§ The thesis
The system is the medicine.
The device is the instrument.
The architecture behind The Precise System™— and why we built it this way.
§ Fig. 02
What the industry got wrong.
For thirty years, laser dermatology optimized for the easiest cases. Lighter skin types. Predictable indications. Settings that worked on the patients the industry was already comfortable treating. Everyone else — Fitzpatrick III, IV, V, VI; melasma; post-inflammatory hyperpigmentation; complex pigmentary disorders — was treated with the same hardware and prayed over with adjusted parameters.
The result was an industry that produced inconsistent outcomes for the patients who needed consistency the most. Practitioners learned to manage expectations. Patients learned to expect uneven care. The technology kept advancing. The framework around it didn’t.
We started over.
§ Fig. 03
A system is not a bundle.
The word “system” is overused. Most companies that call their offering a system are selling a device with a few accessories attached. We use the word literally. The Precise System is four engineered components that depend on each other to produce a clinical outcome. Removing any one of them does not give you three-quarters of a system. It gives you something that cannot do the job.
Protocols are the medicine — indication-specific frameworks, including the PIH Prevention Protocol™, that determine how energy is applied to skin. The device is the instrument that executes those protocols with multi-wavelength pico precision. Biologic control is the engineered prep, recovery, and maintenance regimen that supports the skin before, during, and between treatments. The Data Intelligence Layer captures real outcomes and refines the protocols over time.
A laser without protocols is a tool without instructions. A protocol without biologic control is a plan without a patient. A device without outcome data is a machine that cannot improve. The four exist together, or the system does not exist.
§ Fig. 04 — The architecture
The four are not a marketing structure.
We arrived at four pillars by working backward from what produces predictable outcomes across Fitzpatrick I through VI. Three pillars left a gap — usually around either healing, refinement, or both. Five became redundant; the fifth was always a feature of one of the other four wearing a different name.
Four is not a number we settled on. It is the number the engineering required.
Each pillar has a single job. Protocols define the what. The device delivers the how. Biologic control governs the recovery. The Data Intelligence Layer enables the refinement. Together they form a closed loop — every treatment makes the next one more predictable.
§ Fig. 05
What the Precise System is.
The Precise System is a single architecture. The four pillars are not products sold separately and bundled together for convenience. They were designed in concert and engineered to function as one closed-loop clinical system.
Practitioners do not buy a device from us. They buy into a system.
§ Fig. 06
Every cycle gets sharper.
This is the mechanism most aesthetic technologies do not have. Treatment outcomes flow back into the Data Intelligence Layer. The protocol library updates based on real-world results across the practitioner network. The next session a practitioner runs is informed by the aggregated outcomes of every prior session — not just their own, but every Precise practitioner’s.
The system is not static. It learns. Over months and years, the protocols become more precise, the recovery regimens more refined, the device parameters more tuned. The longer the system runs, the better it gets — for every practitioner using it.
This is the difference between buying a piece of equipment and joining a clinical network.
§ Fig. 07
The patients we built this for.
Every decision in the architecture was tested against a single standard: does this produce consistent, predictable outcomes for Fitzpatrick I through VI — including the darker skin types that the industry has historically struggled to treat?
If the answer was no, we changed the inputs.
The result is a system that works across the full skin-type spectrum. Not by accident. Not by adjusting parameters case by case. By design.
This is what a clinical system looks like.
Four pillars. One closed loop. Predictable outcomes across every skin type.