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Start with a question, not a menu.

A question map laid over the five seats, so every surface answers something you already want to know.

A control plane is broad, and a list of seats doesn't tell you where to begin. Orientation reframes the whole product as five plain questions — and points each one at the surface that answers it.

The pain

It's unclear where to start.

A new user lands in a wide product with five seats and dozens of surfaces. Seat names describe who owns a view, not what question it answers — so the first move is a guess.

The seats have no conceptual map

Executive, Security, Finance, Engineering, Compliance tell you who a view is for, not what it's for. Navigation by role alone leaves the newcomer without a mental model.

You don't know which surface answers your question

You arrive with a question — is this safe, is this working — but the navigation is organized by seat, so you have to translate your question into someone's job title first.

Breadth reads as friction

A broad control plane is a strength once you know it. On day one it's a wall of surfaces, and the cost of a wrong first click is a lost newcomer.

How orientation resolves it

Five questions, mapped across the five seats.

1.

Is it healthy?

The Executive seat answers fleet standing in one number — the governance index, its trend, and its target.

2.

Is it working?

The Engineering seat shows agents, runs, and tool calls — whether the fleet is doing what it was built to do.

3.

Is it safe?

The Security seat carries control coverage, findings, and compound risk — the CISO's accountability picture.

4.

Who is accountable?

The Finance and Compliance seats attribute cost, risk, and findings to owners — a name behind every line.

5.

How is it wired?

The Engineering and Security seats trace identities, MCP servers, and data paths — how the fleet is actually connected.

Every question links to its surface

A question isn't just a label — it's a door. Each one routes straight to the seat and view that answers it, so orientation is also navigation.

The five seats, made legible

Executive, Security, Finance, Engineering, and Compliance stop being a menu and become a map of what the product can tell you.

Find your first surface in one question.

See the question map that turns five seats and dozens of surfaces into a clear place to start.