An AI agent deployment runbook gives the team a repeatable launch process. It explains what must be checked before deployment, who approves release, how monitoring works, and how the team rolls back if behavior is unsafe.
1. Confirm production scope
Write down the exact workflows, users, tools, data sources, regions, and channels included in the release. Do not launch with vague scope such as “all support questions” unless the agent has been tested for that breadth.
2. Freeze the release package
Record the prompt version, model version, retrieval index, tool permissions, policy settings, evaluation results, and known limitations. This makes rollback and incident analysis possible.
3. Run pre-launch checks
- Regression test suite passed.
- Prompt injection tests passed.
- Tool permissions reviewed.
- Escalation routes confirmed.
- Logging and alerts enabled.
- Rollback owner assigned.
4. Launch gradually
Start with a small audience, internal users, or a percentage rollout. Increase traffic only after reviewing traces, user feedback, cost, latency, and error rates.
5. Monitor the first 48 hours
The first two days matter. Watch refusal spikes, unexpected tool usage, failed retrieval, customer complaints, unsupported claims, and cost anomalies.
6. Document rollback steps
The runbook should describe how to disable the agent, remove a tool, revert a prompt, restore a previous retrieval index, and notify affected teams.
Recommended next step
Use this runbook with the AI agent production readiness checklist before each release.
How to use this AI Agent Deployment resource
Use AI Agent Deployment Runbook as an operational review, not as a static reading list. Start by naming the decision the page supports, then check whether the content connects to the right hub, service page, self-assessment, and deeper technical articles. That helps readers continue the workflow and helps crawlers understand where the page fits.
For production AI agent teams, the useful output is a short list of gaps: missing controls, unclear ownership, weak evidence, absent internal links, or pages that do not give the reader a next step. Treat the page as a living artifact and update it when tooling, risks, pricing, or deployment assumptions change.
AI Agent Deployment review checklist
- Confirm the title, summary, and first paragraph describe the same topic.
- Link the page to one relevant hub and one practical next step.
- Add concrete checks, failure modes, or decision criteria instead of generic AI advice.
- Review Search Console, GA4, and Rank Math together after publishing.