The knowledge that makes a complex heritage operation run doesn't live in a handbook. It lives in the heads of the people who've been there longest: the estate manager who knows why the west wing closes in February, the visitor experience lead who remembers what happened when they tried that event format three years ago, the conservation officer who can tell you exactly why that one room is managed differently from every other.
That knowledge is invisible until the person who holds it leaves, or is unavailable, or is pulled in seventeen directions during peak season. Then you feel it.
The problem that brought us in
St. Aubyn Estates in Cornwall manages one of the UK's most complex heritage visitor experiences. Multiple teams. Layered history. Operations spanning hospitality, conservation, events, retail, and estate management. The kind of organisation where institutional knowledge is both its most valuable asset and its biggest vulnerability.
The teams were working hard. The systems weren't helping. Information lived in different places for every team. Reports got compiled manually from the same sources every week. New staff took months to reach full effectiveness, not because they weren't capable, but because there was no reliable way to absorb what the organisation knew.
That's the shape of the problem. The specific form it takes is different in every organisation. But across every business we work with, in every industry, the shape is the same.
What we built
The foundation: the Company Brain. We started by making the organisation's knowledge searchable. Processes. Conservation guidelines. Event protocols. Guest experience standards. Operational history. The decisions that shaped how things run today. All of it captured, structured, and made available to the whole team in plain English.
This is a system that understands questions and gives real, useful answers and guidance. It's not just a document library. A staff member can ask "what's the procedure for a venue hire enquiry over £5,000?" and get an answer from the organisation's own records, not a generic response from the internet.
The first intelligent workflow. We built the first workflow together: a visitor-facing system that handles enquiries. The brief was simple: visitors needed a better way to plan their trip and know what to expect in their journey. From ticket types, to whether they'll walk or take a boat, the visitor experience is enhanced and staff spends less time answering the same questions over and over.
That proved the platform worked. More importantly, it proved to the team what was possible. They know the operation better than we do. That's where the next ideas came from.
What the full operating system looks like
As we partner with clients like the Mount, OS Expansion allows the system to compound. Monthly workshops with the senior team. New Intelligent Workflows going live, one after another, as the team identifies the next problem worth solving and creating value for their visitors.
The operating system grows with the organisation. Every new process added means every future workflow is smarter. The connections mean the team works from one place instead of ten. And because the system is built on the estate's own context (its specific knowledge, its specific history) it does things that generic AI tools simply can't.
What this means for hospitality and tourism businesses
The specifics of a heritage attraction are particular. But the underlying challenge (scattered institutional knowledge, disconnected systems, time lost to work that shouldn't require human attention) shows up in every hospitality and tourism context we've worked in.
Hotels, visitor attractions, tourism operators, experience businesses: the operating model is different but the knowledge problem is identical. The team that knows how things work is the bottleneck. The AI operating system is what changes that.
If you're running a hospitality or tourism business and this sounds familiar, a discovery call is the right place to start. We'll listen to what's actually happening and tell you honestly whether we can help.