Decision Infrastructure and Celonis
How Decision Infrastructure complements process intelligence and the actions it sets in motion.
Why this is not a replacement relationship
Celonis is a powerful process-intelligence platform. It reveals how work actually flows and recommends the action that should follow. Decision Infrastructure does not replace it — it adds the runtime layer that governs whether the action a process recommendation drives remains admissible at the moment it acts.
They sit at different layers of the same stack: Celonis operates primarily at L5 (Decision Systems); Decision Infrastructure operates at L6 — the governance layer between decisions and their consequences.
What Celonis Does Well
Celonis is a broad process-intelligence and execution platform. Within a deployment it can:
- reconstruct how processes actually run from system data
- surface bottlenecks, rework, and inefficiency at scale
- recommend the next-best action to improve a process
- trigger and orchestrate actions back into operational systems
- monitor process performance continuously
What Happens After Celonis?
Celonis identifies what should change and drives the action. Decision Infrastructure validates admissibility before that action becomes consequential.
The question shifts from “what action would improve this process?” to “may this action still execute now?” — and that question is resolved at L6.
L5 · Decision Systems
Celonis
L6 · Decision Infrastructure
Governs whether the action may execute now.
L7 · Decision Intelligence
Learns from governed outcomes.
Celonis reveals how the process runs and drives the action.
Decision Infrastructure governs whether that action remains legitimate at execution.
What Decision Systems Fix — and What They Don’t
L5 · Decision Systems
Decision Systems
What they fix
- Structured decisions
- Decision tracking
- Traceability
- Repeatability
What they don’t answer
- Should this decision exist?
- Is it valid under current constraints?
- Can it control execution?
- Will it produce evidence?
Core question: “What decision was made?”
L6 · Decision Infrastructure
Decision Infrastructure
What it adds
- Decisions validated before execution
- Policy enforced at runtime
- Human and AI accountability
- Evidence across the lifecycle
- Runtime admissibility
Core shift
From structuring decisions to governing whether decisions are valid, executable, and accountable.
Core question: “Is this decision valid, executable, and defensible?”
Most platforms optimize decisions. Very few govern them.
L5 and L6: Different Jobs
Celonis sits in the L5 column. The distinction is not a feature gap — it is a different layer of the stack.
Why Trusted Decision Intelligence Requires L6
Decision Systems determine what should happen. Decision Infrastructure determines whether it may happen now.
Decision Intelligence learns from outcomes. If those outcomes were never validated at execution, the learning is built on actions that may never have been admissible.
Decision Intelligence is not the input to Decision Infrastructure. It is the output of governed execution.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Decision Infrastructure a Celonis competitor?
Not directly. Celonis is a process-intelligence and execution platform at the decision-systems layer (L5); Decision Infrastructure is the runtime governance layer (L6) that determines whether the actions a process recommendation drives remain admissible at execution. They are complementary layers.
Is it a Celonis replacement?
No. It does not mine processes, surface inefficiency, or recommend improvements. It governs the admissibility of actions at the commit boundary — independent of, and portable across, the platforms that produce those actions, including Celonis.
Can it run alongside Celonis?
Yes. Celonis reveals how the process runs and drives the next action; Decision Infrastructure governs whether each resulting action is admissible at execution and captures independent evidence. L5 produces and coordinates; L6 governs the act.
Where does Celonis sit in the stack?
Primarily at L5 (Decision Systems) — it reconstructs processes, recommends action, and orchestrates it back into operational systems. Decision Infrastructure sits at L6, between the decision and its consequence. See the full model on Where Decision Infrastructure Fits.
What does L6 add that L5 does not?
Runtime admissibility, commit-boundary enforcement, execution governance, evidence at execution, and ALLOW/HOLD/DENY outcomes — applied to each individual action at the moment it executes, portably across systems. L5 platforms produce and route actions; they do not revalidate admissibility at the act.
Why does Decision Intelligence depend on L6?
Decision Intelligence (L7) learns from outcomes. Without L6, it may learn from actions that were never admissible. With L6, it learns only from governed execution — making the resulting intelligence trustworthy.
Related Concepts
Vocabulary an analyst can quote
The canonical concepts referenced on this page, each with its one-sentence definition.
Where Decision Infrastructure Fits
The canonical L5 → L6 → L7 model — the full explanation of the stack.
Execution Governance
Ensures decisions remain admissible at the moment they execute.
Runtime Admissibility
Validation of authority, policy, and constraints immediately before execution.
Commit Boundary
The point where a decision becomes a consequential action.
Decision Systems
The L5 layer that coordinates workflows; Decision Infrastructure governs the act.
Observability
Explains execution after the fact; Decision Infrastructure governs whether it should occur.
How the Layers Work Together
Where each category sits relative to Decision Infrastructure.
Sovereign reasoning · agentic AI · ML · decision intelligence inputs
Reference Surfaces
Reference Surfaces
Understanding a category requires more than comparisons. These reference surfaces explain the core concepts, architecture, vocabulary, and placement of Decision Infrastructure within the enterprise stack.
Definition
What Is Decision Infrastructure?
The canonical introduction to the category. Defines Decision Infrastructure, execution governance, runtime admissibility, and governed execution.
- Category definition
- Execution governance
- Runtime admissibility
- Governed execution
Placement
Where Decision Infrastructure Fits
Where Decision Infrastructure sits between Decision Systems and Decision Intelligence in the enterprise stack.
- L4 Decisioning
- L5 Decision Systems
- L6 Decision Infrastructure
- L7 Decision Intelligence
Architecture
Decision Infrastructure Architecture
The architecture that enables execution governance — how Decision Infrastructure operates across enterprise systems.
- Commit boundaries
- Runtime validation
- Execution control
- Evidence generation
Vocabulary
Decision Infrastructure Glossary
The canonical vocabulary of the category — the lexicon analysts can quote precisely.
- Runtime admissibility
- Commit boundary
- Execution governance
- Governed execution
- Evidence at action
Related Comparisons
Related Comparisons
Use these comparisons to understand how Decision Infrastructure differs from adjacent categories, systems, and governance models.
Decision Infrastructure and ServiceNow
ServiceNow runs and automates the workflow; Decision Infrastructure governs whether each action it fires is admissible at execution.
Decision Infrastructure and Salesforce
Salesforce runs the customer workflow; Decision Infrastructure governs whether each action it fires remains legitimate at the act.
Decision Infrastructure and Palantir
Palantir integrates data and drives action; Decision Infrastructure governs whether each action is admissible at execution — across any platform.
Decision Infrastructure and Appian
Appian automates process execution; Decision Infrastructure governs consequence authorization at the commit boundary.
Decision Infrastructure and Icertis
Icertis manages contracts and obligations; Decision Infrastructure governs whether an action taken under them is admissible at execution.
Decision Infrastructure and Pega
Pega manages decision workflows; Decision Infrastructure governs whether execution remains legitimate at the act.