Hyland, a leading name in the field of content management, has unveiled its latest innovation—a groundbreaking solution called Knowledge Enrichment. This tool is set to redefine how organizations interact with unstructured enterprise content by converting it into AI-ready data.
The core challenge for many organizations adopting AI and automation technologies is not the lack of data, but the quality of it. Much of the content remains disjointed and poorly structured, resulting in underwhelming performance of AI workflows. Knowledge Enrichment aims to tackle this issue by seamlessly transforming raw, unstructured content into clean, contextualized, and intelligently structured information.
Michael Campbell, chief product officer at Hyland, elaborates on the necessity of this innovation: “Knowledge Enrichment solves this fundamental challenge by transforming content, creating the structured, contextually rich data foundation that AI agents need to deliver meaningful business value.”
The features that make Knowledge Enrichment an essential tool in today's data-driven world include:
Operating in varied environments such as content lakes, enterprise content management (ECM) platforms, or federated repositories, Knowledge Enrichment brings clarity to chaos, ensuring that AI platforms can process content with a deep understanding.
For industries like healthcare, insurance, financial services, and government, this enriched content ensures AI systems can accurately interpret and act on information, preserving layout, semantics, and relationships vital for operations.
Knowledge Enrichment offers breakthrough capabilities that enhance AI's effectiveness:
An API-first solution, it supports low-code tools, making it accessible for both technical and business users to harness enriched metadata with ease.
Applications span the enterprise, offering:
Roy Godwin from ECM360 acknowledges the potential in industries with intensive data needs:
“For insurers capturing photos and damage descriptions, it streamlines the entire intake process.”