Your agents made forty calls yesterday.
Could you name five?
Your AI staff. Your records.
You run the whole company yourself. Not alone, exactly — your agents handle the email, the lookups, the payments, some of it while you sleep. They're doing real work.
So when something feels off and you go to check what your agent actually decided, where do you look? The decision is buried somewhere in a chat log, and the only account of it is the agent's own. That's not proof. It's the agent vouching for itself.
Delegating was supposed to make this easier. Instead you keep going back to check — and the more you hand off, the more there is to worry about.
A record has to live outside the agent
Decision Anchor keeps a record of what your agent decided in a place the agent itself can't reach. What it decided, how far it acted — left in order, as it happens.
It doesn't read what's inside. It keeps the outline, not the contents — enough to see what happened, without looking over your agent's shoulder.