Cell
One score, one source.
- statementparagraphs 3 & 7
- letterDr. Vasquez
- budgetline item 14
Application management software with AI rubric scoring, document analysis, and bias detection — built for grants, scholarships, accelerators, and awards.
The shortlist isn't the best forty applicants — it's the first forty your team had time to read. Fixing that is a system problem, not a discipline problem.
AI-assisted application review for grants, scholarships, fellowships, accelerators, awards, admissions, and corporate giving programs. Every essay read against the rubric — not just the ones reviewers had time for before Friday. Reviewer drift caught during the cycle. Cohort reports pulled from the application records, not joined from four spreadsheets at the end.
Submittable, SurveyMonkey Apply, WizeHive, and Award Force won the last category by selling two things every team needed in 2014. Both of those things are now the reason the cycle takes ten weeks instead of three.
Intake forms, conditional logic, applicant portal, status emails. You no longer had to stitch this together with Typeform and Mailchimp.
Rubric inside the app, scoring matrix, conflict-of-interest declaration, panel comments. Reviewers no longer scored in a parallel spreadsheet.
Intake, clarification, review, decision, follow-up, re-application four cycles later — all on the same applicant record. Not a workflow product. Not a review product. The application record that holds everything, so cohort reports come out of one place instead of a CSV merge at the end of every cycle.
We call it the Application Thread. The name matters less than what it does: workflow and reviewer screens are now table stakes. The applicant's record is where the next decade is won.
Two to three months to launch a program. Every new program inside the same organization repeats most of the work. The flexibility is the cost.
The platform records numbers. It can't tell you whether the essay was read or just skimmed. Reviewer drift surfaces after the cohort is scored, not before — when there's still time to do something about it.
Could you prompt your way to a demo for one applicant on one rubric? Yes. Could you build something that holds a foundation's applicant data across ten program cycles, with the source evidence you can show an auditor or a board chair? That's a different problem.
Same applicant ID at year five as at year one. Re-applicants from earlier cycles show up with their previous essays, scores, and outcome data already attached. The record doesn't reset at the award decision.
Rubric scores, panel comments, essay text, recommendation letters, follow-up survey responses, and the applicant's contact info — all kept on one record. The foundation sees its full applicant picture, not five disconnected program lists.
Each AI-proposed score points back to the specific essay paragraph, recommendation sentence, or budget line that produced it. Each panel rationale points to a reviewer and a timestamp. When the board chair asks why this 40 and not those 40, the answer is right there.
This has been Sopact's work since 2014 — before the language-model category existed. The application-record idea predates the AI that now reads against it.
Used interchangeably with application management system, application management platform, and application review software. The terms point to the same market; the differences are which stage of the lifecycle the buyer is thinking about when they search.
Application management software is a platform that runs the complete application cycle — intake, clarification, review, scoring, decision, and follow-up — with one persistent record per applicant across every stage. It replaces the typical stack of intake form, email clarifications, reviewer spreadsheet, decision log, and follow-up survey with one connected record. Used by grant-making foundations, scholarship committees, admissions offices, fellowship and accelerator operators, corporate giving programs, and award committees.
Sopact reads each response, tags it back to the source, applies the same rubric to every applicant, and rolls everything up into cohort-level patterns. Less reviewer bias, no manual tallying, every decision traceable.
One score, one source.
One applicant, six writes.
One question across the cohort.
Every applicant the program has ever had.
Fig. 1The application record at four scales — Cell (the score), Row (the applicant), Column (the cohort), Grid (the institution). The 6-stage flow lives inside Layer 02.
The applicant record sits in the middle. The CRM you already use feeds it at intake. The accounting, disbursement, or student-information system you already use takes the decision at the award moment. Sopact owns the record in between — the systems on either side keep doing what they do.
The category claim, in one line. Sopact runs the application record. Your CRM, your accounting system, your SIS, and your community platform stay where they are. The applicant's identity is what carries across them.
Five questions a program officer, scholarship chair, or selection committee asks on a normal Tuesday — not at the annual board meeting. The shape of the answer is where Sopact and the older platforms stop being comparable.
AI read every essay overnight, scored each against the rubric, and pulled the three paragraphs that supported the score. Reviewer comments are on the same record. The borderline-shortlist tab shows the 97 applications that need human judgment — including #447. None of the 500 are unread.
Three reviewers read the first 60. By Friday committee, the other 440 are scored by the team that ran out of Thursday. The platform shows scores. It doesn't show whether the essay was actually read.
The drift signal surfaces mid-cycle, broken out by reviewer, track, and rubric dimension. The panel chair sees it on Tuesday and recalibrates. The committee doesn't vote on a cohort that has already drifted.
Reviewer drift shows up in the cohort export at the end of the cycle, after the committee has already met. The fix is for the next cycle. The fix for this cycle is to defend the shortlist in the boardroom.
For each applicant: rubric scores on each dimension, the essay paragraphs that supported each score, panel comments, COI exclusions. Side-by-side comparison of #40 and #41 is a click, not a project. The board chair gets the answer, not a follow-up email.
The score is on file. The reasoning is in someone's head, in a margin comment, or in a Slack thread. Reconstructing the rationale for one applicant takes an afternoon. The board chair asks about three.
The applicant's history holds across programs. Every program they applied to, every decision, every follow-up — on one record. You see their full picture in the foundation, not five separate program lists.
Each program is configured separately. Cross-program identity gets rebuilt manually at reporting time. Re-applicants are detected by name match, which fails on married names, transliterated names, and email changes.
Follow-up surveys go out from the same record. Responses write back to the original applicant ID. The cohort report is one query: who was admitted, what they said at intake, what the year-one survey said, what the alumni survey said. The funder gets evidence. You get your week back.
Selection data in one system. Follow-up survey data in a second. Communications log in a third. The annual report is a CSV merge with a reconciliation document. Nobody fully trusts the joined record.
Not a one-shot prompt for one essay. A system that holds your applicants across every cohort you've ever run — with the supporting evidence kept on the record.
Four transformations the system runs every time an application lands. Click through them in order — each one is something a legacy review platform has no place to do.
"My organization has spent eight years partnering with Lakeside Community School to redesign the after-school program. We doubled enrollment among first-generation students and shifted the model from tutoring to project-based learning. Two of our alumni are now teachers at the same school. The theory we proved: when the program is co-designed with the families it serves, retention compounds across years..."
Score: 4.4 Dimension: Theory of change articulation Evidence: · Co-design framing (¶3, sentence 4) · Multi-year retention claim (¶3, sentence 5) · Quantitative anchor: "doubled enrollment" (¶3) Confidence: high Reviewer status: pending confirmation
Reviewer sees the score, the three supporting paragraphs, and the option to override. Any override is logged with the reviewer's ID and timestamp on the record.
"I have worked with Maria since 2019 when she joined as a program associate. In that time she has rebuilt our intake process, hired and managed two junior staff, and developed the partnership with the city housing authority that now anchors our scattered-site work. She has handled three difficult board transitions with what I can only call equanimity. I do not write this kind of letter often..."
Signal type: senior recommender, six-year history Concrete claims: · Rebuilt intake process (verifiable) · Hired/managed 2 staff (verifiable) · Built city partnership (verifiable) · Handled 3 board transitions Calibration flag: "do not write this kind of letter often" — distinctive language Reviewer status: AI-flagged for read
The system doesn't score the letter. It pulls out verifiable claims and flags the parts where the recommender is saying something unusual. The reviewer reads with context; the rubric score is a human call.
Line 1 · Personnel · $84,500 Line 2 · Fringe (22%) · $18,590 Line 3 · Travel · $4,200 Line 4 · Program supplies · $12,000 Line 5 · Sub-grants · $25,000 Line 6 · Indirect (15%) · $12,675 Line 7 · Evaluation · $8,000 Total requested: $164,965 Match: $32,000 in-kind from school district
Eligibility check:
· Total under ceiling ($200K) ✓
· Match documented ✓
· Indirect within policy (15%) ✓
Flagged for staff review:
! Sub-grants $25K — pass-through
policy requires Schedule R disclosure
! Evaluation line absent from narrative
(cross-check vs §4 of proposal)
Eligibility checks happen at intake, not at panel review. The program officer sees the two issues on Tuesday, asks the applicant to clarify before the panel reads — not after.
487 applicant records, each holding: · Rubric scores across 6 dimensions · 2-4 panel comments · AI essay extractions · Decision + rationale · Demographic self-report · 90-day follow-up response (admits) · Year-1 outcome survey (admits)
Admitted: 42 of 487 (8.6%) Mean rubric score, admits: 4.31 Reviewer-drift incidents: 1 (recalibrated) Demographic distribution: · First-gen: 67% (target 60%) · Geographic: 14 states, 2 territories Year-1 outcome survey (n=39): · Milestone hit: 82% · Program-attributed shift: 71% Sources: 487 records, 1 query
Not a CSV merge. Not a four-system reconstruction. One query against the application records, every supporting score still attached.
Every application platform built before AI quits at the same place — the award letter. The applicant becomes a CSV export. The program team becomes the integration layer between systems. The post-decision work — annual surveys, training cohorts, case management, multi-year grant administration — gets pushed to a different tool with a different applicant ID, owned by a different vendor. The applicant's record should continue past the decision, not start over.
LOI → full proposal
Budget, theory of change, organizational documents. Multi-round review. The classic foundation cycle.
Essay + transcripts → award
Recommenders, financial-aid context, demographic self-report. Essay-heavy review.
Pitch deck → interview → cohort
Founder questionnaire, demo, reference calls, panel selection. Smallest cohorts, highest touch.
Nomination → jury rounds → decision
Blind review, conflict-of-interest routing, tiebreaker workflows, multi-round scoring under hard external deadlines.
Nomination → vetting → fund
Internal stakeholder scoring against company priorities. ESG criteria. Partner due diligence.
Annual reflection + milestone check-ins
Year-1, year-3, year-5 surveys. Pre/post outcome evidence. The minimum-touch case — and the most common one.
Curriculum delivery + between-session check-ins
Accelerator curricula, fellowship cohorts, workforce training. Each session writes back to the same applicant ID. Alumni engagement continues on the same record.
Small grants + services + events + ongoing relationship
The grant ($500–$2K typically) is one piece of an ongoing relationship — services, referrals, events, repeated touchpoints across years. Common for emergency-relief funds, hardship grants, and direct-service nonprofits.
Read the case-management page →Multi-year reporting + drawdowns + amendments + compliance
Form 990 Schedule I, donor reports, IRIS+, state AG, accreditation. Heavy compliance work on every dollar moved. The grantee record extends for years.
Pre/post assessments, between-session check-ins, learning outcomes tracked per participant. Useful for accelerators, fellowships, and workforce training programs that need to show participant progress over the cohort.
Read the training-evaluation page →Theory-of-change tracking, IRIS+ alignment, validated instruments (PHQ-2, GAD-2, PSS, NPS) for follow-up surveys. The outcomes funders ask about at the end of the year — kept on the same applicant record from intake forward.
Read the impact-measurement page →Portfolio-level roll-up of impact across every program. Foundations, impact funds, and CSR teams report at the portfolio level — not just per-grant or per-program — from the same applicant records.
Read the impact-portfolio page →Other application platforms end at "congratulations, you've been selected." The applicant's record continues — same ID, same supporting evidence, same essays and panel notes — across the year-one milestone survey, the third training session, the fourth case-management touchpoint, the seventh-year compliance amendment.
"Show me 2023 cohort admits whose year-one follow-up survey indicated they fell behind on milestones — joined to the intake essay paragraphs on theory of change that scored above 4.0 at selection. Group by program officer."
2023 cohort admits. Application records still hold the pre-decision essay scores on the same row. 47 admits in scope.
Intersect with the year-one survey response · milestone-slip indicator. Same applicant ID across the decision. Returns 12.
Pull each applicant's intake essay paragraphs that scored above 4.0 on theory of change. Source paragraphs still attached from 2023. 9 of 12 match.
Group by program officer. Three officers, nine rows. Each row holds the original 2023 claim against the 2024 reality — useful evidence for how to score the 2025 cohort.
Pre-side workflow weight and post-side intensity vary independently. A scholarship has heavy intake and light follow-up. A microgrant program with case management has light intake and heavy ongoing service work. One record per applicant handles every combination — the applicant's identity doesn't break when the decision is made.
One platform, more use cases. Every organization unlocks a different combination on the same applicant record — training evaluation (pre/post assessments, learning outcomes per participant), impact measurement (theory-of-change tracking, IRIS+, validated instruments), and impact portfolio (portfolio-level roll-up across grants and programs). The record is already there from intake — nothing has to be reconstructed at the end of the year.
Ten questions that come up in nearly every application-management evaluation. Answered here, so the comparison work happens before the sales call — not during it.
Application management software runs the full application cycle — intake, clarification, review, decision, and follow-up — keeping one record per applicant across every stage. It replaces the typical stack of intake form, email clarifications, reviewer spreadsheet, decision log, and follow-up survey with one connected record.
Used by grant-making foundations, scholarship committees, admissions offices, fellowship and accelerator operators, corporate giving programs, and award committees.
A CRM tracks customer relationships. An ATS tracks job candidates through hiring. Application management software tracks applicants through a selection process with a rubric-based review at the center.
Rubric scoring, blind review, panel collaboration, and cohort reporting are standard in application management software and absent from both CRMs and ATSs. The output is a funded grantee, awarded scholar, or admitted cohort member — not a closed sale or hired employee.
AI-assisted scoring is reliable for reading long-form content (essays, recommendation letters, multi-answer responses, case notes) consistently against the rubric, for completeness and eligibility checks at intake, and for shortlisting at the top of high-volume cycles. It is not reliable for final decisions.
Sopact uses an AI-assisted human review approach: the AI proposes scores with the supporting paragraphs attached, a reviewer confirms or overrides, and both are kept on the applicant record. Reviewer judgment stays on the decisions that require it.
Legacy submission-and-review platforms commonly take two to three months of configuration before the first cycle launches, and each new program inside the organization repeats most of that work.
With Sopact, a first cycle is live in weeks, not months, when the team has a rubric and intake form drafted. Subsequent programs inherit the pattern instead of rebuilding it from scratch.
No. Sopact reads applicant contact identity from your CRM at intake (HubSpot, Salesforce NPSP, Affinity, Attio, Blackbaud Raiser's Edge) and writes the decision and disbursement record back out to your transactional system at the award moment (QuickBooks, NetSuite, Bill.com, Tipalti for grants and awards; Slate, Workday Student, Canvas, Thinkific for admissions and fellowships).
Sopact owns the application record in the middle. The systems on either side keep doing what they do.
Yes. Sopact supports blind review (hiding applicant name, demographics, and organization from reviewers during scoring) and conflict-of-interest routing. Reviewers declare conflicts at panel setup; the platform excludes them automatically from those applicants.
A subtler feature that matters more than buyers usually realize: clean unblinding after the decision, so program staff aren't reassembling applicants from blinded IDs at reporting time.
Reviewer drift — when one reviewer scores systematically above or below the panel mean over a multi-week cycle — gets surfaced during the cycle, not after it.
The platform runs calibration checks mid-cycle on the rubric dimensions where drift is most likely: qualitative writing quality, mission alignment, theory-of-change articulation. The panel chair sees the drift signal in time to recalibrate before the committee meets, not after the decision is already in the cohort report.
Yes. The application record is the same underneath every program type. What changes between a grant cycle, a scholarship cycle, an accelerator selection, and an awards process is which stage dominates the work and which reports matter at the end.
The record underneath — one applicant carried across every stage — doesn't change. The applicant's history holds across programs, so a fellowship alumna who applies to a grant cycle three years later shows up with her history attached.
Cohort reports run as queries against the application records. Rubric scores, decisions, demographics, and follow-up responses sit on the same row, so the report comes out of one place.
When the applicant record is split across multiple tools — as in the form-plus-spreadsheet and submission-and-review categories — cohort reports become reconstruction projects that join data from the intake form, reviewer sheet, decision log, and follow-up survey. That reconstruction is where two to four weeks of staff time go at the end of every cycle.
A demo for one applicant on one rubric, yes. A production system that holds a foundation's applicant data is different.
Three things make it production-grade: the record lasts (same applicant ID at year five as at year one, including re-applicants from earlier cohorts), scores and writing on the same row (rubric scores, panel comments, essay text, and follow-up surveys joined on one applicant), and every score shows where it came from (each proposed score points back to a specific essay paragraph, recommendation letter, or panel vote). This has been Sopact's work since 2014, before the language-model category existed.
Application management is one shape of the stakeholder record. The engine pillar explains how the same approach holds applicants, students, trainees, alumni, employees, and the relationships between them — across every program a foundation, university, or company runs.
One cohort intake. One rubric. One round of reviewer scoring you've already done. We'll walk through how it would live as one record per applicant, what the AI would pull out of the long-form fields, and what the cohort report would look like coming out of one place instead of a CSV merge across four systems.