Question
What is agent coordination review?
Quick Answer
Periodically assess how well your agents work together as a system.
Agent coordination review is a concept in personal epistemology: Periodically assess how well your agents work together as a system.
Example: You run a weekly planning agent, a daily writing habit, a reading-to-notes pipeline, and a monthly reflection practice. Individually, each one produces output. But you have never asked: does the weekly plan actually inform what the daily writing focuses on? Does the reading pipeline feed material into the monthly reflection, or do they operate in parallel without connection? You sit down for a thirty-minute coordination review. Within ten minutes you discover that your weekly plan never references your reading queue, your writing habit pulls from memory rather than notes, and your monthly reflection repeats the same themes because it has no structured input from the other three. The agents are running. They are not coordinating. The review makes the gap visible — and gives you a concrete list of broken handoffs to repair.
This concept is part of Phase 26 (Multi-Agent Coordination) in the How to Think curriculum, which builds the epistemic infrastructure for multi-agent coordination.
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