FAQ
Questions teams ask before a Sensorco pilot.
This page covers the core structural questions first so the next conversation can focus on deployment fit and measurable outcomes.
If a question still needs more context after this page, the product pages and About page carry the broader story.
Company + platform
What Sensorco is building.
What is Sensorco building?
Sensorco is building a sensing and intelligence system that combines Sunbul-Sensor, Mai-Sensor, and one shared platform for dashboards, alerts, recommendations, and outcome review.
Is Sensorco only for agriculture?
The current site starts with precision irrigation and crop environments, but Mai-Sensor is also framed for broader liquid operations such as reservoirs, tanks, tankers, and transfer systems.
Is Sensorco a hardware company or a software platform?
It is both. The hardware captures the operating signals, and the platform is where teams monitor, act, and verify outcomes.
Products + fit
How the sensing layers differ.
What is the difference between Sunbul-Sensor and Mai-Sensor?
Sunbul-Sensor is the crop-side layer for plant and soil visibility. Mai-Sensor is the liquid-side layer for level, usage, flow, and tracking.
Do teams need both products to start?
No. A deployment can start with whichever sensing layer matches the operating question. Teams use both together when plant and liquid behavior need one view.
What kinds of sites fit the first deployments?
The current site is framed around greenhouses, nurseries, high-value farms, reservoirs, tanks, tankers, and transfer systems where earlier visibility has real operating consequences.
Pilots + next steps
How the first pilot is meant to work.
How should a first pilot be scoped?
Start with one site question, one sensing direction, and one measurable success definition.
What happens after the pilot brief is submitted?
The pilot brief now saves into the Sensorco backend. It captures enough context to support a clearer follow-up conversation once email notifications are added.
What makes a strong success definition?
A strong success definition is specific and reviewable, such as earlier anomaly detection, clearer irrigation tuning, better refill planning, reduced loss, or verified improvement after an operating adjustment.
Next step
Use the FAQ to get oriented, then choose the right next step.
Send a general message if you are still exploring, or start a pilot when you are ready to describe a site and outcome.