The vendor built the deck. You're reading it in the room.

The problem isn't the review. It's what you bring to it.

  • What the vendor brings

    Metrics they control. SLAs they define. A deck that shows the picture they want you to see.

  • What that leaves out

    Whether any of it reflects how their service actually lands across your organization.

  • What Voxxify adds

    The independent record the vendor cannot produce, dispute, or prepare for.

  • Voxxify gave us clear focus on tens of millions in IT spend. Our partner acted immediately — because everyone was seeing the same picture.

    IT Director, GroceryCo

When you arrive at the QBR with the independent record

  • The data is independent.

    Captured from the people using the service — the only source in the review that no single party controls.

  • The conversation shifts.

    When both sides share the same independent picture, the session moves to what changes next. The deck becomes irrelevant.

  • Accountability has a record.

    Performance is measured against the same record, review after review. Commitments made in one QBR are tested in the next.

Ready before the review. Not after it.

  • 10 days

    for your people to respond.

  • 10 minutes

    for the analysis to complete.

  • 10 seconds

    to know what it's telling you.

The facts change the room.

  • QBRs used to feel like a presentation. Now they feel like a working session — we have the facts before we go in.

    Karl Aherne, COO, Fexco

Your questions, answered.

Vendor reporting measures what the vendor controls. It is accurate within that frame — and structurally incapable of showing what sits outside it. Voxxify produces the record the vendor cannot provide and cannot dispute.

SLAs confirm the vendor met the terms they agreed to. They don’t confirm whether those terms reflect the condition of your organization. A vendor can meet every SLA while friction remains unrecorded. Voxxify produces the record that sits outside the vendor’s frame entirely.

At contract renewal. When performance is disputed. When the metrics show green and the organization says otherwise. When a vendor needs to be held to account across more than one review cycle.

The data comes from your employees — the only source in the review no single party controls. It cannot be disputed on methodology grounds the way vendor-supplied metrics can. That is precisely what makes it useful at the table.

Yes. The record covers how IT lands across your organization — not how a single vendor performs in isolation. Where multiple partners are involved, Voxxify shows where friction sits regardless of which contract it falls under.

You define who to listen to and what to measure. Voxxify handles execution, analysis, and delivery of the record — ready before the review date.

The next QBR happens either way.

Who will control the record it rests on?