BREAKING: Glean is done with the agent science fair. Here's what it built instead
Most enterprises are stuck in the same loop right now.
Build an agent. Demo it. Get applause. Then watch it quietly die in a corner because nobody knows who owns it, what it costs, or whether it actually moved a number.
Glean just dropped something today that goes straight at this problem.
What was announced
Glean introduced the Enterprise Agent Development Lifecycle (ADLC). Think of it as SDLC, but for AI agents. A seven-stage framework: Opportunity, Design, Performance, Input, Develop, Launch, Monitor & Improve.
It is a simple idea with a sharp message. Agents are software. Treat them like software.
Why this matters
Read this line from Glean's CPO Emrecan Dogan and tell me it does not capture the entire 2026 enterprise AI conversation:
"Enterprises spent the past year proving that agents can generate excitement. The next phase is proving they can generate results."
That is the shift. From pilots to P&L.
The capabilities actually shipping
This is not just a framework wrapped in a press release. Glean is putting product behind it.
Building agents faster:
Auto Mode Agent Builder. Describe what you want in plain English. The agent plans and executes across the enterprise graph. No workflow wiring.
Debug & Trace Views. Step-by-step visibility into every run. Inputs, tool calls, LLM decisions, outputs.
Sub-Agents. Parent agents that coordinate specialized agents at runtime.
Expanded Agent Sandbox with file system and code execution in the customer VPC.
Content & Scheduled Triggers so agents react to real business events.
Governing them like grown-ups:
New Agent Library controls. Verification badges, featured agents, departmental categories, soft-delete with admin restore.
Agent Access Policies. Org-wide guardrails to block sensitive content or restrict which groups can write to systems of record.
Measuring whether they work:
Updated Agent Insights Dashboard. Adoption, top use cases, estimated hours saved, feedback trends.
The proof point
Rich Archbold, SVP at HubSpot, said something every CIO should pin to their wall:
Successful agent adoption is not about the strongest model. It is about the right enterprise context, structured enablement, and a clear way to measure value. Glean became their "trusted front door" for all three.
That phrase, trusted front door, is the real product story.
The takeaway
The agent gold rush is ending. The agent operating model era is beginning.
If 2025 was about "can we build one," 2026 is about "can we run a hundred without it becoming a mess." Glean is betting that whoever provides the lifecycle, not just the builder, wins the enterprise.
Watch this space. The next twelve months belong to the platforms that can answer one question: which of your agents actually earned their seat?
Read the full announcement: Glean ADLC press release
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Best,
Ravit Jain
Founder & Host of The Ravit Show




