System

Multiple agents. One operation.

The orchestration layer that runs maintenance, dispatch, compliance, and reporting agents in parallel - with defined handoffs, conflict resolution, and human escalation when decisions exceed agent authority.

What It Is

AI agents that work together, not in isolation.

Deploying a single AI agent to automate one task is a start. But the real leverage in an AI-enabled operation comes when multiple specialized agents - each with deep capability in its domain - are able to work in parallel, communicate with each other, and hand off decisions as conditions change. Without coordination infrastructure, those agents collide. A maintenance agent flags a shutdown that the dispatch agent has already scheduled a crew for. A compliance agent denies a vendor the procurement agent just approved. Agents that can't communicate create the illusion of automation with the reality of chaos.

TMI's Multi-Agent Coordination Platform is the orchestration layer that makes a portfolio of specialized agents function as a coherent operational system. Each agent - dispatch, maintenance, compliance, revenue, reporting - has a defined domain and a defined scope of authority. The platform manages priority conflicts between agents, routes decisions through the correct approval path, and knows when a situation has moved beyond agent authority and needs a human in the loop. The result is not just multiple agents running, but an actual AI-coordinated operation.

Parallel
Multiple specialized agents running simultaneously
Defined
Agent scope with clear human escalation
24/7
Continuous orchestration across all systems
How It Works

Deploy. Coordinate. Escalate only when it matters.

01

Specialized agents deployed with defined domains

Each agent is configured with a specific operational domain: dispatch handles scheduling and resource allocation; maintenance handles predictive alerts and work order generation; compliance manages credential verification and regulatory tracking; reporting aggregates data across all agents and surfaces anomalies. Each agent has a defined scope of authority - decisions it can make autonomously, decisions that require coordination, and decisions that require human approval. The boundary is explicit before deployment, not discovered during an incident.

02

Coordination layer manages handoffs between agents

Agents communicate via structured protocols - not open-ended messaging, but defined data handoffs that carry the full context of a decision from one agent to another. When the maintenance agent flags an asset for shutdown, that decision reaches the dispatch agent before the next scheduling run, not after a crew has already been deployed. Priority rules determine which agent's recommendation takes precedence when they conflict. The coordination layer is the difference between a collection of agents and a system.

03

Human escalation thresholds defined and enforced

The platform knows where agent authority ends. Escalation thresholds are defined per agent and per decision type: spend above a certain value, safety decisions with regulatory implications, changes to approved contracts. When a decision crosses a threshold, the relevant human is notified with full context - the agent's recommendation, the data it used, the alternatives it considered. Humans make better decisions when the AI has done the work of surfacing the right information. They don't replace the decision; they confirm it.

Systems Included

The layer that makes everything else work together.

The Multi-Agent Coordination Platform is the infrastructure that connects TMI's specialized agents into a single coherent operational system.

AI-03

Multi-Agent Coordination Platform

The orchestration layer that lets multiple specialized agents - maintenance, dispatch, compliance, reporting - run in parallel and hand off to each other. Each agent has a defined scope. The platform manages priority, conflict resolution, and human escalation when decisions exceed agent authority.

Oil & GasConstructionMiningUtilitiesManufacturing

"The difference between deploying five separate AI tools and deploying a coordinated multi-agent system is the same as the difference between five people working in separate rooms and five people working as a team. The individual capability is similar. The operational output is not."

Who Benefits

The teams responsible for making the whole operation run.

Multi-agent coordination delivers value at every level of a complex operation - from the director who needs visibility across all agents to the supervisor who needs escalations that come with context.

Operations Directors

A single view of all agents' activity across the operation. What decisions were made autonomously, what was escalated, what is pending. The coordination platform is the dashboard for the AI layer of your operation - replacing the daily coordination meetings where people report what they did, with a live record of what the system has already handled.

IT & Systems Teams

Governance and escalation controls managed at the platform level, not inside each individual agent. Logging, audit trails, agent scope configuration, and escalation threshold management all in one place. When something needs to change - an agent's authority expanded, a new data source added, an escalation rule adjusted - it's a platform-level change, not a reconfiguration of every agent individually.

Field Supervisors

Agents handle the routine decisions that used to come to supervisors as radio calls and text messages. When an escalation does arrive, it comes with full context: what the agent decided, why, what alternatives exist, what decision is needed. Supervisors spend time on genuine edge cases and judgment calls, not on routing information between departments that could be handled automatically.

Before / After

What changes when agents operate as a system.

Before TMI
  • Each system operates in isolation - no cross-system awareness
  • Handoffs between departments require human coordination at every step
  • No single view of what agents or systems are doing across the operation
  • Decisions escalated inconsistently - based on who happens to be available
  • Agents conflict because they're not aware of each other's decisions
After TMI
  • Specialized agents run in parallel, coordinated by defined protocols
  • Handoffs automated - full context passed between agents without human relay
  • Single dashboard shows all agent activity, decisions, and escalations
  • Escalation thresholds defined - humans notified only when authority is exceeded
  • Conflicts resolved by priority rules before they reach a human

Ready for agents that work together, not in parallel?

We'll map your current operational decisions, identify where agents would add value, and design a coordination architecture that fits your actual operation - with human escalation where it genuinely matters.