A copilot that understands your business
The reason most AI advice feels hollow is that it doesn’t know anything about you. It can’t, because it’s working from the public average of how businesses operate, not from how yours actually does. So you get the textbook answer, then spend twenty minutes translating it into something that fits your team, your stage, your constraints.
The Copilot skips the translation. You authorize it to connect the dots across the context that defines your business — and from then on, “how should we handle this?” gets answered with your reality in the room, not a stranger’s.
Give it your context
Connect what defines your business
Point the Copilot at the sources that hold your real operating knowledge — your docs, your processes, the tools where work lives. It builds unified memory from them, so it knows your pipeline stages and your product names before you ask anything.
Teach it your priorities
Tell it what matters this quarter and what doesn’t. Which accounts are strategic, which deadline is immovable, what “done” means for a launch here. The Copilot weighs its advice against your priorities rather than a generic notion of importance.
Get grounded guidance
Now its answers carry your context. Ask about a renewal and it knows your sales cycle and that account’s history. Ask it to draft something and it uses your naming conventions, not invented ones. The advice fits because it’s built from your facts.
You set the ground truth by telling it, plainly, how your business runs:
The difference shows up immediately. Instead of “consider segmenting your outreach,” you get advice that names the segment, references the last thing that worked for it, and respects the rule that legal flagged in March. It’s the difference between an assistant who read a management book and one who’s read your handbook.
Grounded and remembered, not guessed
Two things keep the Copilot honest. Its guidance is grounded in the sources you connect — it draws from what your business actually documents rather than filling gaps with plausible-sounding invention. And what it learns is remembered, so you explain your world once instead of re-briefing it every Monday. Routing across multiple models under the hood means the heavy reasoning about your context gets the right engine without you choosing one.
Frequently asked questions
A generic chatbot answers from the public average of how businesses work. The Copilot answers from your processes, priorities, and data — connected and held in unified memory — so its guidance reflects your sales cycle and conventions, not a textbook.
The sources and context you authorize it to connect: your documents, the tools where your work lives, and the priorities you tell it. It grounds its advice in those rather than guessing, and it remembers them across sessions.
Only what you allow. The Copilot is built around human-in-the-loop — it advises, drafts, and surfaces options grounded in your context, and you authorize anything it acts on. The judgment calls stay yours.
Tell it. Say the strategic accounts shifted or the deadline moved, and it updates what it weighs. Because your context lives in memory, the change carries forward instead of needing a fresh explanation each time.