🧠 Building Smarter RAG Agents – Key Strategies
Many businesses are struggling to build truly smart RAG agents that can efficiently process large knowledge bases with hundreds (or even thousands) of files. The basic vector search approach is too weak—it often retrieves irrelevant chunks, lacks deeper context, and struggles with large datasets.
To improve accuracy, additional steps are needed to enrich the context before answering user queries. So I started researching ways to enhance RAG systems and whether these strategies could be implemented in N8N.
One of my initial ideas was pre-filtering the data before vector search. Instead of blindly searching across the entire database, we could first categorize files, add metadata links, and apply tag-based filtering to narrow down the search scope before retrieving relevant vector chunks.
During my research, I came across a presentation from a LlamaIndex employee (they specialize in RAG for large enterprises) and discovered three practical techniques for improving RAG performance:
1️⃣ Context Expansion
Instead of pulling only the most relevant vector, the system can retrieve adjacent vectors (e.g., 2 before and 2 after) to preserve context rather than extracting isolated fragments.
✅ Extra Idea: AI validation can be used to check if the expanded context is useful—if not, it can refine the search and output only the truly relevant chunk.
2️⃣ From Small to Big: Layered Search
Instead of running vector search on raw chunks, add metadata summaries, tags, and categories to chunk metadata or a separate table. Then:
🔹 Step 1: Run a vector search only on the metadata layer to identify the most relevant sections.
🔹 Step 2: Retrieve the actual data only from these filtered sections.
📌 This approach requires well-structured metadata summarization based on common user queries and niche specifics. For example, in legal cases, metadata might include facts, dates, names, and key arguments.
3️⃣ Multi-Agent System
Instead of retrieving a static dataset, the system can break down the query into multiple sub-questions and distribute them across different AI agents (or loop them iteratively).
🔹 Step 1: The main agent plans a sequence of sub-queries needed for a complete answer.
🔹 Step 2: Different agents retrieve and analyze relevant data chunks.
🔹 Step 3: The results are aggregated, iterated upon, and refined.
📌 Google has explored this approach, and it allows for more structured, accurate responses by continuously enriching the answer through multiple iterations.
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Mark Shcherbakov
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🧠 Building Smarter RAG Agents – Key Strategies
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