Michael Park
From conventional reporting → to automated insight

I turn the analyst's grind into automated insight.

A few live examples of how I consolidate messy, multi-source data, automate the reporting, and generate decision-ready insight — computed to the source, narrated automatically. The kind of capability I'd bring to a business-insights team from day one.

insight engine — 07:58
01 · Live work samples

See it working, not just described

Interactive, self-contained, and built on illustrative synthetic data — so you can click through the actual output, not a screenshot.

Interactive dashboard

Brand Performance & Forecast Insights

Consolidates sales, market-share and forecast data across therapy areas into one decision-ready view — with the executive summary generated automatically from the numbers.

Synthetic data · fictional brands · illustrative Open the live dashboard →
Interactive · competitive intelligence

Competitive Landscape & Threat Radar

Maps market position, rival momentum and threat, and the patent-cliff timeline across therapy areas — with the strategic read generated automatically from the data.

Real public landscape · illustrative figures Open the analysis →
Live micro-demo

Automated Insight Writer

Type in a few figures and watch a clear executive narrative write itself — the same "compute first, narrate second" approach, in real time.

Deterministic · runs in your browser Try it below →
02 · Try it yourself

The Automated Insight Writer

Adjust the figures — the narrative rewrites instantly, computed from what you enter. This is the engine behind the dashboard's summary, in miniature.

◆ Auto-generated narrative
03 · Why it holds up

The approach I'd bring

01

Automate the repeatable

The multi-day, copy-paste reporting cycle becomes a same-day, self-refreshing view — so the time goes into thinking, not assembling.

02

Compute, then narrate

Numbers are calculated and reconciled to source; AI writes the story on top. Speed of AI, reliability of a spreadsheet.

03

Insight leaders act on

Not a wall of charts — the two or three things that matter, in plain language, surfaced automatically and ready for the decision.

Work samples by Michael Park · illustrative synthetic data · fictional brands · independent, not affiliated with any employer. LinkedIn →