Everyone bought AI; almost nobody is making money from it. Vector3x turns AI from a line of spend into a line of savings — supervised agent workforces, built from how your best people actually work, measured in cost per unit of work against your own baseline.
The problem isn't the models — it's engineering, measurement, and ownership. That gap is our entire business.
Proofs-of-concept that were never designed for production: no evals, no rollback, no owner. Impressive on Friday, abandoned by Q3.
// we ship to production, gatedLicenses for everyone, lift for no one — because nobody measured the cost of the work before, so nobody can prove anything after.
// we freeze the baseline firstAI budgets scattered across teams, with no single person accountable for the return. Spend is real. The return is a slide deck.
// we sign a number, monthlyWe move real work — high-volume, costed, daily work — to supervised AI agents, and we engineer everything underneath so it holds. The gains compound: free a fraction of many roles and the hours re-bundle into whole positions of capacity — growth absorbed without new hires, unit costs falling either way.
Your best people's know-how, captured as skill-files, compiled into agents that beat the human baseline in shadow mode before touching live volume — then handed over gradually, with a kill-switch.
skill-files → agents → verified savingsCustom LLM systems, RAG and retrieval, model-backed services, and migrations of legacy processes and stacks to AI-native ones — engineered with evals, cost metering, and monitoring from day one.
production AI, not wrappersAgents are only as good as what they run on. Full-stack applications, data pipelines, and supervision dashboards — the reliable ground your intelligence layer stands on.
app + data + intelligence, one teamSix phases. Every one exits through a metric gate, and every step back down takes minutes, not meetings.
Find where the money is: cost per unit of work across your operations, ranked. You get an opportunity map and a signed baseline ledger — the number every later claim is verified against.
Your best operators co-author skill-files: procedure, edge cases, judgment calls, metrics. Institutional memory as code — an asset you keep forever, whatever happens next.
Skill-files compile into agents — policies, tool adapters, model calls — graded by an eval harness built from the same metrics your people are graded on.
Agents work real volume silently, in parallel. Nothing ships until they beat the human baseline for two consecutive weeks — quality, cost, and escalation correctness.
Live volume moves in ratchets — 10, 30, 70, 95% — each held behind the same gates, with a tested kill-switch that returns everything to humans in minutes.
We supervise the fleet: drift, exceptions, model upgrades — and send a monthly Verified Savings Report your CFO can take to the board.
Most firms automate without capturing — and lose the judgment calls and edge cases the moment someone leaves. We capture first. Every workflow becomes a versioned skill-file your operators sign: the compile source for agents, and the first complete copy of how your company actually runs.
skill: ap-invoice-triage status: live-L3 # agent runs, humans review exceptions volume_baseline: 120/day metrics: accuracy: { baseline_human: 98.2%, gate: ">= 98.2%" } cycle_time: { baseline_human: 6m30s, now: 38s } cost_per_unit: { baseline: $0.49, now: $0.06 } escalate_when: - amount > $10,000 - vendor not in vendor_master - model_confidence < 0.85 never: - approve payment # humans only. always.
Every engagement is measured against the baseline ledger we freeze together before work begins. If verified first-year value hasn't reached 3× our fees by month twelve, we keep working at no charge until it has. It's in the name.
The engineers who design your system are the ones on the call — and our own delivery runs on the same supervised agent fleet we sell. Today we all run the transition work; each of us brought a prior craft to it.
Skill-file compilation, agent runtimes, evals, and the model layer — production-grade LLM systems with monitoring and rollback.
Production ML & MLOps before agents were a product: training, deploying, and monitoring models that had to survive real traffic. Evals, drift, rollback — that discipline is now the method.
Tool adapters into your ERP, CRM and helpdesk, supervision dashboards, and the applications your agents live in — fast, secure, maintained.
Full-stack engineering first: performant frontends, architected backends, systems built to hold under load. Every adapter and dashboard in the supervision plane comes from that craft.
Baseline ledgers, golden datasets, pipelines and BI — the measurement layer that makes the 3× guarantee something we can sign.
Data engineering & analytics first: warehouse models, ETL/ELT pipelines, and BI that finance teams trust. The baseline ledger is that craft, productized.
We move work, and we plan for people — in that order, deliberately. The operators who know the work best co-author the skill-files and are first in line to become agent supervisors. Personnel decisions stay with your leadership; our job is to make sure they're made with real numbers, real sequencing, and no surprises on the floor. Transitions done erratically fail — the people being surprised are the only ones who know where the edge cases are buried.
The best backend per task — Anthropic, OpenAI, Google, or open-weights in your own VPC for regulated work. Zero-retention endpoints where offered, least-privilege credentials per agent, full action logs, and your data is never used to train anything. And you own everything we build for you — the product, the agents, the skill-files, the golden sets — outright, with a documented exit runbook: the system runs whether we're in the building or not. What stays ours is the background craft — the methods and tooling we bring and reuse across engagements. Client-specific knowledge never travels; our craft does. We keep clients with results, not lock-in.
Every workflow carries hard "never" rules enforced in the runtime (not just prompts), escalation paths to named humans, and a kill-switch — tested before the first live ratchet — that returns 100% of volume to humans in minutes. Nothing goes live before beating your human baseline silently on real volume for two consecutive weeks.
Some of it you should — and by the end, your people run day-to-day supervision. What we bring is the part that's expensive to learn live: the capture discipline, the eval harnesses, the gated handover, and a firm on the hook for a signed multiple. We've made the mistakes on our own ledger so you don't make them on yours.
Tell us about your operation — volumes, team sizes, the work that eats the most hours. We reply within 48 hours with next steps and a ballpark for your Signal Audit.
team@vector3x.com