The decision
Open a signal and the footer gives you the two paths:
Dismiss — this isn't worth acting on: not relevant, already handled, or a risk you're consciously accepting.
Dispatch — hand it to a specialist agent to work, either right now (Run) or added to the queue for later (Queue).
Leaving signals to pile up unread is the one wrong answer — the board is only as trustworthy as the team's follow-through on it.
Dismissing a signal
Open the signal and click Dismiss.
Give a reason — quick-pick options cover the common cases (Not relevant, Already handled, Low confidence, Bad timing, Duplicate of another signal, and more), or write your own.
Confirm. The signal leaves the board.
The reason is required, and it's worth a specific one: dismissal feedback goes back to the agents that generate signals, so a precise "why" makes the next scan smarter. "Diagnosis wrong — this was a planned promo dip" teaches the system; "no" doesn't.
Dispatching a signal
Open the signal and review the recommended agent. If several specialists are suggested, pick the one you want.
Click Run to dispatch immediately — the agent starts working the signal right away.
Or click Queue to add it to the client's work queue without starting it, useful when you're triaging a batch and want to sequence the work.
Dispatched work appears as a run on the Workflow board, where you can follow its progress from Queued through Running to Review — and approve the output when it's ready.
Tip: If you've already explored the signal in a chat with Iris, dispatch anyway — the linked conversation is folded into the agent's briefing, so nothing you worked out gets lost.
Where your actions are recorded
Every dismiss, queue, and run is written to the action ledger on the Monitoring page (in the left rail under Fleet). Each entry shows what was acted on, which action was taken, who took it, and when.
More importantly, Monitoring tracks the signal's related metric from the moment you acted — a few weeks of lead-in for context, a marker at the action, and the trend since. That's how you answer the question every client eventually asks: "we made that change — did it work?"
Note: Dismissals are recorded too, not just dispatches. If a metric deteriorates after a dismissed signal, the ledger gives you an honest record of the call — and the evidence to revisit it.
