Question
How do I practice agent deployment is not instant?
Quick Answer
Choose one cognitive agent you have designed but not yet deployed — or one you deployed but that never became consistent. Write down three things: (1) the date you first attempted to run this agent, (2) how many consecutive days it operated before the first failure, and (3) what happened after the.
The most direct way to practice agent deployment is not instant is through a focused exercise: Choose one cognitive agent you have designed but not yet deployed — or one you deployed but that never became consistent. Write down three things: (1) the date you first attempted to run this agent, (2) how many consecutive days it operated before the first failure, and (3) what happened after the first failure. Now design a deployment plan that assumes a 90-day ramp-up. Define three phases: the first two weeks (heavy scaffolding — alarms, visual cues, accountability checks, reduced scope), weeks three through eight (gradual scaffold removal, expanding scope, tracking activation rate), and weeks nine through twelve (minimal scaffolding, full scope, measuring automaticity by noticing whether you initiate the behavior without conscious effort). Write the plan. Do not execute it yet — just design the deployment architecture. Execution begins when you can describe the deployment process without confusing it with the design process.
Common pitfall: Treating deployment as a binary event — 'I started the agent on March 1st' — rather than a process that unfolds over weeks. This produces the pattern where you design an excellent agent, attempt to run it, fail within days, conclude the design was wrong, redesign it, fail again, and eventually abandon the effort. The failure was never in the design. It was in the deployment model — the assumption that a well-designed agent should work immediately, and that any gap between design and automatic operation indicates a design flaw rather than a deployment timeline that has not yet elapsed.
This practice connects to Phase 30 (Agent Lifecycle) — building it as a repeatable habit compounds over time.
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