Frequently Asked Questions

Daneel offers structured sessions based on systemic thinking and business constellations. Each session type supports a different kind of business need—clarifying goals, exploring important relationships, or integrating AI into your work. Think of it as a practical toolkit: whatever dilemma you bring, there's a session format designed to help you take the next step.

The sessions use predefined steps and representations, but you bring all the content—your situation, goals, dilemmas, relationships, and insights.

If you're used to open-ended constellation work where the facilitator improvises, this structure may feel unfamiliar at first. But our long experience shows that structured sessions can reach the same depth, offer meaningful shifts, and often make the process easier to repeat and follow.

Structured constellations remove guesswork, create consistency, and allow you to enter the process at any time without waiting for a facilitator. The clarity of the steps acts as a container, while the insights and movement within the constellation remain entirely personal.

A Goal Constellation is a focused session designed to move any goal forward—whether it's clear or vague, short-term or long-term, practical or visionary.

This can be anything from increasing revenue, to launching a course, to building a whole school around your method.

The session highlights what supports your goal, what challenges it, and what shift might help you progress.

In business, relationships can be with people, teams, clients, ideas, money, projects, or even parts of your own business.

This session maps one relationship that needs attention and helps you see the dynamics at play. You gain clarity about what this relationship needs and how to move forward with steadiness and insight.

Most sessions take 30-45 minutes. This is typically enough time to complete the entire constellation process from setup to insight.

There's no required pace. You can do one session a week, or do several in a single day when you need momentum. You are free to follow the rhythm that fits your workflow and energy.

At the start of each session, Daneel can help you identify which format is the best fit for where you are today.

You can come with a clear need or just a general sense that something is stuck—both work.

No. Daneel is available on demand, and you can begin a session whenever it suits you. That said, we've found that one effective approach is to schedule the sessions in your diary and commit to them, just as you would with a human business consultant. This brings energy, intention, and continuity into the process.

Anything that feels relevant:

  • strategic decisions
  • goal-setting
  • product direction
  • relationship challenges
  • money dynamics
  • team questions
  • creative blocks
  • leadership dilemmas
  • integrating new tools (like AI)

Systemic sessions are flexible—if it matters to you, it can be worked with.

Working with Daneel requires some familiarity with systemic work. You need to know what a representation is, how to place it, and what connecting to and out of a rep means. The rest is up to the field, the sessions are structured and easy to follow, yet very effective.

Daneel doesn't invent constellations on the fly and doesn't try to mimic a human facilitator. Every session follows expert-designed, pre-guided systemic patterns developed from years of constellation practice.

The value doesn't come from AI intuition—it comes from the universal structures and proven sequences that were intentionally built into the system. However if during the session you want flexibility you can ask that and Daneel will follow.

No. Yes. Maybe. A digital facilitator is a "new kind of animal". It might feel a bit mechanical at start, but we found that after a few sessions when people get used to it the sense of mechanicality disappears and people get immense value from the sessions.

The subtlety doesn't depend on the algorithm—it depends on you and the systemic field. What Daneel provides is the formalized wisdom of facilitators who distilled common patterns, steps, and representations into clear formats.

The sensitivity comes from your experience and presence; the structure simply create space for it.

Not at all.

The predefined steps are not rigid—they are patterns drawn from thousands of sessions.

They guide the movement without narrowing it.

Many experienced practitioners find that the structure reduces noise and allows deeper contact with what is essential.

It is not meant to replace live constellation work.

Think of Daneel as a systemic companion tool created by facilitators, not as an alternative to facilitators.

It gives you access to systemic movements whenever needed—during work hours, during decision-making, or when preparing for upcoming work.

You know your system best, and pacing is part of systemic maturity.

Still, we've found that the most effective approach is to schedule sessions in your diary the same way you would with a human consultant.

This keeps the work integrated and grounded.