Who this is for: New users who want to see AnswerPath actually work, start to finish. Time: 5–10 minutes.
Walks you through a complete loop: add some knowledge, ask a question, and save a good answer for reuse. Once you've done this once, everything else in AnswerPath will make sense.
In the sidebar, click Context Hub.
Upload a document that contains real information about your company — a security overview, a product FAQ, a one-pager, anything you'd hand to a prospect.
Wait for the document to finish processing. You'll see it appear in the list when it's ready.
Don't overthink the first document. One is enough to start.
Answers are organized into Projects. Even for a one-off question, it helps to have at least one project to save it to.
In the sidebar, click Projects.
Click New Project.
Give it a name (for example, "General" or "Practice"). Description and company domain are optional.
Click Create Project.
Go to the Ask a Question page.
In the input, type a question that your document could reasonably answer. For example, if you uploaded a security overview, ask "Where is customer data stored?" or "Do you support single sign-on?"
Click Get Answer.
AnswerPath will draft an answer using the document you just uploaded.
Read the draft and the sources it cites.
Click Save to Project, pick the project you just created, and save.
That's it. The saved question-and-answer pair is now part of your reusable library.
Your document is now part of what AnswerPath knows.
Your saved Q&A is now part of what your team has already said — it shows up in your Answer Bank (searchable library of saved answers) and inside the project you saved it to.
Every document you add and every answer you save makes the next draft a little better.
Don't expect perfect drafts on day one. AnswerPath gets sharper as your Context Hub and Answer Bank grow.
Edit freely. A draft you improved is worth far more than a draft you accepted without reading.
Short, factual documents work best. A 3-page FAQ beats a 200-page PDF for answer quality.