Architecture and build-vs-buy calls that lose their reasoning between quarters and re-orgs.
The rationale behind a direction, kept where the next person can actually find it.
Cross-functional calls that take a week of calendar tetris to make — and a memory to remember.
Strategy that lives in slides and never touches the work below.
Capital and pricing calls re-litigated every quarter because the original logic is gone.
Metric and definition decisions that quietly drift until no one trusts the dashboard.
A trail you can hand a regulator without weeks of stitching it together.
Scaling fast — and already feeling last year’s decisions start to leak away.
It earns its place fastest in regulated, audited industries — financial services, healthcare, public sector — where a decision has to be defended to someone later. There, it isn’t a preference: reviews ask who approved what, when, and on what basis. It still works anywhere decisions matter; those teams just feel the need first — though any team moving fast enough to forget why will feel it too.
Every allocation and risk acceptance is examined by a regulator eventually — keep the rationale and the sign-off on one record.
Clinical, privacy, and procurement choices stay defensible long after the people who made them have moved on.
Choices that answer to oversight, records requests, and the next administration — captured as they’re made.
Recommendations and engagement decisions you can stand behind long after the work has shipped.
Decisions whose rationale has to outlive the project team, the budget cycle, and the org chart.
Less regulated, but the same scrutiny — your SOC 2 and security reviews are your audit. And trade-offs get made faster than memory keeps up, so the chain remembers the why before the next team relitigates it.
If your organization makes decisions it can’t afford to lose, Traceway is for you.
From a pricing call to a replatform to a middle-of-the-night outage — wherever a team makes a decision it can’t afford to lose, Traceway keeps the reasoning.
A multi-quarter migration keeps its original approval, dependent decisions, and checkpoint reviews on one chain — so the next architect inherits the reasoning, not a mystery.
CFO and CRO sign the same record in parallel; Trace recalls what the last pricing change cost. Marketing, sales, and CS work from one source of truth.
A 30-day alert opens a pre-filled record. Trace surfaces the clauses six prior renewals agreed — and the ones they forgot.
Three options compared in the record; Trace cites the prior capacity decision that rules “build” out. The alternatives stay, so the next person sees why.
Decisions made under pressure are captured as they happen, time-stamped and signed — a defensible trail when the post-mortem and the regulator come.
Every decision is immutable, versioned, and exportable. Field-level redaction and a regulator view mean you share exactly what’s needed.
Traceway adapts to how you already decide — name your own decision types, pick the governance framework your team uses (or define your own), and keep your own vocabulary. The chain works the same underneath.
Security and compliance commitments are being built for general availability. Buyers running an early review can request our current posture during a demo conversation.
Join the waitlist — book a demo, or just get the details — and a direct line to the team building Traceway. No drip sequence.
Launching first in the United States and Canada. The United Kingdom and the European Union are planned for 2027–28, with the rest of the world to follow — join from anywhere and we’ll tell you when your region opens.