Today, we are introducing Atlas, a new way to visualize the relationships between the systems, people, vendors, departments, and services recorded in Atlariem.

Traditional inventories are useful for documenting what an organization owns, but they often struggle to explain how those records connect.

Atlas turns the operational registry into a visual map, helping teams understand not only what exists, but also what depends on it, who is responsible for it, and where operational risk may be concentrated.

See the relationships behind your operations

Every organization depends on a network of connected technology and responsibility.

An application may rely on a vendor, a domain, an administrator, and several connected services. A single employee may own multiple critical systems. One vendor may support applications used across several departments.

Those relationships are difficult to understand when they are spread across separate records or spreadsheet rows.

Atlas brings them together in one connected view.

With Atlas, early-access users can explore relationships between:

  • Applications
  • Domains
  • Vendors
  • People
  • Departments
  • Business services
  • Infrastructure
  • Repositories
  • APIs
  • Other tracked operational assets

Selecting a node reveals the records connected to it, allowing teams to move from a single asset or person into the wider operational context surrounding them.

Understand what could be affected

Atlas is designed to help teams investigate practical operational questions.

For example:

  • Which systems depend on this vendor?
  • What applications does this employee own or administer?
  • Which departments rely on this critical service?
  • What could be affected if this application becomes unavailable?
  • Where does one person provide the only administrative coverage?
  • Which assets are connected to an upcoming renewal?
  • How widely is a particular platform used across the organization?

Instead of searching through several lists, teams can begin with one record and follow its relationships across the organization.

Make ownership gaps easier to see

An organization may know that an asset exists while still lacking clear responsibility for it.

Atlas makes ownership and administrative relationships visible alongside the asset itself.

This can help teams identify:

  • Assets without an assigned owner
  • Critical systems with limited administrative coverage
  • Applications connected to departing employees
  • Vendors supporting several important systems
  • Departments relying on unverified assets
  • Areas where responsibility is concentrated around one person

The goal is not simply to create a visually interesting graph. Atlas is intended to help teams find operational gaps that require action.

Explore by asset, person, vendor, or department

Atlas can support several types of investigation.

Start with an application

See its owners, administrators, vendor, department, domains, services, and other connected systems.

Start with a person

Review the assets they own, administer, approve, or support.

This can be especially useful during employee transitions and offboarding.

Start with a vendor

Understand which applications, services, and departments may be affected by a vendor incident or relationship change.

Start with a department

Review the systems, vendors, people, and operational responsibilities connected to one area of the business.

Start with a critical service

See the technology and ownership relationships behind an important business function.

Search and navigate larger operational maps

As an Atlariem workspace grows, its Atlas can contain a substantial number of connected records.

Atlas includes navigation and discovery tools designed to make those larger maps easier to explore, including:

  • Search
  • Node selection
  • Relationship highlighting
  • Connected-record details
  • Department grouping
  • Risk indicators
  • Minimap navigation
  • Focused relationship views

These tools help users isolate the part of the operational map that matters to the question they are investigating.

Built from your Atlariem registry

Atlas does not require teams to maintain a separate diagram.

The map is generated from the relationships already recorded in the Atlariem workspace.

As teams add assets, assign owners, connect vendors, document departments, and record dependencies, Atlas becomes more complete.

This keeps the visual map connected to the same operational records used for ownership, renewals, risks, and verification.

Available now in early access

Atlas is now available to Atlariem early-access users.

Because Atlas is part of the early-access product, its interface and capabilities will continue to evolve as we gather feedback from real operational workflows.

Current early-access functionality focuses on:

  • Visualizing connected records
  • Exploring direct relationships
  • Searching for assets and people
  • Reviewing ownership context
  • Identifying concentrated responsibility
  • Understanding vendor and department connections
  • Navigating larger workspace maps

More advanced service-impact and dependency capabilities remain part of Atlariem’s continued product development.

What is coming next

We are continuing to improve Atlas with a focus on making operational impact easier to understand.

Areas under consideration and development include:

  • Expanded critical-service mapping
  • Deeper dependency-path analysis
  • Additional filtering and focus controls
  • Improved risk visualization
  • More detailed renewal and cost context
  • Better support for larger organizational maps
  • Additional export and reporting options

Availability and timing may change as these capabilities are tested and refined.

Explore Atlas

The best way to understand Atlas is to see it in context.

The Atlariem interactive demo shows how a team can begin with an ownership concern, explore the connected records in Atlas, and understand the wider operational impact.

Explore the interactive demo to see Atlas in action, or request early access to begin mapping your own organization.