Question
How do I practice agent coordination review?
Quick Answer
Set a timer for thirty minutes. List every cognitive agent you currently operate — every recurring habit, routine, automated process, delegation, or structured practice. For each one, write down what it produces and what it consumes. Then draw the connections: which agent's output feeds into which.
The most direct way to practice agent coordination review is through a focused exercise: Set a timer for thirty minutes. List every cognitive agent you currently operate — every recurring habit, routine, automated process, delegation, or structured practice. For each one, write down what it produces and what it consumes. Then draw the connections: which agent's output feeds into which other agent's input? Circle any agent whose output goes nowhere and any agent whose input comes from nowhere. These orphaned connections are your coordination failures. Pick the single most consequential broken handoff and design a repair — a specific, concrete change that connects the output of one agent to the input of another. You have just completed your first agent coordination review.
Common pitfall: Running the review as a vague reflection session instead of a structured assessment. The failure looks like sitting down, thinking 'how are things going,' deciding 'pretty well, I guess,' and moving on. This is not a review. It is self-reassurance. A coordination review requires specific questions: Which agents produced output this period? Which outputs were consumed by downstream agents? Where did handoffs fail? What coordination overhead was excessive? Without these structural questions, the review degenerates into the same metacognitive illusion that makes people believe they already have feedback loops when they only have emotional reactions to outcomes.
This practice connects to Phase 26 (Multi-Agent Coordination) — building it as a repeatable habit compounds over time.
Learn more in these lessons