Build a knowledge base that updates itself
Your team's knowledge is scattered across Notion, Slack, Google Drive, and people's heads. Give Kuse the source material. It builds the base and keeps it current.
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Knowledge bases go stale the moment they are built
- Building the base takes weeks. Organizing, tagging, and writing entries is manual work that never quite gets done.
- Nobody updates it after launch. New processes, new docs, new decisions — none of it makes it back to the knowledge base unless someone is explicitly assigned to maintain it.
- Searching for answers leads to outdated results. Old entries erode trust in the base. People stop using it and go back to asking someone directly.
Documents in, searchable knowledge out
Describe the work in plain language
Tell Kuse which folders to monitor, what tags to apply, and how to structure each knowledge base entry.
Connect your apps
Connect Google Drive, Notion, or Confluence as your source. Kuse reads new files, extracts insights, and keeps your knowledge base indexed.
Set a schedule or run it anytime
Run weekly to index new documents or trigger on demand after a big batch of new content is added.
Get finished results in your workspace
Tagged, searchable knowledge base entries appear in your workspace automatically — ready for your team to find and use.
Kuse Workflows
Your company knowledge, always findable.
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A practical guide to AI knowledge base building
01
What is an AI knowledge base?
An AI knowledge base uses AI to automatically ingest, organize, tag, and surface company knowledge from across your tools. Unlike a static wiki that someone has to manually update, a Kuse-powered knowledge base indexes new documents automatically and keeps entries current without manual curation.
02
Who needs an AI knowledge base?
- Growing teams where tribal knowledge is a scaling risk
- Customer-facing teams who need fast, accurate answers
- Companies with frequent onboarding where ramp-up time matters
- Research and product teams maintaining living documents
- Any team that relies on a Notion wiki nobody updates
03
What should a good knowledge base entry include?
- Clear title and category tag
- One-paragraph summary of the key information
- Source document link with last-updated date
- Owner or maintainer for the entry
- Related entries so users can navigate contextually
04
How to build an AI knowledge base that stays current
Start by connecting your primary document sources — Google Drive folders, Notion databases, or Confluence spaces. Define your category taxonomy in the workflow prompt. Set a weekly schedule so new documents are indexed automatically. Add an expiry check to flag entries older than 90 days for review. The goal is a base that maintains itself, not one that needs a dedicated librarian.
05
Common mistakes to avoid
- No taxonomy defined upfront: Uncategorized entries are unsearchable
- Indexing everything including drafts: Limit the workflow to published or approved documents
- No expiry review process: Old entries erode trust in the entire base
- Building it and walking away: Schedule quarterly reviews to validate quality
06
Why an AI knowledge base works better in Kuse
Kuse does not just index files — it reads them and extracts what matters. A 40-page policy document becomes a 3-sentence entry with a source link. Related documents get linked automatically because Kuse reads across your workspace and understands which entries share context. The result is a knowledge base that is searchable, navigable, and maintained without anyone's full-time attention.
07
Frequently asked questions
Can Kuse index documents from Google Drive automatically?
Yes. Connect your Drive folders in the workflow. Kuse checks for new files on each run and adds them to your knowledge base.
How does Kuse decide what tags to apply?
Define your tag taxonomy in the workflow prompt. Kuse applies the tags that best match each document's content.
Can I query the knowledge base with natural language?
Yes. Once documents are indexed in your Kuse workspace, you can ask questions and get answers with source references.
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See use caseA knowledge base that keeps itself current.
Indexed, tagged, and searchable — automatically.