Every new source is an engineering project
Traditional platforms require a custom connector per source: a scoping call, a statement of work, a deployment cycle. Adding a tool to your stack means waiting on someone else's roadmap.
Wave · AI Source Profiler
Point Wave at a CMS, knowledge base, or video library. Wave's AI reads the vendor's documentation and drafts the ingestion configuration. You preview exactly what would be ingested, then approve. Nothing commits until you say so.
Quick answer
The AI Source Profiler is Wave's no-code path for onboarding a new content source. An operator pastes vendor API documentation or a sample payload; Wave drafts a complete ingestion configuration covering authentication, item discovery, field mapping, and governance; the operator previews the draft against real content and commits it only when it looks right. Nothing auto-commits.
Key capabilities
Last updated: July 2026
The problem
Blog posts in the CMS, case studies in the help center, demos in the video library, docs in the wiki. Every system your platform cannot read is content your buyers never get recommended.
Traditional platforms require a custom connector per source: a scoping call, a statement of work, a deployment cycle. Adding a tool to your stack means waiting on someone else's roadmap.
What your intelligence layer cannot see, it cannot recommend. Unread sources are invisible to gap analysis, buying-group curricula, and per-person predictions, however strong the content.
Teams add new content tools every quarter. Vendor connector catalogs grow by a handful a year. The math never closes.
How Wave does it
The profiler turns source onboarding into a review task instead of a build task: AI drafts, the operator verifies, the platform runs it.
Paste the vendor's API documentation or a sample payload into the profiler. That is the entire technical input: no code, no ticket, no scoping call.
Wave reads the documentation and proposes a complete source profile: authentication, item discovery, field mapping for title, permalink, format, and summary, and governance classification for every item.
A deterministic preview shows exactly which items would be ingested and how every field maps, run against the live source. Nothing is committed at this stage, ever.
The operator commits the profile. From then on Wave handles incremental syncs, deduplication across sources, and failure monitoring.
Ingested assets run through Wave's content tagging automatically, join the content inventory, and become eligible for buying-group recommendations and per-person format predictions.
Where it fits
Content Intelligence can only tag what it can read. The profiler is how everything your team publishes, everywhere it publishes, becomes part of one intelligence layer.
Reference profiles for WordPress, Zendesk, and Wistia ship with the product, so operators see the expected shape before generating their own. Once a source is live, its assets flow through the same tagging pipeline as everything else: themes, personas, funnel stage, and format. Governance classification runs on every ingested item, so drafts, internal documents, and confidential material are structurally excluded from outward-facing recommendations. Credentials are encrypted at rest and never stored inline, and all outbound access runs against a strict allowlist.
Works alongside Content Intelligence, Next Up Content, The full Wave platform.
Why Wave is different
Source onboarding is where content intelligence projects stall. Wave moved it from the engineering backlog to the operator's browser tab.
FAQ
It is Wave's no-code path for onboarding a new content source. An operator pastes vendor API documentation or a sample payload, Wave's AI drafts the full ingestion configuration, and the operator previews the result against real content before committing. Nothing is ingested without explicit approval.
Web CMS platforms, knowledge bases, video libraries, and REST-based content APIs. Reference profiles for WordPress, Zendesk, and Wistia ship with the product so operators can see the expected shape before generating their own. If the source exposes documentation or a sample payload, the profiler can draft a configuration for it.
No. The flow is draft, preview, commit, and the middle step is mandatory. The preview is deterministic and runs against the live source, so what you approve is exactly what ingestion will do.
A human-readable preview: which items the source would yield, how each field maps (title, permalink, format, summary), and the governance classification each item would receive. If the draft is wrong, edit it or regenerate. Commit only when it is right.
Credentials are encrypted at rest and never stored inline in the configuration. Wave decrypts them only at use time, and all outbound requests run against a strict allowlist, so a source profile can never route data somewhere it should not go.
Every sync is monitored and logged. A source that fails repeatedly is automatically disabled and surfaced to the operator rather than left to ingest bad data. Re-enable it once the upstream issue is fixed.
It flows through Wave's Content Intelligence tagging: themes, personas, funnel stage, and format. Tagged assets join the content inventory and become eligible for buying-group recommendations, per-person format prediction, and coverage analysis. Drafts, internal documents, and confidential material are excluded from outward-facing recommendations.
Book a 20-minute walkthrough. Bring the API documentation for a system in your stack and watch Wave draft the ingestion profile live.
See it on your stack
Book a 20-minute walkthrough. Bring the API docs for a system in your stack and watch Wave draft a working ingestion profile before the call ends.
Request a demo