Orchestrator Agent

Orchestrator Agent

Term explanation

Definition and meaning

An orchestrator agent is a specialized AI agent that coordinates and directs the work of other agents — rather than executing tasks directly itself. In a multi-agent system, the orchestrator receives a high-level goal, uses task decomposition to break it into subtasks, assigns them to specialist agents, monitors progress, and assembles the final output. This pattern enables reliable automation of complex, multi-step enterprise workflows.

LIZ AI's core is built around an orchestrator-agent architecture: a central orchestrator coordinates specialist agents for data retrieval, content generation, brand compliance, and slide management — delivering complete, production-ready presentations end to end.

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Other glossary terms

Learning Chunk

A learning chunk is a small, self-contained unit of educational content covering a single concept or skill. Chunking is a core principle of instructional design: breaking complex topics into manageable segments reduces cognitive load and improves retention. Learning chunks are the building blocks of microlearning programs and modular course structures, and work well in both digital and instructor-led training contexts.

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Pitch

A pitch is a short presentation that is given with the intention of persuading someone (a person or company) to buy or invest. There are various forms of pitches, depending on the goal and intended outcome.

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Microlearning

Microlearning delivers educational content in short, focused segments — typically between 3 and 10 minutes. Rather than completing a lengthy course, learners engage with bite-sized units that cover a single concept or skill. Microlearning is effective for knowledge reinforcement, mobile training, and just-in-time learning. It fits naturally into busy workdays and is widely used in corporate onboarding, compliance training, and professional development programs.

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Asynchronous Learning

Asynchronous learning refers to educational experiences that do not require all participants to be present at the same time. Learners access materials, complete exercises, and submit work according to their own schedule within a defined timeframe. Common formats include recorded video lectures, discussion boards, and self-paced e-courses. Asynchronous learning offers flexibility for geographically dispersed or busy learners and forms the backbone of most online learning programs.

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