Product / Decision Register

The Decision
Register.

Every decision tracked, linked, and searchable. The system of record for how your organisation decides.

Decisions are the most valuable — and least managed — asset.

Every organisation makes hundreds of decisions each year. Capital allocations. Policy changes. Strategic pivots. Executive appointments. Yet most are buried in minutes, scattered across email, or live only in someone's memory.

When a new board member asks "Why did we decide this?", the answer should not require archaeology. The Decision Register makes every decision findable, contextual, and connected.

What the register captures.

Structured Decision Records

Every decision is recorded with its title, category, rationale, conditions, dissent, supporting documents, and outcome. Not just what was decided — why, and what was considered.

Decision Graph

Related decisions are linked into a knowledge graph. See how a policy change connects to a budget decision, which connects to a hiring decision. Patterns emerge over time.

Full-text Search

Find any decision by keyword, category, workspace, date range, or decision-maker. Autocomplete and faceted search make discovery instant.

Institutional Memory

The register grows with every meeting. Over months and years, it becomes the definitive record of how your organisation thinks and decides.

From capture to memory.

01

Decisions are captured during meetings

As your meeting progresses, decisions are recorded with structured fields — not buried in paragraph text. AI assists with categorisation and linking.

02

Context is preserved

Rationale, dissent, conditions, and supporting documents are attached to each decision. Future reviewers see the full picture, not just the outcome.

03

Links are established

Each decision can be linked to parent decisions, related decisions, and spawned actions. The decision graph grows organically with every meeting.

04

Memory compounds

Over time, the register becomes your organisation's decision memory. Ask "What have we decided about X?" and get a complete, contextual answer.

Start building your decision memory.