And of course, as we've been thinking about architecture, we know that this is never going to happen across just one app. Your enterprises have hundreds of apps, right? You have workflows in dozens, if not hundreds of places, some of them in Pega, some of them, unfortunately, probably not in Pega. That's okay. Right? Which is why we had designed the process fabric to start connecting all of those workflows across different systems, no matter where they live. And as agents come into play, and we need those workflows to orchestrate our agents to make sure that they're always following the best practices that we've set for our business. That agentic process fabric that Alan talked about yesterday is going to ensure that this works no matter where those workflows live in the system. You know, our friends at Gartner have been talking about this idea of business orchestration and automation technology boat, and how what we had as BPM and RPA and all these different pieces is coming together to support a world where we are orchestrating decisions and integration to existing systems and humans and agents to get work done better and more effectively.
And I think that's a great vision and a great way of looking at that, because I do think that orchestration and that power of having those workflows remains really, really important. So if, if I could I want to illustrate this point, and mainly just because it's freaking cool, I want to bring the drum bots back up here. So can I get the drum bots back up on stage? Drum bots, come on up. All right. They're not actually bots. They're just guys in suits with flashing lights. All right. Yeah, I'm just letting you all know, just in case anybody was worried.
Um, but. All right. But in this case, the drum bots for us are going to stand in for AI agents, right? And, you know, we talk a lot about sort of how we want to manage our agents and can we manage them with prompts. So let's look at how that might happen. I'm going to give our drum bots a prompt. Pretty simple basic prompt I'm going to ask them to play some funky music. Cool. All right.
So let me ask this. That's the prompt I'm giving to our drum bot agents here. So let's see what happens. Drum bot number one. Right. That was funky right. All right. Drum number two. Wow.
That was also funky. Very different from what drum beat number one played, though. Now, now let's look at drum bot number three. Wow, that was probably the funkiest of the bunch. But also still like very different. Now what happens if we ask all of these drum bots to play together? Ready? Drum bots. Are.
Stop, stop! Right. Ah, this is enough. That's enough. Like. Right. They were funky on their own. But because they're all doing different stuff, it ends up creating a cacophony. Now, maybe we just need to do prompt engineering.
We could refine our prompt a little bit. Right? So I can make our prompt a little bit better. I can tell them to play some funky music in four four time with a swing vibe and lots of 16th notes. So we've engineered our prompt. We've made it more specific. Let's see what happens. Drum bot number one. Drum bot number two.
Again, pretty funky, but they're still pretty different. Drum about number three. All right. Now what happens when we put that all together? Drum bots go. All right, all right, all right. Thank you. That was better. That was better.
But we're still not playing in unison. Now, we could continue to keep trying. Prompt engineering. We need to get some tools to help us do an automate prompt engineering. But here's the thing. We've already solved this problem. If you want to get a bunch of musicians to play the same thing together, you give them sheet music. You don't just give them free text prompts. You give them sheet music that lays out with room for interpretation what they want to play, but makes unambiguous the beats that everybody has to hit.
And so, armed by sheet music, let's listen to our drum bots. And that is funky. All right. Thank you. Drum box. Man. If if I could have drummers follow me around every day in my normal life, it would be about the coolest thing ever. Look, this musical notation, it's your workflow for rhythm. It ensures that everybody in your business is playing together, hitting the beats they need to hit in time with repeatability and blueprint.
As Alan talked about it yesterday, is the Agentic composer. It helps you design the sheet music, the workflow that ensures your business works as one consistently to deliver on your customer's.