Your knowledge is spread across dozens of business units, intranets, and regional repositories — each with its own permissions and its own local version of the truth. We build permission-aware retrieval that searches the whole enterprise from one place and reconciles global policy with regional variants, every answer cited and scoped to what each person may see.
At enterprise scale, knowledge does not fail because it is missing; it fails because it is fragmented. The same question is answered three ways across three business units, the global policy and its regional addenda live in different systems, and nobody is sure which intranet holds the current version. The naive fix — copy everything into one searchable pile — quietly breaks the access model that kept sensitive content where it belonged.
We build retrieval that federates across your repositories instead of flattening them. Identity and group membership are evaluated per source at query time, so a single search reaches every business unit and region while honoring each one's permissions. Content is tagged by scope, so the system can tell a global standard from a local variant and present both — cited — rather than guessing. An employee in one region, a shared-services team, and a corporate function each get an enterprise-wide answer that respects exactly what they are entitled to see.
A retrieval layer engineered to span business units and regions while preserving the boundaries between them.
The biggest returns come from ending the duplicated search and conflicting answers that scale with the size of the organization:
The system federates across repositories without flattening their access models. A user's identity and group memberships are evaluated at query time against each source, so a single search spans the enterprise but returns only what that person is entitled to see in each business unit — no shared index that leaks across boundaries.
Documents are tagged by scope, so the system distinguishes the global standard from a region's local addendum. An answer presents the governing global policy alongside the variant that applies to the user's region, each cited, so people see both the corporate baseline and the local rule rather than one masquerading as the other.
Bring two or three repositories from different units and the questions that get answered inconsistently across them. In thirty minutes we will show how federated, permission-aware retrieval unifies them. Response inside 24 hours.