You said you'd send the SOC 2 letter. You forgot. The deal slipped two weeks. Sage tracks every commitment you make on a call — and nudges at T+24h if it's not done. At high autonomy, Sage sends it for you. At low, he drafts and waits for a nod. Plus: cross-deal memory, a mutual action plan the buyer reads, and silent CRM updates.
AE co-pilot ships as one role with one flagship persona. The rep never sees a dashboard — they see either a done thing or an approve-me thing in the Revenue Channel. At high autonomy, Sage updates CRM silently and sends recaps without asking.
Every commitment you make on a call becomes a tracked item. At T+24h, if it's still not done, Sage drafts the send and — at high autonomy — sends it for you. At low autonomy, he drafts and asks. Either way, nothing you promised ever just quietly falls off the list.
In call 3 the prospect said "procurement is 60 days." In call 5 they said "30 days." Sage flags this before your next call. Plus: "this objection pattern looks like the FinServ deal you ran in Q2 — here's what worked." Your memory, across every deal, not just this one.
After every call, Sage updates a buyer-shared document with decisions, next steps, and owners on both sides. The buyer sees it. They don't have to ask for a recap — it's already in their inbox. The deal runs on a shared artifact, not on your memory.
At high autonomy, Sage auto-updates CRM fields and sends recap emails silently. At low autonomy, drafts and waits. You never see a dashboard — you see a Revenue Channel entry that's either finished or asking for a nod. That's the whole surface.
Your manager runs MEDDPICC. Your last manager ran Challenger. Your stages are custom. Sage composes: MEDDPICC for qualification, Command-of-the-Message for discovery, your stages for forecast. Per-team swap. You don't retrain the tool for your process — you tell it what your process is.
Here's how Sage stacks up against the category. Recording and scorecards are table stakes — we have them too. Where Sage is sharpest: follow-through, cross-deal memory, buyer-side MAP, silent mode, and your methodology.
Harmony ships four roles on one memory substrate. When Aria books a call, Sage has the prospect's objection pattern queued. When the deal closes, Atlas inherits Sage's call memory and knows what the customer was promised. When Sage hears a new objection, Echo's next creative leads with the answer.
That's not a feature — that's the product.
Four stages. The rep never leaves the Revenue Channel.
Sage builds the prep brief from cross-agent memory — Aria's Q1 qualifier, Echo's nurture history, Atlas's account health. The rep skims 30 seconds.
Every commitment on the call becomes a tracked item — both the rep's and the buyer's. Not just extracted, tracked.
T+24h passed. Sage drafts the send and — at auto 85% — sends it silently. At lower autonomy, waits for your nod in the Revenue Channel.
A mutual action plan the buyer reads — not an internal CRM note. Sage maintains it after every call. Both sides own the doc.
30-minute demo. Drop Sage onto one of your AE's live deals. We'll show what T+24h enforcement, cross-deal contradictions, and a buyer-side MAP would have caught on the last five calls. Numbers, not slides.