For many organizations, accessing internal documentation is a daily hurdle—especially for new employees navigating complex processes or legacy systems. One of our clients, a mid-sized enterprise with decentralized operations, faced this exact pain point. Their teams relied on Sharepoint repositories housing decades’ worth of procedures, training guides, and department-specific protocols. However, locating precise information was time-consuming, often requiring employees to interrupt supervisors or comb through poorly organized folders. New hires, in particular, struggled to acclimate, slowing onboarding and creating bottlenecks. Compounding the issue was outdated documentation: policies untouched for years lingered in the system, leading to conflicting guidance. The client needed a way to democratize access to institutional knowledge while ensuring information reliability—a solution that could bridge the gap between efficiency and accuracy.
We implemented a customized Microsoft Copilot chatbot system integrated directly with their Sharepoint repositories, transforming it into a dynamic, conversational search engine. Employees now query the bot using natural language (e.g., “How do I submit an IT ticket?” or “What’s the protocol for client expense approvals?”), and the system retrieves answers by scanning the most recent, relevant documents. To prioritize accuracy, the model cross-references multiple versions of files, flagging potential conflicts or outdated sections—a feature that inadvertently became a catalyst for documentation audits. While initial pushback arose when employees blamed the bot for incorrect answers, this transparency highlighted gaps in their knowledge base, motivating teams to proactively update stale content. Adoption soared: the tool reduced supervisor interruptions by 40% and cut onboarding time for new hires by nearly a third. Though the bot’s success hinges on document currency—a hurdle the client now addresses through monthly “refresh cycles”—it has already fostered a culture of accountability. Looking ahead, the organization is exploring AI-driven automation for tasks like drafting SOPs from transcripts or generating meeting summaries, proving that even “simple” tools can lay the groundwork for smarter, self-sustaining workflows.