IT
How do we decide between groups, tags, countries, and regions?
Choose the right metadata on knowledge documents for access control versus filtering and discovery.
- knowledge-base
- groups
- tags
Harriet can attach several kinds of metadata to knowledge documents. Each serves a different job.
User groups
- Use for: who is allowed to see a document in search.
- Empty or unset group restrictions usually mean “any member of your customer account” can see the document (within normal role limits).
- Best for: confidential handbooks, local policies, or anything that must not appear for the whole company.
Tags
- Use for: organization, reporting, and filtering in the Knowledge Base console.
- Tags help your admins find and maintain content; they can also help Harriet or admins narrow relevant material when configured for your setup.
- Best for: themes like
onboarding,benefits,security, or document lifecycle (review-2025).
Countries and US regions
- Use for: geographic relevance on documents—so answers can align with location-specific rules.
- This is separate from “who is in which group”: an employee in the UK might still be in a group that may see US policy documents if you allow it, but geography metadata helps prioritise the right corpus.
- Best for: multi-country handbooks, state-specific leave or tax summaries, and “default to local, allow global” patterns.
Example
You publish a global code of conduct with no group restriction (everyone should see it), tag it conduct, and set no country so it applies everywhere. You publish a California supplement with US + California metadata and restrict it to US employees group if you do not want other regions to see it at all.
Guardrails
- Do not rely on tags alone for strict confidentiality—use groups when access must be enforced in search.
- Keep a small, agreed tag vocabulary so admins do not invent overlapping labels.
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