For the last decade, the enterprise data problem was treated as a search problem. Companies bought massive indexing platforms to scan SharePoint, Slack, and Salesforce, hoping that if an employee could just find the right document, the workflow would become efficient.
We now know that retrieval is not enough.
Finding the Document Isn't the Workflow
Enterprise workflows don't stop when a file is found. If a compliance officer needs to verify a vendor, finding the vendor's policy document is just step one. They then have to read it, compare it against a separate regulatory framework, check the vendor's recent activity in a CRM, and synthesize a conclusion.
Workplace search engines like Glean or Coveo stop at step one. They give you a list of links.
The Shift to Synthesis
Momor was built on the premise that getting an answer isn't the workflow; acting on it is.
Instead of just retrieving a document, Momor's orchestration system performs cross-system synthesis:
- It ingests the intent of the query.
- It fetches the vendor document.
- It retrieves the regulatory framework.
- It compares the two and surfaces the conflicts.
This is the difference between a search engine and an orchestration system. Search engines return lists. Orchestration systems execute steps and return synthesized context.