A score is only useful if you can defend it. EvalLense reports are built around that idea: open any rating and you see the slide it came from, the rubric line it answered, and the reasoning in plain language.

From matrix to memo

The scoring matrix gives the at-a-glance ranking. Click into a row and the report expands into a memo — strengths, risks, and the open questions a partner should raise in the first call.

The best feedback we get is boring: 'I knew exactly why this deck ranked where it did.' That's the whole point.

— Maya Okonkwo, Design

Designed to be argued with

Reports are editable. If a reviewer disagrees with a score, they override it and the change is logged — the report becomes a record of the conversation, not a verdict handed down.