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Answers · AI red team / pre-mortem / stress-test a decision

Red-team your decision before reality does it for you

The strongest plans are the ones that have already survived a serious attack. Most decisions never get that — they are made by people who want them to succeed, and a single agreeable AI only reinforces the optimism. The failure mode that sinks you is almost always one someone could have named in advance.

Stress-test your decision before you commit. 1,500 free credits · no sign-up, no card

Decidi runs a structured red team on your decision: an adversarial panel and four frontier models assume the plan has already failed and work backwards to explain why. They surface the hidden assumptions, the second-order effects and the single most likely point of failure, then hand you the mitigations ranked by what matters most.

  • A pre-mortem that assumes failure and finds the cause
  • The single most likely failure mode, named and ranked
  • Hidden assumptions and second-order effects surfaced
  • Adversarial challenge instead of optimistic agreement
  • Concrete mitigations and early-warning signals to watch
  • A go, fix-first or stop verdict you can act on

Part of: Problems we solve

You walk away with

A pre-mortem report: the most likely way it fails, the chain of assumptions behind it, and the mitigations ranked by priority.

Common questions

What is an AI pre-mortem?

A pre-mortem assumes your plan has already failed and works backwards to find out why, before you commit. Decidi runs this with an adversarial panel and four models, so you discover the failure mode while you can still prevent it.

How is red-teaming different from a normal review?

A review checks whether the plan is sound; a red team actively tries to break it. Decidi assigns adversarial personas whose only job is to find how it fails, which surfaces risks that a cooperative review would politely overlook.

What do I get at the end?

The single most likely failure mode, the chain of assumptions that leads to it, the second-order effects, and a ranked set of mitigations with early-warning signals — plus a clear verdict on whether to proceed, fix first, or stop.

Try it on your own decision

Put your question to a council of GPT, Claude, Gemini and Grok — they debate it, a Final QA audit reviews it, and you get one clear verdict. 1,500 free credits to start — no sign-up, no card required.

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