The onboarding brief gave you the 30-second version of each capability. These guides go deeper, so you can answer the hard follow-ups, talk credibly with an IT director, and explain exactly how each feature works and why it is built the way it is.
Read the brief first for the story. Reach for these when a prospect asks “but how does that actually work?” Each guide is self-contained and follows the same shape: what it is, why it matters, how it works, how it is configured, what is Basic vs Pro, who it sells to, and the honest limits.
Districts and teachers write classroom rules in normal sentences, and Tenet enforces them on every supported AI platform, invisibly. Teacher-by-teacher control is the superpower.
The choice that makes the privacy story, the speed, and the pricing all work: the sensitive work happens in the browser, so prompts never reach our servers.
Districts choose which AI tools are allowed. Tenet enforces the allowlist on-device and recognizes AI behavior, so it catches new tools a URL blocklist would miss.
Seven trained, on-device models for self-harm, bullying, jailbreaks and more, in a three-layer pattern. Free crisis overlays, optional counselor alerts.
A four-phase pipeline that scrubs private student data out of prompts and files before they leave the device, including the standout name-pseudonymization trick.
How a district goes from decision to deployed in under a day, with no new infrastructure, plus the IT-facing details on data ownership, roster, and the kill switch.
How to communicate how easy the install is: add the extension, paste a short config in Google Admin, and (for Pro) upload a simple roster. Includes the Basic vs Pro roster nuance.
Internal co-sell hit list: which K-12 partners and platforms to align with, and how Tenet fits alongside them. Keep this one internal, do not share with prospects.