Today I'm launching Lore — the modern intranet that turns every person on your team into an AI power user.
Let's be honest about the intranet you have now. That SharePoint site nobody opens. The wiki that hasn't been updated since 2022. The "single source of truth" that's neither single, sourced, nor true. Companies pour money into these systems and they go stale the moment they launch — because keeping them current is somebody's least favorite job.
Lore is the trade-in. It's an AI-powered knowledge base that actually captures how your business works — your processes, decisions, playbooks, and the context behind them — and keeps it alive. Then it plugs that knowledge straight into the AI tools your team already uses (Claude, ChatGPT, and more) through MCP, so everyone gets real answers grounded in your business, not generic ones.
The result: every employee, day one, operating like your most experienced insider. Proper context. Real insight. No more digging through dead links and stale folders.
Why we built it: the knowledge that runs a company is its most valuable asset — and most companies are letting it rot in tools no one wants to use. AI changed what's possible. Your intranet should too.
This is launch day, but it's really just the start. Over the next few days I'll be sharing a lot more — how Lore works, what it can do, and who it's for. Stay tuned and learn more about how to build your enterprise brain on Lore.
Trade in the intranet nobody uses for one that makes everyone smarter → https://t.co/8WqOQC7dkt
A 15-year veteran isn't worth 3x a junior because they type faster.
They're worth it because of what they remember.
When they leave, you don't lose an employee. You lose a library.
So how can you get higher productivity out of a junior level employee?
Empower them with an enterprise brain.
"Enterprise brain" gets thrown around a lot. Most of it is marketing.
What it actually means: a layer that knows what your company knows, respects who can see what, and updates as work happens.
Not a chatbot. Not a wiki. Not Notion with AI bolted on. A different category.
Talked to a PT clinic owner today.
Her senior therapist knows every insurance quirk, every protocol nuance, which carriers deny which codes. None of it is written down.
The day that therapist leaves, the practice loses a decade of knowledge in a week.
This is the problem. Everywhere.
Most companies bought ChatGPT Enterprise and saw nothing.
Adoption plateaued at 30%. Productivity barely moved.
It's not the AI's fault. It's the lack of a company brain to provide consistent context.
"We should document our processes" is the corporate version of "we should eat healthier."
Everyone agrees. Nothing happens.
Documentation as a project fails 100% of the time. Documentation as a byproduct of how work already happens actually works.
Every company has a Susan.
The person everyone asks. Who answers the same 5 questions every week for 10 years.
Susan is your knowledge base.
And Susan is going to retire eventually.
Build a company brain before she does, and you don't have to worry about it.
A construction company I work with stopped building bids from scratch.
Their AI reads every past bid, material cost, and labor hour they've logged. An estimate that took a day now starts from a real baseline in minutes.
The knowledge didn't get smarter. It got reachable in a company brain.
Everyone's asking "which AI model should we use."
Wrong question.
The model isn't the bottleneck. The context is. ChatGPT is a genius that knows nothing about your business. Fix the context and a "worse" model beats a better one every time.
Your company doesn't have a knowledge problem.
It has an access problem.
The information exists. Nobody can find it fast enough. Those are completely different diseases with completely different cures.