Operating doctrine
The STAGERLABS Method
Every AI system we build is governed from day one — specification before code, evidence before claims, controls before handoff.
Pain Discovery
Identify the costly bottleneck, delay, missed revenue, manual loop, decision friction, or trust failure.
Specification
Define the measurable required outcome, acceptance criteria, owner, evidence requirement, and pass/fail threshold. Open the live instrument →
Workflow Mapping
Document current state, actors, handoffs, toolchain, data sources, wait states, and failure points.
Failure-Mode Analysis (FMEA)
Before designing controls, enumerate how the workflow fails. Score each failure mode for severity, occurrence, and detectability (RPN = S × O × D). The highest-risk modes set the control priorities.
Agent / Automation Design
Use AI only where it improves classification, drafting, routing, reasoning, summarization, monitoring, or decision support.
Governance Layer
Add approvals, policy boundaries, human-in-the-loop gates, exception routing, undo windows, and escalation triggers.
Evidence Layer
Log actions, outputs, decisions, timestamps, owners, sources, artifacts, and status changes.
Outcome Verification
Compare observed results against the specification, then decide pass, fail, variance, corrective action, or next iteration.
What this means for you
The structure is the guarantee.
Specification before build
You approve what "good" means before a single automation runs. No scope drift, no surprise requirements at handoff.
Controls, not just deliverables
Every step has an owner, a trigger, a failure condition, and an escalation path. The system governs itself after we leave.
Evidence you can read
Every outcome is measured against the specification you approved. Pass or fail — no interpretation required, no trust-me reports.