Key Terms & Definitions
Your guide to the language of AI-powered knowledge management, learning, and enterprise technology.
AI Hallucination
When an AI model generates information that sounds plausible but is factually incorrect, fabricated, or not supported by its source data.
View definition →Change Management
A structured approach to transitioning individuals, teams, and organizations from a current state to a desired future state, minimizing resistance and maximizing adoption.
View definition →Competitive Battlecards
Concise reference documents that give sales reps the key talking points, differentiators, objection handlers, and competitive intelligence they need to win deals against specific competitors.
View definition →Digital Job Aids
Quick-reference tools and resources — such as checklists, decision trees, how-to guides, and searchable knowledge bases — that employees access in the moment of need to perform tasks correctly.
View definition →Employee Onboarding
The structured process of integrating new hires into an organization, including orientation, training, cultural acclimation, and role-specific skill development.
View definition →Enterprise AI Security
The set of policies, technologies, and practices that protect an organization's data, intellectual property, and users when deploying AI systems in the workplace.
View definition →Institutional Knowledge
The collective expertise, processes, relationships, and unwritten know-how accumulated by an organization's employees over time that is essential to operations but often undocumented.
View definition →Knowledge Base
A centralized repository of organized information that employees can search and reference to find answers, procedures, policies, and institutional knowledge.
View definition →Knowledge Silos
Isolated pockets of information trapped within specific teams, departments, or individuals that are inaccessible to the rest of the organization.
View definition →Large Language Model (LLM)
An AI system trained on massive amounts of text data that can understand, generate, and reason about human language with remarkable fluency.
View definition →Microlearning
A training approach that delivers content in short, focused bursts — typically 3 to 7 minutes — designed to teach a single concept or skill at a time.
View definition →Retrieval-Augmented Generation (RAG)
A technique that enhances AI responses by retrieving relevant information from a knowledge base before generating an answer, producing more accurate and verifiable results.
View definition →Sales Enablement
The strategic process of equipping sales teams with the content, training, tools, and knowledge they need to effectively engage buyers and close deals.
View definition →Spaced Repetition
A learning technique that spaces out review sessions at increasing intervals, leveraging the brain's natural memory consolidation process to dramatically improve long-term retention.
View definition →Vector Search
A search technique that finds information based on meaning and semantic similarity rather than exact keyword matches, using mathematical representations (vectors) of text.
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