Specs, BRDs, and
technical handoffs, written once, read everywhere.

Business Requirement Documents, project specs, architecture notes, and technical guidelines, written once, handed across time zones without losing the thread. Built for Engineering, Product, Architecture, and Tech Leadership in distributed delivery organisations.

Project Spec, review IN REVIEW
📐 BRD · PROJ-341 v2.1
Payment gateway migration, Phase 2 scope
Last edit: 8 min ago · Owner: Platform Eng
🔗 Architecture (embedded)
Client
Gateway v2
Ledger
Bank API
💬 Comments on this spec 7 OPEN
KR
Arch: Need idempotency guarantee on retry path, section 3.2
SN
QA: Rollback SOP missing for Phase 2 failure mode
MH
SecOps: Tokenisation approach approved, thread closed
Reviewers across shifts
IN
US
PL
SG
+8
v2.0 → v2.1
+Idempotent retry in sec 3.2
~Rollback plan in Phase 2
Token-gen in request body
Async reviews
🇮🇳India ArchMar 28
🇺🇸US ProductMar 29
🇵🇱Poland QAMar 29

The spec is in three people's heads and a forgotten Confluence page.

The product manager has the latest thinking in a doc in their drafts. The tech lead is half a version ahead in a branch. QA is reviewing something from two weeks ago. The offshore team didn't see the architecture note because it went out at 3 AM their time. A week later, a release has gone out missing a core requirement that everyone thought was scoped.

Business Requirement Docs on PolicyCentral.ai do the unromantic work of making sure the current spec is the only spec in circulation, with every reviewer signed off, every comment tracked, and handoffs across time zones that don't lose the plot.

In a global IT services organisation

Shift teams, multiple geographies, one source of truth.

A global IT services company runs delivery centres in India, the US, Europe, and South East Asia. Engineering teams cover 24-hour shifts on customer programmes. Requirements get authored in one time zone and need to be read, reviewed, clarified, and committed to in another, often in the next four hours before the handover call.

The failure mode isn't bad engineers. It's bad handoffs. A BRD emailed at the end of the IST day sits in inboxes until US morning; an architecture change discussed on a Slack thread is invisible to the QA team in Poland; a spec update happens in a shared drive and the offshore PM never gets the notification.

A single platform that carries the current BRD, shows exactly what changed between versions, threads comments inside the spec, and proves who reviewed what, that's what BRDs on PolicyCentral.ai look like.

Capabilities that play a critical role
in async specification work.

Word-style editor + .docx upload.

Authors write BRDs in the familiar Word-style editor, or upload an existing .docx and have it auto-converted to structured, responsive web content. No format breaks. No "Table didn't render." No Markdown religion. The spec lives where your delivery organisation can actually work on it.

Explore Content Management
BRD_PaymentGW_v2.1.docx
Uploaded · auto-converted to web
Headings preserved Tables responsive Images embedded

Rich media in-line, diagrams that live with the spec.

Architecture diagrams embedded next to the text that describes them. Loom walkthroughs of a complex flow. Screenshots with annotations. Secure video of the tech-lead's whiteboard session. The visual artefacts travel with the words, not as attachments on a separate shared drive.

Explore Content Management
PROJ-341, Payment flow
Client SDK
Gateway v2
Ledger
Bank API
+ idempotency key on retry (v2.1)
Walkthrough 6:42 Sequence diagram Appendix A.pdf

Version control, built for iteration.

A spec can move from v1.0 to v2.3 inside a sprint. Every version preserved. What changed is visible as a diff. Reviewers see the delta since their last sign-off, not the whole doc from scratch. No "can you re-send me the latest version" ever again.

Explore Version Control
PROJ-341 history LIVE v2.1
2.1
Idempotency, rollback plan, token-gen moved to header
Mar 28 · Platform Eng
2.0
Phase 2 scope, initial draft after Arch review
Mar 22 · Platform Eng
1.3
Phase 1 sign-off · locked for dev
Mar 04 · Architecture

Threaded comments and cross-shift targeting.

Reviewers leave comments inline on the spec, threaded, resolvable, attributable. Target the spec to the reviewers that matter: Arch in Bangalore, QA in Poland, Product in Austin. Everyone sees what's pending and what's closed. No separate Slack channel for the questions.

Explore Interaction & Comments
PROJ-341, Review targeting
🇮🇳
Architecture
Bangalore · IST
3 reviewers
🇺🇸
Product
Austin · CST
2 reviewers
🇵🇱
QA & SecOps
Kraków · CET
4 reviewers
🇸🇬
Platform Eng
Singapore · SGT
2 reviewers

4D Intelligent Search, answers without a handover call.

Search across spec titles, body, attached files, and the content inside those files. "Where is the idempotency key defined?" returns the exact section from BRD-337, plus the architecture decision log thread, plus the QA test case that covers it. An engineer in Austin finds the answer at 10 AM Central without pinging the architect in Bangalore at 3 AM.

Explore 4D Intelligent Search

AI summaries that shrink new-joiner onboarding.

A new engineer joins a programme in the middle of sprint 7. Auto-generated summaries of every BRD, the goals, the decisions, the constraints, the open questions, get them productive in an hour instead of a week of scattered reading. The same AI stack that powers PolicyGPT, applied to specifications.

Explore Gen AI Intelligence
✨ AI SUMMARY BRD-337 Payment Gateway v2.1
Decisions in one glance
Idempotency key required on all retry calls
Token generation moved to request header (v2.1)
Rollback plan via feature flag in Phase 2
SecOps tokenisation approved Mar 12
Ideal for new joiners
An hour of reading. A week saved on shadowing.

Real handoffs. Actually handed off.

Five situations a distributed delivery team will recognise from the last sprint.

End-of-day spec handover

A tech lead in Bangalore finishes v2.1 at 8 PM IST. Publishes with a short changelog. The Austin and Kraków teams wake up to the current version, the diff since v2.0, and a two-line summary of what's changed, not a 3 AM email.

Version diff → Cross-shift targeting → Async review

The QA question that used to loop for a day

QA in Poland hits an edge case in the spec at 9 AM their time. Drops a comment threaded on section 3.2. The Bangalore team replies during their morning; Austin sees the resolved thread when they log in. Three zones, one conversation, no dropped context.

Threaded inline comments → Resolvable → Visible to all

Upload the Word doc you've already written

Product has a BRD in Word. Upload, auto-convert, review, publish, no re-authoring in a different tool. Tables preserved, headings preserved, images embedded. The spec is live on the platform the same day.

.docx upload → auto HTML conversion

"What version did we commit to in the SOW?"

A customer escalation six weeks after a delivery. The Delivery Lead pulls up the BRD, clicks to v1.3, sees the signatories and timestamps from the Phase 1 sign-off. Argument over, facts win.

Version history → Sign-off trail → Immutable

A new engineer joins a programme mid-sprint

Evergreen targeting pushes them the current BRD, Architecture doc, decision log, and rollback plan on day one. Search across the project docs surfaces the answer to "what does the idempotency key look like in practice?" without a single handover call.

Evergreen inclusion → 4D Search → Self-serve onboarding

From "which version is the latest?"
to "the platform knows."

1

Handover quality

From 3 AM email attachments to async sign-offs with visible diffs.

2

Spec conversations

From scattered Slack threads to inline threaded comments tied to the section.

3

Onboarding an engineer

From shared-drive scavenger hunt to day-one access to the current, approved spec.

Live Customers
HDFC Life
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Arohan Financial Services
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Reliance Nippon Life Insurance

Ready to stop losing the thread between shifts?

Bring a BRD or spec from a programme you're running. In 20 minutes we'll show you what the upload, version diff, threaded reviews, and cross-shift targeting would look like on your next handover.

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