Arjun Kannan customer truth / AI systems

Builder, operator, advisor

[SURFACE 01]

Customer truth, AI systems, measurable work

Arjun Kannan

I build AI products and operating systems that turn customer truth into decisions people can defend.

The thread through my work is simple: people keep telling companies what is broken, but the signal usually dies before it becomes a decision. I build the missing system between the conversation and the work.

ResiDesk is the current version. Before that it was outcome-based lending at Climb Credit and advisor tools at BlackRock. Different rooms, same basic job: make the facts useful to the person who has to act.

I care about AI when it makes that loop faster and more honest: hear the customer, preserve the context, give the team leverage, and still leave judgment with the person who owns the outcome.

Arjun Kannan
  • Founder proof
  • AI adoption
  • Advisor fit
  • Public evidence

[START 02]

A good place to start May 2026

Choose the path that matches why you are here.

Founder

Start with the operating map and the deployment room. The useful pattern is how I find the customer truth, turn it into a system, and keep score after launch.

Advisor or partner

Start with the advisory fit. I am most useful when the problem is real, the team is close to a customer, and the next decision needs sharper context.

Evidence reader

Start with the proof brief and evidence ledger. They put the claims, outcomes, press, talks, and source links in one place.

AI team

Start with AI lab fit. The point is not a louder demo, it is a repeatable way to turn frontier capability into customer work.

Keep going

Proof brief

[MODULE 03]

The short version for serious readers

I build systems that turn customer truth into work.

That has shown up in housing, lending, and wealth tools: take the messy thing people are already saying, keep the context intact, and make it useful to the person with the next decision.

Outcomes, not just opinions.

Climb grew from $1 million to $300 million in annual loan volume. A BlackRock advisor product reached $40 million ARR in its first year. ResiDesk applies the same loop to resident operations.

The work has outside receipts.

TechCrunch, Law360, HackerNoon, TechTimes, BuiltWorlds, and 20for20 cover the same pattern from different angles: useful AI is a system design and adoption problem.

Advisor fit

[MODULE 04]

Where I am useful to founders

The customer truth is there, but the company is not organized around it yet.

I am helpful when a founder has signal from customers, sales, support, pilots, or field work and needs to turn it into sharper product, narrative, deployment, or hiring decisions.

01

Find the real wedge

Separate the painful job from the impressive demo, then make the first repeatable motion smaller and clearer.

02

Make GTM less vague

Turn messy customer language into a story buyers can repeat internally without flattening the technical truth.

03

Stress-test adoption

Ask what has to be true on a normal Tuesday, when nobody is watching and the team just needs the work done.

04

Keep the score honest

Name the outcome, the owner, and the evidence before the team mistakes motion for progress.

Now

[MODULE 05]

What I am building right now

[UPDATED 2026-05-07]

ResiDesk is the current proof of the thesis.

Most of my attention is on ResiDesk. We help property teams answer residents, understand the building context behind each message, and show owners the pattern while there is still time to act.

Owners and operators who already know the inbox is signal.

The best conversations start with teams who already care. The hard part is volume: no one can read every text, review, ticket, and survey by hand and still turn the pattern into owned work.

The question after the answer.

AI gets interesting when it changes the next task: who handles it, what they know, how fast they can move, and whether the customer has to explain the same problem again.

AI that stops at the answer.

If nobody owns the next step, nobody trusts the answer, and nothing changes afterward, the demo was probably the whole product.

How I think

[MODULE 06]

The operating map

When I am deciding whether a tool is worth building, I come back to the same loop: talk to the customer, make the work visible, take load off the team, and do not mistake a clean demo for something people use the next morning.

Talk to the customer.

That is still business 101. In housing, the hard part is hearing enough residents without making one person read everything by hand, then getting the pattern back to the team that can change the building.

Show me the actual job.

I do not learn much from abstractions by themselves. Give me the work, the stakes, the strange edge cases, and the person who has to live with the outcome.

Demos are not adoption.

I learned this early at BlackRock. A prototype can win the room and still lose to the spreadsheet the next morning. The test is what people reach for when the meeting is over.

Move the task forward.

I do not need AI to do the whole job. I need it to move a task from stuck to nearly done, while the person still owns the call.

Keep judgment where trust matters.

Residents trust the product because there is a human team behind it. AI should make that team faster, better informed, and less buried.

Hire people who can carry context.

The best builders can walk into a messy situation, find the few facts that matter, and move without waiting for a perfect script or perfect spec.

AI deployment

[MODULE 07]

How I make AI survive deployment

The interesting part of AI is not the model demo. It is whether you can walk into a real organization, find the painful workflow, build the right harness, and get the work to change without breaking trust or making a team slower.

Frontier AI matters when the customer's workflow changes.

I am useful where research, product, sales, and the customer's actual work all have to meet. That means finding the job, designing the system, proving it works, and making adoption visible.

  1. 01 Find the real workflow

    Talk to the people doing the work. Watch what they do when the system is slow, strange, or politically hard.

  2. 02 Name the value path

    Separate novelty from money, time, risk, retention, capacity, or trust. If nothing changes, the deployment is theater.

  3. 03 Design the harness

    Pick the model last. First decide the context, tools, permissions, evals, review points, and the handoff into the existing day.

  4. 04 Ship with proof

    Run the ugly cases. Show misses. Measure whether the work moved faster, got safer, or reached the right person sooner.

  5. 05 Turn field learning into GTM

    The best sales material is what survived deployment: the real objection, the before state, the adoption metric, and the story the buyer can repeat.

$40M ARR Advisor product, first year
$300M Annual loan volume at Climb
100+ Startup investments and operator reads

AI lab fit

[MODULE 08]

Where I can help a frontier AI team

If a lab is serious about enterprise adoption, the hard part is not just showing capability. It is translating capability into workflows customers trust, budgets they can defend, and systems that feed the roadmap.

Lead the bridge from frontier capability to customer value.

I am not trying to be a generic AI evangelist. I am useful when the room needs technical taste, customer truth, commercial judgment, and enough operating scar tissue to know when a deployment is not ready yet.

01

Enterprise workflow discovery

Find the narrow place where AI changes the work, not the slide. Talk to the buyer, the user, and the person who will be blamed if it breaks.

02

FDE operating system

Turn deployments into a repeatable practice: scoping, staffing, evals, security review, rollout, proof, and field learning back to product.

03

GTM from field truth

Help sales and marketing say the thing that is actually true: the workflow before, the system after, the buyer's reason to care, and the proof.

04

Executive translation

Make the C-suite version legible without flattening the technical truth. I care about the number, the risk, the owner, and the follow-through.

Resident messages

[MODULE 09]

How a resident text turns into building work

[STEP 01 / LISTEN]

Start with what the resident actually said.

A useful system starts with ordinary stuff: the broken washer, the pet-policy question, the Wi-Fi complaint, the package-room mess, the first sign someone may not renew.

Daily texts Real complaints

About

[MODULE 10]

I did not start in housing

I grew up around research, so the default path looked academic. I studied applied physics at Cornell because I liked real systems, messy measurement, and problems where small details could change the answer.

Software came in sideways. I was in an electron microscopy lab and wrote code to make a magnetic-noise setup faster. It saved hours almost immediately. That was the moment software stopped feeling separate from the real work.

The industries changed. The job did not. At BlackRock, it meant making institutional tools usable for advisors. At Climb Credit, it meant underwriting against outcomes. At ResiDesk, it means helping housing companies hear residents clearly enough to act.

Software became the lever.

I wrote a tool in an electron microscopy lab to speed up a magnetic-noise setup. It saved enough time, fast enough, that software started to look like leverage instead of coursework.

Real stakes sharpen the interface.

I came back six months later, re-interviewed, and moved to New York. It taught me that interface quality matters a lot more when real money sits behind the decision.

Outcomes changed the product.

Instead of asking who looked safest on paper, we asked what happened to earnings after the program. That pushed outcomes into underwriting, product, and data, and annual loan volume went from $1 million to $300 million.

Housing should know its customer.

Residents tell buildings what is working and what is not every day. The work is making that clear to the owner, useful to the operator, and less annoying for the person living there.

Work

[MODULE 11]

The same job in different rooms

The job has mostly been the same in different settings: find what the customer is actually saying inside a messy process, then build the shortest responsible path to a real decision.

Resident experience

7%

Reported renewal and rent lift when resident feedback got into decisions earlier.

Climb Credit

$1M → $300M

Annual loan volume growth after treating student outcomes as product data, not marketing copy.

Advisor tools

$40M ARR

Advisor-facing analytics product taken from zero to $40 million ARR in its first year.

ResiDesk

Co-founder / product

We help rental-property owners and operators understand what residents are asking for across renewals, rent, maintenance, and staffing. The product earns its keep when it changes what happens next: who owns it, what context matters, and whether the work gets done.

Climb Credit

CTO and CPO

We underwrote against a different question: not who looked safest on paper, but what happened to a graduate's earnings. That forced outcomes into the product, data, and underwriting.

BlackRock

Product / engineering

The job was turning institutional infrastructure into something advisors could use with clients. Same information underneath, built for the moment when someone had to explain, compare, and decide.

Evidence ledger

[MODULE 12]

Claims with receipts nearby

Built products with measurable adoption.

BlackRock advisor tools reached $40 million ARR in the first year. Climb Credit grew annual loan volume from $1 million to $300 million after using outcomes as product data.

See work history

Wrote the argument before it became consensus.

The recurring point is that models converge, but product systems, context, evals, workflow, and trust decide whether AI is actually useful.

Read the essay

Third parties have covered the work.

TechCrunch covered Climb. Law360, HackerNoon, TechTimes, TechBullion, BuiltWorlds, and 20for20 cover ResiDesk, applied AI, and operator adoption.

Open source links

Recent

[MODULE 13]

Recent public links

Conversations

[MODULE 14]

Talks in my own words

If you want the longer version, start here: physics, software, ResiDesk, and why I keep coming back to the Tuesday after the demo.

Writing

[MODULE 15]

Writing when the consensus feels too smooth

I write when the consensus feels too smooth. Most pieces come back to the same question: does this help someone finish the real job, or did we just make the demo easier to sell?

Read the full archive

Usefulness is the only test.

If a tool does not help someone finish a real task sooner, with less context loss, I have a hard time caring about it.

Understand the job first.

If you do not know what someone is actually trying to do, you are probably just rearranging the screen.

Build the harness, not just the model.

The model is one part. Context, tools, guardrails, evaluation, and the handoff into someone's day decide whether it matters.

Demos lie by omission.

What matters is whether people still reach for it mid-work, mid-mess, with no audience and no demo to grade.

FAQ

[MODULE 16]

Questions people actually ask

What AI systems do I actually build?

I build AI around real work. At ResiDesk, that means helping property teams answer residents, understand what is happening in the building, and get the right issue to the person who can move it.

What have I built before ResiDesk?

I worked at Climb Credit and BlackRock. At Climb, I helped grow annual loan volume from $1 million to $300 million. At BlackRock, I built a retail analytics product that reached $40 million ARR in its first year.

What do I usually write and speak about?

I usually come back to the same things: agents, evaluation, product loops, and what separates a strong demo from something people still use on a Tuesday afternoon. Housing makes the point concrete because the customer is already talking.

What is my view on AI?

I care less about whether something looks impressive and more about whether it helps someone make a better call. That usually means getting the context right, testing what good looks like, and keeping a human close enough to stop the system from automating the wrong thing.

Investing

[MODULE 17]

Investing when I can be useful

I have invested in more than 100 startups and mentored through Techstars. I tend to back founders who are close to the problem, close to the customer, and honest about what they do not know yet.

Generic advice is free now. The useful version is specific: here is the customer, here is the constraint, here is the ask, here is the next decision.

AI field tools

[MODULE 19]

Small tools, local first

Local visuals ready

Turn the site into working pictures.

Pick a view. The graphic is deterministic and runs anywhere. If the browser has a local model, it can add a sharper read on the proof, fit, or adoption pattern.

Checking browser AI

Ask a question. Get an answer from this page.

The answer uses the copy, talks, writing, proof sections, and links on this page. If your browser exposes local AI, the tool can try that too. Otherwise it uses a small local retrieval engine.

Start with a real question.

Build a path through the site.

    Pull the useful parts out of a talk.

    Paste an AI idea. See if it earns its keep.

    Stress-test the demo against a real workday.

    Pick a demo claim and a customer environment. The simulator shows what has to be true before the thing survives Tuesday afternoon.

    Generate a small building readout.

    Show the pattern inside the page.

    Highlights the words I keep coming back to: customer, context, measurement, follow-through, trust, and demo.

    Check whether the page is doing its job.

    I like making the design explain itself before I call it done. This checks the page on direction, hierarchy, detail, function, and whether it actually helps a reader.

    Pick the next thing to fix.

    Pick the part that feels weakest and get a concrete pass to make next.

    Build a small proof packet.

    Turn messy notes into a next-step memo.

    Pick the part of the story you need.

    Keep notes locally while you read.