Hyve pricing has two layers — participation (for the organizations doing the work) and signal (for the organizations buying the rollup). New to the federation model? Start here.
Participation gets you a deployed product in your vertical. Signal gets you the rollup view across the network. Most organizations need one or the other — not both.
For the organizations doing the work — local party districts, brokerages, clinics, programs, firms. You get a real product you'd use anyway, plus you're part of the network.
For organizations that need the rollup — candidates, campaigns, national orgs, state parties, multi-region operators. Signal pricing scales with the value of the intelligence.
Each vertical Hyve opens reuses the same federation pattern, with vertical-specific products, schemas, and signal layers. Participation pricing varies by vertical because the economics do.
Field operations and political intelligence for legislative districts, county parties, and state caucuses. The first proof point for Hyve's federation model.
Federated market intelligence for brokerages. Early access partner program forming — founding-participant rates available to the first cohort.
If your industry has fragmented participants, a shared intelligence problem, and a buyer at the rollup layer, the federation pattern probably fits.