A wiki teams actually maintain
A team wiki works when it’s close to the work. In Wyatt, each team can own its wiki in a teamspace, with pages that are real documents connected to the projects and tasks the team runs.
Give your team a wiki that stays current because it’s connected to projects and tasks, with AI to answer questions and keep it findable.
Per team
Each team owns its wiki in a teamspace.
Living docs
Pages are real, editable documents.
AI answers
Ask the wiki questions in plain language.
Findable
Search across the wiki and workspace.
What you can do with Wyatt
Per team
Each team owns its wiki in a teamspace.
Living docs
Pages are real, editable documents.
AI answers
Ask the wiki questions in plain language.
Findable
Search across the wiki and workspace.
A team wiki works when it’s close to the work. In Wyatt, each team can own its wiki in a teamspace, with pages that are real documents connected to the projects and tasks the team runs.
When a team owns its wiki, it’s clear who maintains it, so pages stay current instead of rotting in a shared void.
Teammates can ask the assistant questions and get answers from the wiki, so onboarding and day-to-day questions don’t require interrupting a colleague.
Even with per-team ownership, wikis stay searchable across the whole workspace, so knowledge flows where it’s needed.
Adding a team means adding a wiki. The structure grows with the company without becoming an unmanageable mess.
Yes. Each team can own its wiki in a teamspace, with clear ownership that keeps pages current.
Yes. The assistant can answer questions from the wiki in plain language.
Yes. Even with per-team ownership, wikis stay searchable across the whole workspace.
Yes. Adding a team means adding a wiki, and the structure grows with the company.