Every quality failure in safety-critical supply chains shares the same anatomy: the measurement existed, the language existed, the context existed — but they lived in separate worlds. No shared code. No common signal. QuraSync's ontology is that code.
No single person in any organisation masters all three simultaneously. The engineer who understands the measurement doesn't always understand the standard. The person who understands the standard doesn't always speak the supplier's language. The person who speaks the language doesn't always understand what the number means. This is not a people problem. It is an architecture problem.
"The reason quality data fails to travel is not technical. It is linguistic. The same event is described in three different ways by three different people — and no system exists to recognise that all three are talking about the same thing."
The ontology means different things to different people. Select your perspective.
Every safety-critical supply chain generates enormous amounts of quality data. The problem has never been a lack of data. It has been the absence of a shared code — a system that all parties in the chain can read, act on, and trust. QuraSync's ontology is that code.
"A competitor who tries to replicate this needs 25 years of technical interpretation, three industries, two languages, and three years of engineering. Knowing what was built is not the same as being able to build it."
As a quality engineer you live in all three worlds every day — measurements, standards, and human language. Until now, you were the translation layer. Manually. Every time. Here is what that translation looks like when the ontology does it.
An AI that reads documents is impressive. An AI that reads documents within a structured system of meaning is reliable enough to use in safety-critical industries. The difference is the ontology.
The QuraSync ontology is not a technology decision. It is the accumulated output of 25 years of technical interpretation, three industries, two languages, and three years of engineering. A competitor who reads this page understands what they would need to build — which is precisely what makes it a moat, not just a feature.
"For ten thousand years, people communicated across distances with signals through the air. The smoke didn't need to explain itself — sender and receiver shared the same code. QuraSync is that shared code for safety-critical supply chains."
We're inviting a small group of quality and operations leaders to experience the ontology on real supply chain inputs — in their industry, in their language.
Request early accessNo sales team. A direct response from the founding team in Ingolstadt.