
OneDrive


Turn Microsoft OneDrive into a source of product decisions
Your documents already contain the answers. Samepage turns them into signals you can act on.
Connect OneDrive to Samepage and continuously analyze files, reports, and internal content to surface patterns, identify gaps, and generate product-ready insights.
Built for teams whose knowledge lives in documents
If you’re using OneDrive, you likely have critical information spread across:
Product specs, research docs, customer feedback summaries, strategy decks, internal notes.
The problem isn’t access—it’s understanding what all of it adds up to.
Samepage is built for teams that have already done the work of documenting—but don’t have a system to connect and operationalize it.
The problem with OneDrive today
OneDrive is great for storing and sharing files. It’s not built to answer:
What patterns exist across all our documents?
What customer issues show up repeatedly?
What insights are missing from our current plans?
How does this content connect to product decisions?
So teams end up:
Searching across folders and opening multiple files
Manually synthesizing insights
Repeating work because prior knowledge isn’t surfaced
Making decisions without full context
The knowledge exists—but it’s fragmented and underutilized.
What Samepage does differently
Samepage treats OneDrive as a connected knowledge layer—not just storage.
Instead of searching and skimming, you define Signals that continuously analyze your files.
You can ask:
“What are the top customer pain points across all research docs?”
“What themes appear across recent reports?”
“What insights are not reflected in our roadmap?”
Samepage reads across documents, connects ideas, and produces structured outputs you can act on.
How it works
Connect OneDrive
Samepage ingests selected folders and files.Create a Signal
Use OneDrive as a data source and define what to analyze, like:
“Analyze all customer research documents and identify recurring issues.”Run continuous analysis
Signals update as files are added or edited.Get structured outputs
Instead of isolated documents, you get synthesized insights, themes, and recommendations.
Key use cases
1. Synthesize customer research across files
Analyze reports, interview notes, and feedback docs.
Example output:
“Across 9 documents, onboarding friction is the most common issue—mentioned in 61% of sources.”2. Identify gaps in product strategy
Compare insights across documents with current initiatives.
Example:
“Multiple documents highlight ‘reporting limitations,’ but no active initiative addresses this.”3. Prevent duplicate work
Scan past files for overlapping efforts.
Example:
“Two previous specs explored ‘bulk actions’—key constraints already documented but not implemented.”4. Track how insights evolve over time
Analyze documents chronologically.
Example:
“Shift from SMB-focused feedback to enterprise concerns appears across recent reports.”5. Turn documentation into actionable outputs
Generate recommendations from existing content.
Example:
“Based on research findings, prioritize simplifying onboarding before expanding feature set.”
Before vs After
Before Samepage
You search through OneDrive, open multiple files, and manually connect insights. Important context is scattered and easy to miss.
After Samepage
Your entire document system becomes connected. Signals surface what matters across all files—what’s consistent, what’s missing, and what needs action.
What OneDrive data Signals can analyze
Samepage works directly on your OneDrive content, including:
Documents (specs, research, notes)
Presentations and decks
PDFs and uploaded files
Folder structures and organization
Document content and updates
You control which folders or files are included.
Why not just use OneDrive search or manual review?
Search helps you find files—not understand them collectively.
Folders organize documents but don’t connect ideas across them.
Manual synthesis is slow, inconsistent, and doesn’t scale.
Samepage doesn’t replace OneDrive—it makes it usable as a thinking system.
It answers:
“What do all of our documents actually tell us—and what should we do next?”
OneDrive integration for document analysis and product insights
If you’re trying to get more value from OneDrive—whether that’s synthesizing research, analyzing customer feedback, or aligning product decisions—Samepage gives you a system that goes beyond storage and search.
Instead of manually reviewing files or relying on fragmented knowledge, you can define exactly what you want to learn from your content and let Signals surface it continuously.
This is especially valuable for product teams sitting on large volumes of information that aren’t being fully utilized.
Turn your documents into a system of insight
Connect OneDrive to Samepage and define your first Signal in minutes.
Stop searching through files. Start using them.

