To turn documents into a private AI knowledge base, combine intentional ingestion, document indexing, grounded Q&A, saved corrections, and a process for removing stale context.
Turn documents into a private AI knowledge base by uploading or connecting selected files, indexing their content, asking grounded questions, preserving corrected answers, and reviewing outdated memory over time.
Choose the Right Documents
Do not start by uploading everything. Start with documents that create repeated questions: policies, reports, client files, standards, procedures, and research notes.
A smaller trusted set is more useful than a huge messy archive.
Index for Retrieval
Documents need to be split into retrievable chunks and represented in a way the system can search. Embeddings can help find related passages even when the user's wording is different.
Good retrieval is the foundation of good grounded answers.
Preserve Human Judgment
The most important layer is often human correction. People know which answer the team accepted, which document is outdated, and which interpretation is wrong for the current project.
A private AI knowledge base should preserve that judgment as memory.
Keep Privacy Visible
Teams should know where documents, chunks, embeddings, and memory live. Sensitive documents should not be casually uploaded into systems with unclear data use.
Manex is built around a browser-first, local-first approach where possible and encrypted sharing when teams choose to sync.
For document-heavy teams, the winning workflow is not just finding a file. It is preserving the trusted answer, the correction, and the source context for next time.
Where Manex Fits
Manex is private answer memory for document-heavy teams. It helps users upload or connect documents, ask grounded questions, and preserve useful answers, corrections, and decisions as reusable memory.
The goal is not to replace every storage system. The goal is to help teams stop re-answering the same document questions and keep trusted context available for future work.
Frequently Asked Questions
What documents should go into an AI knowledge base?
Start with documents that support repeated decisions or questions, such as policies, procedures, reports, contracts, and research notes.
Is a folder of PDFs a knowledge base?
Not by itself. A knowledge base needs retrieval, context, source evidence, and a way to preserve what the team learns.
Can a private AI knowledge base be used by a team?
Yes. A shared workspace can preserve derived memory and corrected answers for team reuse.
Turn private documents into reusable answer memory.
Manex Team Brain helps teams ask grounded questions, preserve corrected answers, and reuse source-backed decisions across future work.