How AccelOne solved their own institutional knowledge problem and discovered a new product in the process.
In brief: AccelOne built Vivian, an AI assistant connected to all internal data sources, Slack, Google Drive, email, financial reports, that answers questions with citations from verified internal data, never guesses. The proof of concept handled 100+ internal query types. Employees reclaimed an average of 1.8 hours per day previously spent searching for information. Vivian is now a flagship client product deployed in legal, customer support, and R&D teams.
The morning coffee hadn't even cooled when Scott, AccelOne's CEO, found himself in the familiar dance of corporate governance. A leadership meeting in thirty minutes. Critical financial data from the last three months scattered somewhere in the digital maze of spreadsheets, email chains, and financial reports.
"Does anyone have the Q3 revenue breakdown by client segment?", typed into the leadership Slack channel. The third such message that week.
This scene played out daily across AccelOne's growing organization. Engineering insights lived in code repositories. Client intelligence gathered dust in conversation threads. Sales materials floated through cloud storage. Each search became an expedition. Each answer, a small victory against the entropy of organizational memory.
For a company helping clients harness AI to solve complex challenges, the irony was not lost on leadership: they were drowning in their own information.
Research shows that employees spend an average of 1.8 hours per day searching for information. Across a team, that is not an inconvenience, it is a structural drag on every project, meeting, and decision the organization makes.
Rather than treating the problem as a typical IT challenge requiring better file organization or more robust search tools, AccelOne approached it as a research question. The distinction matters: a search problem gets a search solution. A knowledge problem requires something different, a system that understands not just where information lives, but what it means and how it connects.
The hypothesis became the foundation for Vivian.
When a team member asks about client preferences, Vivian does not guess — she surfaces the relevant customer research document and highlights the specific insight. When someone needs the latest product roadmap, she provides the most recent version along with who last updated it and when. The answer always comes with a citation, not just a response.
AccelOne's first step was mapping their full information ecosystem, the sprawling network of platforms containing fragments of the company's collective intelligence. What they found is common across organizations: critical knowledge exists in the spaces between formal documentation.
The real insights lived in informal communications and unwritten context, not in neatly organized wikis. Vivian was built to access all of it:
The system understands the unique language and logic of the business, not just keyword matching, but contextual understanding of how knowledge actually flows through the organization.
AccelOne treated their own organization as both laboratory and test subject, a methodology that would later become their standard approach for AI knowledge management projects.
The transformation was immediate and measurable. The 1.8 hours per day employees had been spending searching for information came back. But the more significant shift was cultural.
Instead of hesitating to ask questions that might interrupt a colleague's workflow, team members began exploring their institutional knowledge with newfound confidence. The barrier between having a question and getting a reliable answer had effectively disappeared.
Employees reclaimed 1.8 hours per day previously lost to information searches
Questions that previously required interrupting colleagues were answered instantly
Answers came with citations, source document, author, last updated date
The POC handled 100+ distinct internal query types from day one
Zero hallucinations, Vivian only answers from verified internal data
What began as AccelOne's internal solution became a flagship product for clients. Each implementation reveals new dimensions of the same underlying challenge: how to transform scattered organizational knowledge into accessible intelligence.
The scientific approach that produced Vivian, treating internal challenges as research problems rather than IT tickets, has become AccelOne's standard methodology for AI projects. It also produced a business insight: the best way to build a product that solves a real problem is to solve your own problem first.
What is Vivian and what problem does it solve?
Vivian is an AI assistant built by AccelOne that connects to an organization's internal data sources (Slack, Google Drive, email, financial reports, documentation) and answers questions with citations, never guesses. It solves the institutional knowledge problem: critical information scattered across platforms that costs employees 1.8 hours per day on average to locate. Vivian makes that knowledge instantly accessible while always showing exactly where the answer came from.
How is Vivian different from a standard AI chatbot?
Unlike a general-purpose chatbot, Vivian is grounded exclusively in an organization's own verified internal data. It does not generate answers from general training data or risk AI hallucination. It surfaces the actual document, conversation, or report containing the answer, with attribution showing who created it and when. When Vivian doesn't know something, it says so rather than guessing.
What data sources can Vivian connect to?
Vivian connects to an organization's full information ecosystem: Slack conversations, Google Drive files and comments, email chains, financial reports, code repositories, sales materials, client documentation, and product roadmaps. The system is designed to surface knowledge that exists in informal communications and unwritten context, not just formal documentation.
How did AccelOne build Vivian?
AccelOne treated their own organization as both laboratory and test subject. The first phase mapped their full information ecosystem. They then built a proof of concept connected to all internal data sources, trained on the specific language and logic of the business. The POC handled over 100 internal query types, from operational to strategic. Once validated internally, the methodology became AccelOne's standard approach for AI knowledge management projects.
How much time does an AI knowledge assistant save employees?
Research shows employees spend an average of 1.8 hours per day searching for information. An AI assistant like Vivian (grounded in internal data with cited answers) directly reclaims that time. Beyond the efficiency gain, it also eliminates the hidden cost of interrupting colleagues with questions the system can answer instantly.
What industries and teams use Vivian?
Vivian is deployed in legal departments to navigate regulatory documentation, customer support teams to access product knowledge bases, and R&D groups to surface relevant prior work and prevent duplicated effort. Any team that relies on finding and applying institutional knowledge is a strong use case.
Can AccelOne build a custom AI knowledge assistant for my organization?
Yes. AccelOne offers Vivian as a flagship client product, built on the same methodology used internally: mapping the organization's information ecosystem, building a proof of concept, and training the assistant on the specific language, data sources, and knowledge flows of that business. The result is an AI that understands how knowledge actually moves through the organization, not a generic search tool applied to company files.