> ## Documentation Index
> Fetch the complete documentation index at: https://docs.serviceplan-agents.com/llms.txt
> Use this file to discover all available pages before exploring further.

# Political Monitoring

> Track politicians and political entities over time — dossiers, relationship maps, and briefings.

Political Monitoring keeps a living knowledge base on the people, organizations, and institutions that matter to you. Instead of researching a topic once and moving on, your coworker keeps watching — so you always have an up-to-date view of the political landscape around your industry.

<Info>
  This is a specialized skill built for teams that need ongoing political and regulatory awareness — not a general research request. See [Skills](/en/skills/overview) for how skills work more broadly.
</Info>

## What it does

* **Builds structured profiles.** Your coworker creates a clear profile — a "dossier" — on each person, party, or institution you care about, and keeps it current as things change.
* **Maps relationships.** It tracks how people and organizations connect to each other, so you can see the bigger picture, not just isolated facts.
* **Delivers regular briefings.** On a schedule that suits you, your coworker sends a briefing that highlights what's changed recently and why it's relevant to your organization.
* **Flags what matters, not everything.** The goal is signal over noise — briefings focus on developments that could actually affect you.

## What you get

<CardGroup cols={2}>
  <Card title="Dossiers" icon="id-card">
    A structured, always-current profile for each person or entity you're tracking.
  </Card>

  <Card title="Relationship maps" icon="diagram-project">
    A view of how the people and organizations in your landscape connect.
  </Card>

  <Card title="Briefings" icon="newspaper">
    Regular updates on what changed and why it matters — delivered the way you already work with your coworker.
  </Card>
</CardGroup>

## Who it's for

Political Monitoring is built for teams like government relations, public affairs, or regulatory strategy — anyone who needs an early-warning view of the political environment around their industry, rather than a one-off research report.

For example, a public affairs team might ask their coworker to track a handful of relevant policymakers and committees, and receive a weekly briefing summarizing any statements, votes, or personnel changes that touch their industry. A regulatory strategy lead might use the relationship maps to understand how a new appointee connects to existing stakeholders before a first meeting.

<Note>
  **Premium skill.** Available on request — talk to your Serviceplan Agents contact to enable it for your workspace.
</Note>
