We develop AI decision-making engines that combine LLM reasoning with your existing business rules — built for explainable outputs, not a black box.
AI Decision-Making Engine Development for High-Stakes Workflows
In short: Northell develops AI decision-making engines combining LLM reasoning with existing business rules, built for explainable, not black-box, outputs.
Key takeaways
- LLM reasoning combined with your existing business rules, not a replacement.
- Explainable outputs — every decision traceable to a specific input and rule.
- Built to integrate with your existing decision workflows, not sit apart from them.
Frequently asked questions
How is a decision engine different from a rules engine or a plain LLM call?
It combines both: your hard business rules (compliance, thresholds, policy) constrain and validate the LLM's reasoning, so you get flexibility on ambiguous cases without losing control over the non-negotiable ones.
Can this replace our existing rules-based system?
Usually it extends it — hard rules stay in place for what they already handle well, and the LLM layer handles the ambiguous cases that rules-only systems struggle with.
How do you keep the outputs explainable?
Every decision is traceable to specific rule matches and reasoning steps — output includes not just the decision but why, in a format a non-technical reviewer can audit.
What industries use decision engines like this?
Lending and underwriting, fraud triage, claims processing, and eligibility determination are common use cases where explainability is a hard requirement.
How do you validate the engine before it goes live?
Backtesting against historical decisions with known outcomes, then a shadow-mode period running alongside your existing process before full cutover.