Lore FleetJuly 5, 20264 min readSankritya, co-founder

Your docs are lying to your agents

Written process rots the day it ships. Lore Fleet reads how your company actually works, and keeps your agents honest.

Here is a thing that happens at every company. Someone writes the process doc. It is accurate for about a week. Then the pricing changes in a Slack thread, the runbook gets a verbal exception, the vendor decision quietly reverses in a meeting, and nobody goes back to edit the doc. The official story and the real story drift apart, and everyone senior enough just knows which one to trust.

Now put an AI agent on that team. It cannot ask the person at the next desk. It reads the doc, believes every word, and follows the official story straight into failure, confidently, at scale, in your customer's inbox. The better your agents get at executing, the more expensive stale knowledge becomes.

The fix is not a better doc

Docs rot because writing them is a chore humans deprioritize the moment reality moves. So Fleet does not ask anyone to write anything. It reads how your company actually works, the threads, the tickets, the decisions where they actually happened, and compiles that into Skills: living, executable playbooks your agents load before they act. Every claim in a Skill is cited back to its source, so an agent, or a person, can always check where a rule came from and how fresh it is.

And when reality drifts from the doc, that is not a silent failure anymore. It is a flag. The moment the observed truth stops matching the written truth, Fleet surfaces the contradiction instead of letting your agents act on the stale version.

A workforce, not an assistant

Fleet runs many agents at once, each scoped to a role, all governed by one policy: permissions on what each agent may touch, budgets on what it may spend, a full audit trail on every action, and a human approval gate on anything sensitive. One agent is an assistant. A fleet is a workforce, and a workforce needs management, not vibes.

No answer without a citation, no citation without a source.

Same engine as Pilot

If you have read about Lore Pilot, this will sound familiar, on purpose. Fleet runs on the same engine: context that is cited to its source, and trust that governs every action. Pilot points that engine at one person's life. Fleet points it at a company's knowledge. One engine, two brains.

Fleet is already built and running on our own company's data, which is how we keep ourselves honest about what works. We are opening early access to a small group of design partners, teams that want agents doing real work without handing them the keys. If that is you, request access on the Fleet page and tell us what your agents keep getting wrong.