compare / hubbl alternative
The scan ran in two minutes. A number came back, some red, some green. And the only question that matters is still unanswered: if you turn an AI agent loose on your org, what does it touch, and what falls over? A grade tells you that you're not ready. It doesn't show you the wreckage path, and it doesn't hand you the fix.
A readiness score answers one question: how bad is it? The question you actually carry to bed is different: what will go wrong, and what do I do about it?
A two-minute scan reads your org's blueprint, the fields, the flows, the descriptions, the tech debt. Useful. Real. But it stops at the blueprint.
It doesn't trace what happens when an agent with broad permissions reaches into that org and acts. This field feeds that flow, that flow fires that update, that update touches ten thousand records. That chain is the whole risk. The score never walks it.
So we built the thing the score skips. The X-Ray isn't a number. It's a map and a plan, delivered by a human to the person who has to answer for the rollout.
Descriptions make the agent smart. The X-Ray makes it safe.
Good diagnostic tools are fast and broad, and that's worth something. We're deep and finished, which is worth something else. Here's the honest difference, strengths and all.
| A diagnostic tool · e.g. Hubbl | The Agent-Readiness X-Ray | |
|---|---|---|
| What you get | A scan and a prioritized score | A scan + the map + the ten-step plan |
| How deep | Metadata, tech debt, field use, process mining | Blast radius & permission paths — what actually breaks |
| How honest | A list of findings | Every finding evidence-graded (Confirmed / Computed / Inferred) |
| Who runs it | You do — a tool you learn | We do — read to your IT and data team |
| What it costs | A subscription that auto-renews | One fixed fee. No subscription. No auto-renew. |
| How fast | About two minutes | Days — because depth isn't a dashboard |
| Built for | Admins who want an ongoing tool | The leader who answers for the agent going live |
If you want a dashboard, buy the tool. If you want the answer, call us.
A score is a fine place to start. It's a terrible place to stop, because someone still has to read the org deeply, find what breaks, and do the ten steps. That's the part the tool hands back to you.
That's us. You bring the score. We bring the answer.
Here's what changes the night before you flip the switch: you're not guessing anymore. You have the map. You know what it touches, and you know the ten things you fixed, in order, and why. You can put your name on it.
show us your orgOne fee. No subscription. No findings, no fee.
questions
Yes. The Agent-Readiness X-Ray is done-for-you: we run the deep read, trace what your agent will break, and walk the findings and the ten-step plan through with your IT and data team, instead of handing you a dashboard to operate yourself.
No. The X-Ray is a one-time, fixed fee. No subscription, no auto-renew. You choose each engagement, and if we find nothing, there's no fee.
A score grades the blueprint — metadata, technical debt, field usage. The X-Ray traces the blast radius: which paths your agent can take through the org and what breaks if it takes one. Then it gives you the ordered ten-step plan to get ready. A different question, answered at a different depth.
Every finding is labeled Confirmed, Computed, or Inferred, so you can see what we proved directly from your metadata versus what we calculated or suspect. Your agent should never act on uncertain data, and neither should you.
That's the ideal starting point. Bring the score; we read the org deeply, tell you what will break, and get you ready. The scan becomes step zero, not the finish line.
Comparing other tools too? See the Sweep alternative breakdown.