News

TriClick™ Subscriptions Are Now Open — Self Sign-Up Launched

Hill Research |
TriClick™ Subscriptions Are Now Open — Self Sign-Up Launched

Every statistical programmer knows the drill. Weeks of TLF programming, then weeks of QC ping-pong. Findings, reruns, re-reviews. All of it racing a database lock that won’t move.

TriClick was built to compress that cycle.

Our AI agents read raw data and specs, generate SDTM datasets, derive ADaM, and produce the TLFs as R or SAS code with the rendered, filled-in tables. Before anything reaches formal QC, finished outputs get an AI pre-review with structured, severity-ranked findings so the programmer can fix obvious issues before a human reviewer ever opens the file.

The News

TriClick subscriptions are now open. Thanks to the team who worked super hard to make it happen.

Self-serve individual plans for biostatisticians, programmers, and clinical scientists who want to test TriClick on real workflows before bringing it to a team:

  • $79/month · 10 table credits
  • $199/month · 30 table credits
  • $799/month · 120 table credits

Individual self sign-up takes a few minutes. No procurement cycle, no sales call: app.hillresearch.ai/signup

For team, department, or enterprise access with custom pricing and onboarding, reach us at info@hillresearch.ai.

The Same Operating Standard Runs Through Every Plan

  • GCP-ready, audit-defensible outputs. Every result auto-versioned and traceable to who ran it, when, and how.
  • A pinned, validated environment. The code that produced last month’s TLF still produces the same TLF if you re-run it next year.

A Note for Early Adopters

We know TriClick is not perfect. We built a feedback channel inside the platform so users can flag what isn’t working, what’s confusing, or what’s missing.

Anyone whose suggestions (three of them) get accepted into the platform earns a free next-month subscription as a thank you.

This is the part of the launch we’re most serious about. The platform that ships in 2027 will be shaped by the working programmers who hit edit on it in 2026. Tell us what’s broken. We’re listening.

Learn More