Daybreak
Internal, liveDecisions, ready by morning
A founder decision desk. Overnight, agents prepare the calls only a human can make; by coffee they are queued, argued, and one tap from done.
The problem
When a company runs on agents, the human becomes the bottleneck by design: direction, money, and irreversible calls stay with the founder. The failure mode is those decisions arriving as forty scattered pings a day instead of one deliberate sitting.
What we built
Daybreak collects every decision the fleet needs a human for and prepares it properly: the context, the options, the recommendation, and what happens on approve or reject, all written before you wake up.
The founder clears the queue in one sitting. Each verdict wires straight back into the task substrate, so approving a decision is not a note to self - it dispatches the work.
It is the quietest product here and the one that makes the rest of the system governable.
Touch it
Clear a morning queue yourself.
This morning’s queue
3 of 3 remaining
Ship the pricing page for the new app?
Copy passed brand review. Two price points tested against comparable apps; the lower one converts better in every reference we found.
Rec: Approve. Lower tier first, revisit after 100 real users.
Reply to the agency asking about white-label work?
Inbound from a 12-person agency. Fits the wholesale thesis. Draft reply attached, commits us to a call, not a price.
Rec: Approve the reply as drafted.
Retire the legacy analytics daemon?
Zero reads in 30 days. Replacement live since June. Rollback is one command for two weeks after retirement.
Rec: Approve. Keep the rollback window.
One queue, once a day
Every human-gated call in one place, ordered by consequence, not by arrival time.
Prepared, not forwarded
Agents attach context, options, and a recommendation. A decision arrives ready to be made, not researched.
Verdicts that dispatch
Approve and the work fires; reject and the reasoning is recorded. The queue is wired to the machine, not to a notes app.
A record of judgment
Every call and its outcome is kept, so the system learns which decisions should never have reached you.