For immediate release
Mayia launches the firm-owned AI brain that runs your firm's workflows inside the AI tools you already use
Legal teams can now load their institutional knowledge and their own ways of working into every AI conversation, on their existing subscriptions.
Mayia today announced the launch of its AI knowledge layer for professional services firms, built around the Atlas, a structured, firm-owned knowledge graph that captures a firm's clients, contacts, matters, positions, and the way the firm actually works. Mayia connects that knowledge directly to the AI tools a firm already uses, so every lawyer starts each task with the right context already loaded and the firm's own workflows ready to run.
Most AI tools start every conversation blank. A lawyer opens an AI assistant, re-explains the client, the matter, and the house style, and still gets generic output. The knowledge that makes a firm distinctive lives in the heads of its senior people and is lost the moment they are busy or leave. Mayia closes that gap.
With Mayia, the Atlas does three things. It knows: lawyers can ask it anything about their clients, matters, and positions and get an answer grounded in the firm's real knowledge. It feeds: while a lawyer drafts, Mayia loads the right context so the output reflects the firm's standards, not a generic template. And it works: Mayia fires the firm's own workflows, the steps, the positions, and the house format, into the AI tool the lawyer is using, so the finished work reflects how the firm actually does it.
“Every firm has a way of doing things that took years to build, and until now no AI tool could capture it. Mayia is the brain that holds the firm's knowledge and its methods, and puts both to work inside the tools the firm already uses. A junior associate produces work a senior partner would recognise, on day one.”
— Mitchell Goudie, Chief Product Officer and co-founder, Mayia
The Atlas feeds context and runs workflows across Claude, ChatGPT, and Gemini, so the firm's knowledge is never locked to a single tool and travels wherever the team works. On the desktop, where Mayia runs as a companion application docked beside Claude, it goes a step further: it can open the firm's own templates and produce finished, formatted documents on the firm's letterhead. Because Mayia rides the firm's existing AI subscriptions, it adds no per-query AI cost. The Atlas builds itself from the systems a firm already uses, drawing facts automatically from document stores and email, so there is no manual data entry. Over time, Mayia learns how the firm handles each kind of task by observing real work, then proposes workflows that the firm reviews and refines.
“What convinced me was watching a junior produce something I would have written myself, without me in the room. For years I watched our best thinking disappear the moment a senior lawyer got busy or moved on. Mayia keeps it, and puts it to work for the whole firm. That is the difference between a tool that helps one person and one that raises the whole team.”
— Michiel Van Roey, Chief Executive Officer and co-founder, Mayia
“The value compounds. Six months of Atlas, the facts plus the firm's own workflows, is something no feature update can replicate. It belongs to the firm, it travels across tools, and it gets stronger every day.”
— Mitchell Goudie
Mayia is in active pilot with law firms and is available now for early access.
About Mayia
Mayia is the firm-owned knowledge layer for professional services. It captures an organisation's clients, matters, and ways of working in a structured Atlas, then loads that knowledge into the AI tools teams already use. Mayia is based in Brussels, Belgium.