INTRODUCING...
1) 2026 SISE TTX Exercise Planning Accelerator Agent V6.0:
https://chatgpt.com/g/g-69dd34362d8881919e735276b98f0d49-2026-exercise-automation-agent
SISE TTX Exercise Planning Accelerator Agent
Rapidly create practical, discussion-based tabletop exercise materials for emergency planning, infrastructure resilience, disaster communications, and public/private operational coordination.
What the Agent Does
| Capability | Description |
|---|---|
| Accelerates TTX planning | Quickly turns a basic scenario idea into usable tabletop exercise materials. |
| Supports public/private coordination | Helps government agencies, infrastructure operators, and private sector partners discuss shared risks and responsibilities. |
| Focuses on operational issues | Emphasizes communications, situational awareness, information sharing, resource constraints, and decision-making. |
| Uses scenario-specific inputs | Tailors outputs to the selected hazard, state, sector, and problem focus. |
| Produces ready-to-use materials | Creates both a concise exercise outline and a more formal planning document. |
Required User Inputs
Users provide four simple inputs:
| Input | Example |
|---|---|
| Scenario | Hurricane |
| State | Georgia |
| Primary Sector | Transportation and Logistics |
| Problem Focus | Road closures, power outages, wireless disruptions, fuel shortages |
Primary Outputs
| Output | Purpose |
|---|---|
| 1-Page Exercise Outline | A concise, boardroom-ready discussion sheet for rapid planning sessions or facilitated tabletop discussions. |
| Formal HSEEP-Style Version | A more structured exercise planning document for executive, operational, and planning audiences. |
Key Features
- Exercise purpose and objectives
- Scenario overview and escalating conditions
- State-specific operational context
- Primary sectors and supporting sectors
- State agency roles and coordination responsibilities
- Disaster communications concerns
- Information-sharing and situational awareness gaps
- Cross-sector infrastructure dependencies
- Discussion questions for government and private sector participants
- Escalating injects that challenge decision-making
- Expected outcomes and recommended next steps
Core Preparedness Themes
| Theme | How It Supports the Exercise |
|---|---|
| Disaster communications | Examines how organizations communicate when normal systems are degraded or unavailable. |
| Information sharing | Helps participants identify what information is needed, who needs it, and how it should be shared. |
| Situational awareness | Supports a common operating picture across government and private sector partners. |
| Operational coordination | Clarifies roles, responsibilities, resource needs, and decision points. |
| Cross-sector dependencies | Highlights how disruptions in one sector can affect transportation, energy, communications, fuel, supply chains, and public services. |
| Executive decision-making | Creates realistic pressure points for leaders to prioritize resources and manage uncertainty. |
Who Can Use It
- Emergency management agencies
- State and local government partners
- State Emergency Operations Center planning teams
- Critical infrastructure owners and operators
- Transportation and logistics organizations
- Energy, fuel, communications, and utility partners
- Public/private sector coordination groups
- Business continuity and resilience planners
Value to Organizations
- Reduce planning time
- Improve tabletop exercise quality
- Create consistent exercise materials
- Strengthen coordination across sectors
- Identify preparedness gaps
- Improve disaster communications planning
- Support more productive planning conferences
- Build practical next steps after the exercise
Summary
The SISE TTX Exercise Planning Accelerator Agent gives planners a faster, more structured way to turn a scenario into a focused tabletop exercise. By combining operational planning, disaster communications, public/private coordination, and cross-sector dependency analysis, it helps organizations create exercises that are realistic, useful, and immediately actionable. Its outputs support better discussions, stronger partnerships, and improved readiness before a disaster occurs.