🩺 Free pilot spots for ABA clinics this quarter

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Social narratives: a recognized EBP · NPDC 2014

The support that comes home with the child.

Fully illustrated stories and boards with the child as the hero, made in under two minutes. Engaging enough that kids keep using them after the session — which is where carryover really happens.

⭐ Social narratives: a recognized EBP · NPDC 2014
🔒 Privacy-First · No PHI Stored
⚡ Under 2 min per support
📋 Gray-complete
1 photo
Consistent Character, Every Page
2 min
Per Support
EBP
NPDC 2014
RBT and child reviewing a personalized support on a tablet
Carol Gray's Framework (10.2)
ABA Behavioral Contingency
Shrodes Bibliotherapy
Gottman Emotion Coaching
Perry Trauma-Informed
Privacy-First · No PHI Stored
30–45min
to build one visual support by hand, per child, per target
<2min
to build the same support, fully illustrated, with Tinyverse
43min
of build time given back to your team, per support, practitioner-reported
The gap in the clinic day

Three problems every clinic already pays for, quietly.

⏱️

Non-billable build time

30–45 minutes of BCBA time per support — spent sourcing images and formatting, not billing.

🧩

Generic clip art, not the child

Gray's framework calls for the child to be the illustrated subject. Stock symbols aren't.

🏠

It never reaches home

The laminated board lives in a clinic folder. Parents never see it, so carryover stalls.

"A Social Story is illustrated and individualized — describing a situation, skill, or concept from that specific child's perspective."Paraphrasing Carol Gray's 10.2 framework · individualization is the method, not an add-on
By hand
30–45
minutes / support
vs
With Tinyverse
<2
minutes / support
Generic clip art vs a personalized illustrated support
What clinics do today, without Tinyverse
  • Google Images, snipping tool, slides — one support at a time
  • Generic symbols that don't match the child
  • Rebuilt from scratch every time a reinforcer changes
  • Stuck with one clinician — never shared with RBTs or parents
The same child, on every page

We complete Gray's framework.

Individualization isn't decoration — it's what makes the story land.

📖

Comprehension follows the hero

Children understand and remember more when they are the protagonist, not a generic avatar or name-swap.

Kucirkova, 2014
d = 0.82

The method already works

Effect size for story-based intervention on child anxiety. Clinicians already trust it.

Marrs, 1995 — bibliotherapy meta-analysis
🔁

Re-reading = carryover

Kids return to the stories that star them — that's the mechanism that moves a skill home.

One profile. Every support.

The full visual-support toolkit, from one child photo.

Build the child's illustrated character once. Reuse it across every story and board your team needs.

📖 Behavioral Story ⏭ First-Then Board 🧩 Choice Board 🗓 Visual Schedule ✅ Task Sequence
tinyverse.ai/create
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Why the character stays consistent

One photo becomes a reusable character across every page and board.

Tinyverse builds an illustrated sprite set from a single child photo, then composites that same character into every story page, First-Then board, and schedule — the same child, every time. Inconsistent characters are exactly why earlier AI tools couldn't be used clinically.

The same illustrated child, in a new scene
Same character, every scene

One reference photo → one consistent illustrated child, composited into every story and support your team builds — same face, hair, and skin tone the family recognizes.

Three steps

From a photo to a finished support in one sitting.

1
Upload one photo
Generates the child's consistent illustrated character, reused across every story and board from then on.
30 seconds
2
Pick the target & support
Choose a behavioral target and support type. Add the reinforcement language your team already uses.
60 seconds
3
Share, read, or print
Send to an RBT, share with parents by link, or print for the session and the home folder.
Under 2 min
The child-facing layer

Your AI already writes the session note. Who builds the visual support?

Clinics are adopting AI for reports, scheduling, and documentation. None of it touches the child-facing layer. Tinyverse is the piece that does: the visual schedule, the first-then board, the social story, with your client's own likeness on every page, ready in about two minutes. It fits beside whatever documentation stack you already run.

For the clinic owner

Every hand-built support costs real BCBA time.

Simple unit math — your own cost, not a pitch for the clinician. See what your team gets back in a free pilot.

Loaded BCBA cost~$75K / yr
Time per support, by hand30–45 min
Labor cost per support~$18–27
Time per support, Tinyverseunder 2 min
Time back, per support
About 43 minutes each

Two minutes instead of forty-five. Across a caseload, that's hours of non-billable time back every week.

See it before you price it

Run a free pilot on a real caseload, watch the time your team gets back, then we'll talk pricing.

Built for the whole clinic

From the BCBA writing the plan to the parent reading at bedtime.

Owner / Director
Recover labor, approve it today.
  • One flat clinic plan, create as much as you need, no procurement committee
  • Recovered non-billable BCBA time you can see in the math
  • A visible reason families and referrers choose your clinic
Clinic leadership reviewing a caseload
BCBA
Gray-complete supports, minutes not hours.
  • Individualized, illustrated supports for each behavioral target
  • Reinforcement language built right into the tool
  • Prep time back for direct intervention
BCBA reviewing a printed support with a child
RBT
The right support, ready for session.
  • Boards and sequences shared straight to you — no rebuilding
  • Consistent character the child already recognizes
  • Print for the table, or pull up on a tablet
RBT reading a personalized story aloud with a child
Families
The same support, at home.
  • The exact support the clinic uses, shared by link or print
  • Their child as the illustrated hero, seen and recognized
  • The home half of generalization, finally in their hands
Parent and child reading a support at home
The evidence base

You already trust the methods. We remove the production friction.

Recognized EBP
Behavioral stories
Story-based intervention is a designated evidence-based practice for autistic learners. The barrier was never clinical acceptance — it was build time.
NPDC (2014) · National Standards Project (2015)
Recognized EBP
Visual supports
First-Then contingencies and visual schedules are recognized EBP across a large single-case research literature.
NCAEP (2020) · Knight, Sartini & Spriggs (2015)
Individualization
The child, represented
Gray's framework emphasizes individualizing the material to the specific child, for many families, the first therapy material that's looked like their own.
Carol Gray's framework, v10.2
How clinics start

A pilot first. The plan follows the proof.

📖
Step 1 · Now
Free stories
Create your first supports free. No card, no commitment.
🧑‍⚕️
Step 2 · Week 1
Run a real caseload
Use it for a handful of active students. Feel the time drop.
🏢
Step 3 · Team access
Open it to the team
Shared folders for every BCBA and RBT, plus parent sharing.
🌱
Step 4 · Ongoing
Generalization, built in
Every support can travel home, by design, from day one.
A child recognizing themselves in a printed support at home
The reason individualization is the method, not a feature.The child is finally in the story.

Build a support your whole clinic can use in two minutes.

Create your first stories free. No procurement, no card — just individualized, illustrated supports that reach the session and the home folder.

Privacy-first · No PHI stored · Photos deleted after generation · Subprocessors disclosed