Strategy

Decide what to build, what to buy, and what to orchestrate.

Most agentic strategy work in 2026 is one of two things: a slide deck about LLMs and the future of work, or a vendor pitch dressed up as research. Neither produces decisions you can act on Monday.

We do something different. We start with your stack, your constraints, and your roadmap. We map every place an agent could plausibly do work, and we evaluate each one against three axes: business value if it works, integration cost to make it work, and operational risk if it goes sideways. The output is a ranked list, not a vision document.

What you get

Agentic readiness audit

A blunt assessment of which workflows are ready for agentic intervention and which need to be fixed first. Most clients learn that their highest-value targets aren't ready, and that's a useful finding.

Build / buy / orchestrate framework

For every candidate workflow, a recommendation: build it ourselves, buy it from a vendor, or orchestrate existing tools. We name the vendors. We tell you why.

Reference architecture

A diagram and document showing where agents would sit in your existing stack, what they'd talk to, where the failure modes are, and what observability you'd need.

Vendor selection

A short list of model providers, vector stores, eval platforms, MCP servers, and orchestration tools that fit your constraints. We don't take referral fees.

Roadmap

Twelve months of agentic work, prioritized, with rough estimates.

Engagement shape

Four to eight weeks, fixed price.

One senior consultant lead, one design partner, optional embedded engineer for technical depth.

What this is not

This is not a slide deck about the future of AI. This is not a vendor's analyst report wearing a logo from your company. This is a working document your engineering leaders will reference for the next year.