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How to Use Vault as a Reliable Knowledge Layer
Vault is where you turn files into governed working knowledge. The point is not just to store documents. The point is to make the right materials findable, trustworthy, and usable inside prompts, workflows, and reviews without people hunting through folders every time.
Structured upload
Add documents with clear ownership, tags, and status so the material can be governed instead of dumped into a pile.
Search and retrieval
Find materials by meaning or keyword depending on whether you are exploring or doing a precise lookup.
Prompt injection
Send the right material into Prompt Architect or PromptForge when the task truly needs reference context.
Lifecycle control
Move content from draft to review to published to archive so outdated knowledge stops contaminating AI output.
Give each document an owner, a purpose, and a status.
Use domain-prefixed tags so search scales cleanly across teams.
Mark drafts and under-review items clearly so they are not mistaken for production truth.
Archive instead of deleting when the document still matters for history or audit.
Step 1: Upload with context
Add the document with a meaningful title, ownership, and tags that explain what it is for and where it belongs.
Step 2: Set status before reuse
Decide whether the material is draft, review-ready, published, or archived. Status controls trust, not just organization.
Step 3: Search the way the task demands
Use keyword search for exact identifiers and semantic search when you know the idea but not the exact wording.
Step 4: Inject only what the prompt truly needs
Pull the most relevant materials into Prompt Architect or PromptForge. More context is not always better context.
Step 5: Maintain the lifecycle
Review old documents, refresh published content, and archive stale knowledge before it keeps affecting outputs silently.
Step 6: Reuse strong materials intentionally
When a document becomes a repeated source of truth, keep its tags, owner, and status tight so downstream prompts stay dependable.
Write titles and tags for future search, not only for the current uploader.
Publish only materials that are truly safe to inject into production prompts.
Prefer smaller, focused knowledge injections over dumping entire manuals into one run.
Review documents that have not been used in a long time and decide whether they still belong.
Do not let drafts sit next to published materials without a clear status signal.
Do not assume the newest file is the most authoritative file.
Do not inject large context blocks if only one section actually matters.
Do not delete historically important materials when archive status would preserve the trail.