The entire secret of Navigator is this: it is a harness that grounds your LLM output in a deterministic, shared set of
glossary definitions, which are backed by database tables. The lawyer agrees, once, on what a Notation is, what a
Project is, what a Workflow step is — and from that point on, every drafting interaction speaks that same
vocabulary. The same nouns appear in the template you write, the questionnaire the client answers, the workflow that
advances the document toward signature, and the audit log your malpractice carrier will eventually read. No room for the
model to invent new categories of work.
Those Bloom rungs map one-to-one onto the noun ladder Navigator runs on. The Project is the matter. The Template
is a markdown blueprint with {{placeholders}} and a workflow declaration. The Notation is a Template come to life:
one Person bound to one Template inside one Project, advancing through a workflow. The Workflow is the state machine
the Notation walks (draft → staff_review → notarization_pending → notarized → signed). And Signed is the lawyer's
own work product — Navigator does not sign anything; it makes it faster and more correct for you to sign. When you
have walked all five rungs once, you have done the entire Navigator loop. That is the workshop.