Why We Built iii Agent Hub
We needed an AI company that actually runs companies — so we built one, and we run our own businesses on it.
We did not set out to build an AI product. We set out to run a portfolio of companies well, and we kept hitting the same wall: every brand needed the same go-to-market machine, and assembling it from a dozen tools meant a human was always the integration layer holding it together.
What we believe
- A pile of agents is not a company. Capability without a shared brain and a closed loop is an org chart with no organization. The agents have to coordinate on one system of record, or they duplicate work and contradict each other.
- Motion is not delivery. The most common failure in agentic systems is to sense, decide, and then only log what they would do. We built iii Agent Hub to act and to measure whether the outcome actually moved.
- Autonomy is an architecture problem, not a model problem. You make autonomy safe with structure — one owner per lever, locks humans can set, an auditable ledger — not by hoping the model behaves.
- The human stays in command. The system does the tireless work; people set direction, hold authority, and run the live close. Amplified judgment is the point, not its removal.
- The moat is the loop, not the model. Capability is getting cheaper every month. A system that has been making good decisions in your domain, in production, cannot be copied in a quarter.
Proof, not promises
iii Agent Hub powers iii Partners' own portfolio — 8 brands on one codebase — because we would not ask anyone to run their business on something we would not run ours on.
If you operate one company or many, and you are tired of renting agents instead of running a company, let's talk: https://cal.com/scott-fielder/platform-demo