-CC | FlightSense |
|---|---|---|
| Primary market | Canada — TC / CARs | United States — FAA / Part 141 |
| Regulatory orientation | PTR-aligned, CAR-mapped | ACS-mapped |
| When evidence is captured | During the flight | After the flight |
| Capture method | Structured in-flight tap evidence | Post-flight voice debrief |
| AI role | Debrief assist, reviewed before sign | Debrief generation |
| Record model | Immutable signed records + amendments | Debrief-focused |
| Curriculum model | Per-school course-cards-as-data | — |
| Management visibility | Multi-tenant console + dashboard | — |
| Pricing | CAD 20 / seat / mo | USD 15 / seat / mo |
| Record holder | FTU remains the official record holder | — |
Based on FlightSense's public positioning. “—” indicates a dimension that is not its stated focus, not a confirmed gap. The moat is a structured training-quality data layer built for Canadian regulation.
A simple per-seat model where a seat is any school user — owners, CFIs, instructors. Students aren't counted. Revenue grows with both the number of schools and seats per school.
Per-school: 5 seats → $1,200/yr · 10 → $2,400 · 20 → $4,800 · 40 → $9,600 · 75 → $18,000/yr.
A focused adoption round to turn one live pilot into a repeatable onboarding motion across Canadian flight schools — run by a lean, low-burn two-person team.
Builds the platform end-to-end — iPad, API, web, and the regulatory data model — with first-hand flight-training context.
Runs the pilot relationship and school outreach — the founder-led sales motion into Canadian FTUs.
Real, validated category. A funded U.S. player proves schools pay for structured training quality.
Canada-first wedge. Built around TC / CARs and the PTR — where no incumbent is focused.
Defensible data layer. Structured in-flight observation + immutable records compound into a moat.
Built, not promised. Live in a real pilot, test-gated — remaining work is hardening, not a rebuild.
Capital-efficient. A small ask buys adoption traction from a lean team with deep domain context.
The structured way for Canadian flight schools to see how training quality is actually being delivered — captured during the flight, owned by the school, aligned with the regulator.