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MediaWiki

Also analyzed in: 3 other industries
Analyzed: 2026-04-22
Model: OpenAI GPT-5
Prompts run:
Total responses:
Overall AI Visibility?
26
/ 100
Weak

Geometric mean of LBA, Authority and TOM. Penalises any single weak metric.

Latent Brand Association?
80
/ 100
Product-Strong

What the model believes about MediaWiki without web search.

LLM Authority?
6
/ 100
Absent

Frequency × prominence across organic category prompts.

Top of Mind?
34
/ 100
Weak-Recall

Unprompted recall on high-volume discovery prompts.

Metric 1 of 3 Latent Brand Association?

Measures what GPT-5 believes about MediaWiki from training alone, before any web search. We probe the model 5 times across 5 different angles and score 5 sub-signals.

LBA Score
80/100
Product-Strong
Quality?
0.65
Meta-factor?
1.00
Familiarity?
0.80
Top associations for MediaWiki
powers Wikipedia 5 open-source wiki software 5 hard to set up 3 used by Wikimedia sites 2 excellent for collaborative editing 2 mature and battle-tested 2 free and open source 2 large extension ecosystem 2 open-source wiki platform 2 complex to set up 2 multilingual support 2 hard to maintain 2 steep learning curve 2 dated default interface 2 collaborative editing platform 2
Control prompt (category baseline)
team collaboration 2 centralized knowledge sharing 2 team documentation 2 project documentation 1 workplace tool integration 1 version history 1 knowledge management 1 shared documentation 1 central place for company info 1 secure permissions 1

High overlap with brand prompts shows MediaWiki is firmly in the model's "enterprise wiki platform" category.

Sample model responses
Prompt: What is MediaWiki known for?
MediaWiki is known as the open-source wiki software that powers Wikipedia and many other collaborative websites.
Iteration: 1 of 5
Prompt: What is MediaWiki known for?
MediaWiki is known as the open-source wiki software that powers Wikipedia and many other Wikimedia sites. It’s widely used for collaboratively editing and organizing large amounts of information.
Iteration: 2 of 5

Metric 2 of 3 LLM Authority?

Frequency × prominence across organic category prompts where users ask category questions and AI recommends brands. Measured both with and without web search, then averaged 50/50.

Authority Score
6/100
Absent
Recall mode (no web)?
13

What the model recalls from training without searching the web.

Retrieval mode (with web)?
0

What the model returns when it can search live web sources.

IntentPromptRecall pos.Retrieval pos.
discovery What are the best enterprise wiki platforms for remote teams? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery Which enterprise wiki platforms work well for HR documentation? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What enterprise wiki platform is best for engineering documentation? #6 not mentioned
discovery Which enterprise wiki platforms are good for policy and procedure manuals? #7 #4
discovery What are the best enterprise wiki platforms for onboarding new employees? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery Which enterprise wiki platforms are best for cross-functional teams? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What enterprise wiki platforms are most suitable for regulated industries? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery Which enterprise wiki platforms are best for product documentation? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best enterprise wiki platforms for large organizations? not mentioned #7
discovery Which enterprise wiki platforms support strong search and version history? #5 not mentioned
discovery What are the best enterprise wiki platforms for project documentation? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery Which enterprise wiki platforms are best for internal SOPs? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What enterprise wiki platforms are best for distributed knowledge sharing? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery Which enterprise wiki platforms are good for multilingual teams? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best enterprise wiki platforms for storing company procedures? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery Which enterprise wiki platforms are best for IT documentation? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What enterprise wiki platforms are best for legal knowledge bases? #8 not mentioned
discovery Which enterprise wiki platforms are best for customer support teams? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best enterprise wiki platforms for centralized documentation? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery Which enterprise wiki platforms are best for wiki governance and permissions? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison What are the best alternatives to leading enterprise wiki platforms? #3 not mentioned
comparison Which enterprise wiki platforms are best alternatives for teams needing advanced permissions? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison What are the best alternatives to the most popular enterprise wiki platform options? #10 not mentioned
comparison Which enterprise wiki platforms compare best on search, structure, and collaboration? #7 not mentioned
comparison What are the best alternatives for companies that want a simpler enterprise wiki platform? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison Which enterprise wiki platforms are better than traditional document repositories? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison What are the best alternatives for an enterprise wiki platform with stronger workflow controls? #9 not mentioned
comparison Which enterprise wiki platforms are best for teams comparing knowledge base software? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison What are the best alternatives for organizations that need a wiki and intranet in one? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison Which enterprise wiki platforms are best when comparing self-hosted and cloud options? #9 #4
problem How do I organize company policies in an enterprise wiki platform? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How can I make internal documentation easier to search and maintain? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I keep procedures updated across a growing team? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I prevent knowledge from getting lost when employees leave? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How can I build a single source of truth for company documentation? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I manage permissions for sensitive internal documents? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How can I improve employee onboarding with internal documentation? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I reduce duplicated documentation across departments? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How can I standardize SOPs in one place? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I keep remote teams aligned on internal processes? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional How much does an enterprise wiki platform cost? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional Is there a free enterprise wiki platform for teams? #3 not mentioned
transactional What is the pricing for enterprise wiki software? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional Which enterprise wiki platforms have a free tier? #10 not mentioned
transactional What are the cheapest enterprise wiki platform options? #2 not mentioned
transactional What enterprise wiki platform offers the best value for money? #3 not mentioned
transactional How much do knowledge base and wiki platforms charge per user? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional Are there enterprise wiki platforms with unlimited users? #2 not mentioned
transactional What enterprise wiki platforms offer a trial before purchase? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional Which enterprise wiki platforms are affordable for small teams? #7 not mentioned
Sample responses
Prompt: What enterprise wiki platform is best for engineering documentation? · discovery · recall mode
**Best overall for enterprise engineering documentation: _Atlassian Confluence_** Why it’s usually the default choice: - Strong enterprise admin/security controls - Excellent integrations with Jira, Bitbucket, Slack, and Microsoft 365 - Good for cross-functional docs, RFCs, incident runbooks, and internal knowledge bases - Mature permissions, templates, and search **Best if your docs are more developer-facing and code-centric: _GitBook_** - Cleaner for API docs, engineering handbooks, and product/tech docs - Great Markdown workflow - Easier publishing and nicer reading experience than many traditional wikis **Other solid options** - **Notion** — great UX, but less ideal for large-scale enterprise governance - **Slab** — simple and polished for internal knowledge bases - **Nuclino** — lightweight and fast, but less enterprise depth - **MediaWiki** — powerful, but usually too clunky for modern engineering teams **Quick recommendation** - **Large enterprise / Jira-centric org:** **Confluence** - **Engineering org focused on docs-as-code and clean publishing:** **GitBook** If you want, I can also give you a **top 3 ranked by security, search, and developer workflow**.
Prompt: Which enterprise wiki platforms are good for policy and procedure manuals? · discovery · retrieval mode
Good options for policy/procedure manuals: - **Confluence** — probably the safest all-around choice for enterprise SOPs and policy manuals: it’s built for knowledge management, offers templates, versioning, permissions, and “company wiki” / knowledge base use cases. ([atlassian.com](https://www.atlassian.com/software/confluence/knowledge-base?utm_source=openai)) - **Microsoft SharePoint** — best if your org is already deep in Microsoft 365; Microsoft explicitly positions it for large centralized enterprise knowledge repositories and page permissions. ([support.microsoft.com](https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/office/create-and-edit-a-wiki-dc64f9c2-d1a2-44b5-ac59-b9d535551a32?utm_source=openai)) - **Notion** — great for a cleaner, faster-to-edit internal wiki with databases, team wikis, and pages for processes/policies; especially good for smaller or more agile teams. ([notion.com](https://www.notion.com/product/wikis?utm_source=openai)) - **MediaWiki** — best if you want open-source, highly customizable wiki software and have technical staff to administer it. ([mediawiki.org](https://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/MediaWiki?utm_source=openai)) If you want a quick pick: **Confluence** for most enterprises, **SharePoint** for Microsoft-heavy shops, **Notion** for ease of use, and **MediaWiki** for maximum control. That’s my inference based on the vendor docs above. ([atlassian.com](https://www.atlassian.com/software/confluence/knowledge-base?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also give you a **top 3 by company size** or a **feature comparison table**.

Metric 3 of 3 Top of Mind?

Unprompted recall on 15 high-volume discovery prompts, run 5 times each in pure recall mode (no web). Brands that surface here are baked into the model's training, not borrowed from live search.

TOM Score
34/100
Weak-Recall
Discovery promptVolumeAppearedPositions (5 runs)
What are the best enterprise wiki platforms for internal documentation? 0 2/5 5, 6
Which enterprise wiki platforms are most popular right now? 0 3/5 8, 11, 9
What are the top enterprise wiki platform options for companies? 0 3/5 13, 10, 10
Which enterprise wiki platforms are best for knowledge sharing? 0 3/5 10, 8, 8
What are the most recommended enterprise wiki platforms? 0 1/5 8
What enterprise wiki platform should a business choose? 0 1/5 6
What are the best wiki tools for enterprises? 0 3/5 10, 8, 9
Which internal wiki platforms are best for teams? 0 0/5
What are the best company wiki platforms available? 0 2/5 8, 9
Which knowledge base and wiki platforms are best for organizations? 0 4/5 13, 9, 8, 11
What are the leading wiki platforms for businesses? 0 5/5 9, 7, 10, 7, 6
Which enterprise knowledge wiki platforms are worth considering? 0 3/5 10, 10, 10
What are the best wiki software options for large teams? 0 3/5 7, 4, 5
Which business wiki platforms are easiest to use? 0 0/5
What are the best collaborative wiki platforms for enterprises? 0 0/5
Sample recall responses
Prompt: What are the best enterprise wiki platforms for internal documentation? (no web search)
Here are the strongest enterprise wiki platforms for internal documentation: ### Best overall **Atlassian Confluence** - Best for: teams already using Jira/Atlassian - Why: mature permissions, great collaboration, strong templates, huge ecosystem - Watch out for: can get cluttered; search/organization needs governance ### Best for Microsoft 365 shops **Microsoft SharePoint + Viva** - Best for: companies standardized on Microsoft 365 - Why: deep Teams/OneDrive/Office integration, solid permissions and intranet/document management - Watch out for: less “wiki-like” and can feel complex to manage ### Best for product/engineering docs **Notion** - Best for: fast-moving teams, startup-to-midmarket internal docs - Why: extremely easy to use, flexible databases/pages, excellent UX - Watch out for: enterprise governance and advanced knowledge architecture are weaker than Confluence/SharePoint ### Best for IT/service knowledge bases **Guru** - Best for: searchable internal knowledge and support workflows - Why: strong browser/search workflow, great for operational knowledge, Slack/Teams integrations - Watch out for: less suitable as a full company wiki/intranet ### Best open-source/self-hosted **MediaWiki** - Best for: highly customizable, self-hosted environments - Why: proven at scale, very flexible, open source - Watch out for: dated UX and higher admin overhead ### Best modern self-hosted wiki **BookStack** - Best for: clean internal documentation on your own infrastructure - Why: simple interface, easy to structure, good editor experience - Watch out for: fewer enterprise collaboration features ## Quick picks - **Most enterprises:** Confluence - **Microsoft-heavy orgs:** SharePoint - **Simple, fast internal docs:** Notion - **Knowledge base for frontline/support teams:** Guru - **Self-hosted/open source:** BookStack or MediaWiki ## What to prioritize Look for: - SSO/SAML, SCIM - Fine-grained permissions - Version history and approval workflows - Strong search - Templates and content governance - Audit logs/compliance If you want, I can also give you: 1. a **top 5 ranked list by company size**, or 2. a **feature comparison table** of Confluence vs Notion vs SharePoint vs Guru.
Iteration: 2 of 5
Prompt: What are the best enterprise wiki platforms for internal documentation? (no web search)
Here are the strongest enterprise wiki platforms for internal documentation, by common use case: ### Best overall - **Confluence (Atlassian)** Best all-around choice for large teams. Strong page structure, permissions, templates, Jira integration, and mature ecosystem. ### Best for Microsoft 365 orgs - **Microsoft SharePoint** Ideal if your company already lives in Teams, Outlook, and OneDrive. Great governance and intranet-style documentation. ### Best modern knowledge base / internal docs - **Notion** Very easy to use, fast to set up, and excellent for flexible internal docs. Less ideal for strict enterprise governance at scale. ### Best for engineering teams - **GitBook** Clean docs experience, great for technical documentation, versioning, and internal developer portals. ### Best open-source/self-hosted - **BookStack** Simple, effective, and easy to self-host. Good if you want a traditional wiki with low complexity. - **MediaWiki** Very powerful and highly customizable, but more maintenance-heavy and less polished out of the box. ### Best for security/compliance-heavy enterprises - **Confluence Data Center** Better fit when you need on-prem control, advanced permissions, and enterprise governance. - **XWiki** Strong enterprise self-hosted option with flexibility and access controls. ### Best for IT/service-management teams - **Guru** Good for searchable team knowledge and workflows, especially for support and operations. - **Slite** Simple team docs with a cleaner experience than traditional wikis. ## Quick recommendation - **Most enterprises:** Confluence - **Microsoft-heavy orgs:** SharePoint - **Fast-moving teams/startups:** Notion - **Engineering docs:** GitBook - **Self-hosted/open source:** BookStack or XWiki If you want, I can also give you a **top 5 ranked list by security, ease of use, and enterprise features**.
Iteration: 3 of 5

Also analyzed in MediaWiki in 3 other industries

This report focuses on Enterprise Wiki Platforms because that is where MediaWiki scores highest. The model also evaluates it against the industries below, with their own prompts and competitor sets. Click any industry for its full leaderboard.

What to do next Recommendations for MediaWiki

Generated automatically from gaps and weaknesses in the analysis above, ranked by potential impact on the AI Visibility Score.

Enter the category conversation

Your Authority is low across category queries. Users asking about your category do not see you. Priority: get listed in "best of" and "top N" articles for your category on domains with strong training-data crawl presence.

+10 to +25 on Authority

Defend retrieval position

You score 13 on recall but only 0 on retrieval (gap of +12.8). Training-data authority is outpacing your current web footprint. Publish fresh, well-cited content to keep search-augmented responses including your brand.

Close the fragility gap

Close the gap on broad category queries

Your TOM is solid on specialty queries but weaker on broad category questions. Seed content that frames your brand in the exact phrasing users use in broad queries, not just your specialty sub-category.

+5 to +15 on TOM

Protect and reinforce your LBA

Your LBA is strong. Focus on maintaining authoritative coverage and ensuring new product launches get independent reviews within 12 months of release.

Maintain current LBA

How is this calculated? Methodology

Every score on this page is reproducible. Below is exactly what we ran and how we computed each number.

Overall AI Visibility Score
Geometric mean of LBA, Authority and TOM: (LBA × Authority × TOM)^(1/3). Geometric mean is used so that any single weak metric pulls the overall score down, rather than being masked by strength elsewhere.
Latent Brand Association (LBA)
5 brand probes + 1 control prompt, each run 5 times in recall mode (no web search). LBA = quality × meta × stability × share × recognition × 100. Each sub-signal is on a 0-1 scale. Read the full LBA methodology →
LLM Authority
50 organic category prompts (discovery, comparison, problem and transactional intents), each run once in recall mode and once in retrieval mode. Score = frequency × log-decayed prominence × intent weight, then 50/50 averaged across the two modes. Prompts are shared across all brands in the industry. Read the full Authority methodology →
Top of Mind (TOM)
15 high-volume discovery prompts (sourced from Keywords Everywhere search-volume data), each run 5 times in pure recall mode (no web). Score = frequency × (0.5 + 0.5 × log-prominence), volume-weighted. Prompts are shared across all brands in the industry. Read the full TOM methodology →

Analysis run on April 22, 2026 at 7:56 PM

All 210 AI responses for MediaWiki

Click a prompt to expand its responses. 210 total responses across 72 prompts.

LBA — Latent Brand Association (7 prompts)

On a scale of 1-10, rate your familiarity with the brand "MediaWiki" in the enterprise wiki platform category. 1 = I've never heard of this brand 4 = I'm aware of the name but know little specific 7 = I know the brand well including its main products 10 = Deep, confident knowledge including specific features, differentiators, pricing tier, competitor positioning Return JSON: { "familiarity": <1-10 integer>, "justification": "<one sentence>" }
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned
{"familiarity":8,"justification":"I know MediaWiki well as the open-source wiki platform behind Wikipedia, including its core features, extensions, and general positioning, though not detailed current pricing or enterprise packaging."}
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned
{ "familiarity": 8, "justification": "I know MediaWiki well as the open-source wiki platform behind Wikipedia, including its core capabilities, ecosystem, and general positioning, though not detailed enterprise pricing specifics." }
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
{ "familiarity": 8, "justification": "I know MediaWiki well as the open-source wiki platform behind Wikipedia, including its core features, extension ecosystem, and common enterprise uses, though I’m less certain on current pricing and vendor-specific packaging." }
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
{"familiarity":8,"justification":"I know MediaWiki well as the open-source wiki software behind Wikipedia, including its core editing, extension, and deployment model, but not detailed current enterprise-specific pricing or packaging."}
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
{ "familiarity": 8, "justification": "I know MediaWiki well as the open-source wiki platform behind Wikipedia, including its core capabilities, ecosystem, and common enterprise use cases, though not deep pricing or vendor-specific details." }
What is MediaWiki known for?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned
MediaWiki is known as the open-source wiki software that powers Wikipedia and many other collaborative websites.
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned
MediaWiki is known as the open-source wiki software that powers Wikipedia and many other Wikimedia sites. It’s widely used for collaboratively editing and organizing large amounts of information.
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
MediaWiki is known as the open-source wiki software that powers Wikipedia and many other Wikimedia sites. It’s widely used for creating collaborative, editable knowledge bases and documentation websites.
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
MediaWiki is known as the open-source wiki software that powers Wikipedia and many other collaborative websites.
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
MediaWiki is best known as the open-source wiki software that powers Wikipedia and many other Wikimedia sites. It’s used for collaborative editing, version history, and managing large knowledge bases.
What are MediaWiki's main strengths and weaknesses?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned
MediaWiki’s main strengths are: it’s free and open source, very mature and battle-tested, highly scalable, excellent for collaborative editing, strong version/history tracking, and it has a huge ecosystem of extensions and community support. It’s also great for structured, reference-heavy content and can be customized extensively. Its main weaknesses are: it can be complex to set up and maintain, the default editing experience is less polished than some modern CMSs, customization often requires technical know-how, and performance/administration can become challenging without good hosting and optimization. The wiki syntax and admin tooling can also feel dated to new users.
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned
MediaWiki’s main strengths are: it’s very mature and battle-tested, excellent for collaborative editing, highly extensible through extensions, strong revision/history tracking, and well-suited to large knowledge bases with lots of contributors. It also has a powerful permission model and a huge ecosystem around Wikipedia-style use cases. Its main weaknesses are: it can be harder to set up and maintain than simpler wiki platforms, the default interface and editing experience can feel dated, customization often requires technical skill, and some operations/performance tuning can become complex at scale. It’s also less friendly for non-technical teams that want a polished out-of-the-box experience.
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
MediaWiki’s main strengths are that it’s open source, highly scalable, very customizable, and excellent for collaborative editing with strong revision history, permissions, and community support. It’s especially good for large knowledge bases like Wikipedia. Its main weaknesses are that it can be complex to set up and maintain, has a steeper learning curve for administrators, and often needs extensions and customization to feel user-friendly. The default editing experience can also feel less polished than some modern wiki platforms.
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
MediaWiki’s main strengths are: - Very scalable for large, collaborative knowledge bases - Strong revision history, versioning, and rollback - Powerful wiki markup and extension ecosystem - Excellent for structured, community-edited content - Mature, battle-tested, and highly customizable Main weaknesses: - Steep learning curve for editors and admins - Core interface and editing workflow can feel clunky or outdated - Requires technical setup/maintenance compared with simpler CMSs - Advanced customization often needs PHP, templates, or extensions - Can become complex to manage at scale because of template and extension sprawl
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
MediaWiki’s main strengths are scalability, extensibility, and openness. It powers Wikipedia, handles large collaborative sites well, supports strong version history and talk-page workflows, and has a huge ecosystem of extensions, skins, and multilingual support. It’s also free and open source. Its main weaknesses are that it can feel complex to set up, customize, and maintain. The default user experience is not as polished or modern as some newer wiki platforms, extension compatibility can be tricky, and non-technical users may find administration and templating/markup more difficult. It can also require more server and maintenance overhead as sites grow.
Who should use MediaWiki? Who should avoid it?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned
Use MediaWiki if you need a powerful, highly structured wiki for lots of collaborative editing, version tracking, permissions, templates, and long-term knowledge management—especially for larger communities or organizations. Avoid it if you want something very simple to set up and maintain, a polished out-of-the-box site, or a general CMS/blog; it can be more complex and technical than lighter alternatives.
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned
Use MediaWiki if you need a wiki for collaborative knowledge bases, documentation, or an encyclopedia-style site, especially with many contributors and strong page history/version control. Avoid it if you want a simple, polished out-of-the-box website, a lightweight note app, or a team tool that requires minimal setup and maintenance. It can be powerful, but it often needs technical administration, customization, and ongoing upkeep.
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
MediaWiki is best for teams that need a highly structured, collaborative knowledge base with strong revision history, permissions, and links between pages—especially if they’re comfortable with some setup or administration. It’s a good fit for communities, documentation teams, research groups, and organizations that expect lots of contributors and content growth. It’s a poor fit for people who want a simple, low-maintenance website builder, a polished out-of-the-box design, or minimal technical overhead. If you don’t want to deal with configuration, extensions, templates, or hosting/maintenance, you should probably avoid it.
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
MediaWiki is a good fit for teams that need a highly collaborative, structured, and heavily linked knowledge base—especially wikis, documentation portals, and community-driven sites that may grow large over time. It’s ideal if you want granular revision history, strong permissions, and lots of extensibility. People should avoid MediaWiki if they want something simple to set up, easy for non-technical users to administer, or polished out of the box with minimal configuration. It can be more maintenance-heavy than many modern CMS/wiki tools, so it’s usually not the best choice for small teams that just need a quick internal docs site.
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
MediaWiki is a good fit for organizations that need a highly collaborative, highly extensible wiki with strong version control, multilingual support, and lots of customization—think communities, documentation-heavy teams, nonprofits, and enterprises with technical admin support. It’s best for users who can tolerate setup/admin complexity and want a powerful knowledge base rather than a polished plug-and-play site. Avoid MediaWiki if you want something simple, modern-looking, and low-maintenance right away, or if you don’t have someone available to manage configuration, templates, permissions, and updates. It’s usually not ideal for small teams that just need a lightweight internal wiki with minimal setup.
How does MediaWiki compare to its main competitors?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned
MediaWiki is strongest when you need a highly scalable, open-source wiki with powerful page revision/history, templates, and extensibility. It’s best known for Wikipedia-style publishing and very large knowledge bases. Compared with its main competitors: - Confluence: easier for business teams, better built-in collaboration and permissions, but proprietary and less flexible than MediaWiki. - DokuWiki: simpler to set up and maintain, but less powerful for very large or highly customized wikis. - Tiki Wiki CMS Groupware: broader all-in-one feature set, but generally more complex and less focused than MediaWiki. - Fandom/hosted wiki platforms: easier to launch, but far less control and customization than self-hosted MediaWiki. Overall, MediaWiki wins on openness, scale, and customization; competitors often win on ease of use, polish, or built-in team features.
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned
MediaWiki is strongest when you need a highly scalable, open-source wiki engine with deep editing history, templates, categories, and complex community workflows. Its biggest competitors are Confluence, DokuWiki, Tiki Wiki CMS Groupware, and other wiki/CMS platforms. Compared to Confluence: MediaWiki is more open and customizable, and usually cheaper to run, but Confluence is easier for businesses to adopt, has a more polished out-of-the-box experience, and better built-in team collaboration features. Compared to DokuWiki: MediaWiki is more powerful for large, structured knowledge bases and heavily linked content, while DokuWiki is simpler to set up and use, especially for small teams. Compared to Tiki and similar all-in-one platforms: MediaWiki is more focused on wiki content and has a larger ecosystem around wiki editing, but those platforms often bundle more non-wiki features. Overall: MediaWiki is best for large, public, or community-driven knowledge projects where flexibility and scale matter more than simplicity.
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
MediaWiki is strongest as an open-source, highly scalable wiki platform built for structured, collaborative knowledge bases. Compared with its main competitors, it stands out for flexibility, transparency, and large-scale reliability. - Versus Confluence: MediaWiki is more open and customizable, and cheaper to run at scale, but Confluence is easier for business users and has better built-in team collaboration features. - Versus DokuWiki: MediaWiki is better for very large, complex sites and structured content, while DokuWiki is simpler to install and maintain for smaller teams. - Versus Fandom/hosted wiki platforms: MediaWiki gives far more control and ownership, but hosted platforms are easier for nontechnical users. - Versus Notion/knowledge-base tools: MediaWiki is much better for public, long-lived encyclopedic content and advanced editing workflows, but Notion is more polished for general internal documentation. Overall, MediaWiki is the best choice when you need an open, powerful, massively scalable wiki. Its main weakness is that it can be less user-friendly and requires more technical setup than many competitors.
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
MediaWiki is strongest when you need a highly scalable, open-source, wiki-style knowledge base with deep collaboration and revision history. Compared with its main competitors: Confluence is easier for teams and more polished for business use, but it’s proprietary and less flexible; DokuWiki is simpler to install and maintain, but less powerful at scale; Tiki Wiki is very feature-rich, but can feel more complex and less focused; Fandom/other hosted wiki platforms are easier to launch, but you trade away control and customization. MediaWiki’s biggest advantages are extensibility, openness, and proven large-scale reliability. Its downsides are that it can be harder to administer and less user-friendly out of the box than many alternatives.
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
MediaWiki is strongest as a large-scale, highly collaborative wiki engine: it’s battle-tested, open source, and great for structured, revision-heavy knowledge bases. Its biggest edge is the same system behind Wikipedia—excellent version history, permissions/extensions, and handling lots of content and traffic. Compared with competitors: - Confluence: easier for teams and more polished out of the box, but proprietary, less wiki-native, and usually more expensive. - DokuWiki: simpler to install and maintain, good for smaller sites, but less powerful for huge, complex wikis. - Tiki Wiki CMS Groupware: more feature-packed as a CMS/groupware platform, but generally more complex and less focused than MediaWiki. - MoinMoin / other classic wikis: often lighter or more flexible in niche ways, but usually smaller ecosystems and less proven at Wikipedia scale. Overall: MediaWiki wins on scale, openness, and extensibility; competitors often win on ease of use, administration, or broader business features.
What do people typically complain about with MediaWiki?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned
People typically complain that MediaWiki is hard to customize and maintain, has a steep learning curve, and feels clunky or outdated compared with newer wiki/CMS tools. Common complaints also include messy template/parser complexity, limited built-in WYSIWYG editing, lots of admin overhead, and performance issues on larger or heavily customized sites.
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned
People commonly complain that MediaWiki is hard to set up and maintain, has a steep learning curve, and feels overly complex for small teams. Others dislike its dated default UI, clunky editing workflow compared with newer wiki tools, and the need for lots of extensions or customization to get basic features. Administrators also often mention performance tuning, spam/vandalism management, and upgrading extensions as ongoing headaches.
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
People typically complain that MediaWiki is hard to learn and administer, has a dated/clunky default interface, can be awkward for non-technical editors, and often depends on lots of extensions to feel modern. Others mention performance tuning, messy extension compatibility, and the burden of spam/vandalism management on larger wikis.
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
People commonly complain that MediaWiki is hard to set up and maintain, especially compared with newer wiki platforms. Other frequent complaints are that the default editing experience feels dated, customization can be awkward because of extensions and templates, and managing permissions/anti-vandalism at scale can be cumbersome. Some also find the admin interface and documentation uneven, and performance can become an issue on larger sites without careful tuning.
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
People commonly complain that MediaWiki is hard to set up and maintain, has a steep learning curve, and can feel outdated or clunky compared with newer wiki/CMS tools. Other frequent complaints are its very plain default interface, reliance on wikitext/markup, limited built-in features without extensions, and the complexity of managing extensions, updates, and permissions.
What is a typical enterprise wiki platform known for? control
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
An enterprise wiki platform is typically known for centralized team collaboration: creating, organizing, and sharing internal documentation, meeting notes, project plans, and knowledge bases with permissions and version control.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
An enterprise wiki platform is typically known for centralized knowledge sharing, team documentation, collaboration, and creating an internal knowledge base for projects and company processes.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
An enterprise wiki platform is typically known for collaborative knowledge sharing, team documentation, version control, and secure permissions for organizing company information in one central place.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
An enterprise wiki platform is typically known for team collaboration, shared documentation, knowledge management, version history, access control, and integrations with workplace tools.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
An enterprise wiki platform is typically known for centralized knowledge sharing, team collaboration, page versioning, permissions, and integration with other workplace tools.

Authority — LLM Authority (50 prompts)

What are the best enterprise wiki platforms for remote teams? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Best enterprise wiki platforms for remote teams: 1. **Atlassian Confluence** - Best overall for large teams already using Jira/Slack/Atlassian - Strong permissions, templates, versioning, and search - Good for structured internal knowledge bases 2. **Notion** - Best for fast-moving remote teams and hybrid docs/wiki use - Easy collaboration, lightweight databases, great UX - Less strict governance than Confluence 3. **Microsoft SharePoint + Viva Connections** - Best for Microsoft 365-centric enterprises - Strong compliance, access control, and document management - Better for formal intranets than casual wikis 4. **Guru** - Best for knowledge delivery inside tools like Slack, Chrome, and Salesforce - Great for remote support, onboarding, and just-in-time knowledge - More “knowledge platform” than classic wiki 5. **Document360** - Best for polished internal or external knowledge bases - Strong article management, analytics, and customer-support workflows - Good if you want a clean, purpose-built wiki 6. **Slab** - Best for simple, modern team wikis - Easy to adopt, clean interface, solid search - Good mid-market option for remote collaboration **My quick picks:** - **Largest enterprise:** Confluence - **Microsoft shop:** SharePoint - **Best UX for remote teams:** Notion - **Best in-workflow knowledge:** Guru - **Best support docs/wiki:** Document360 If you want, I can also give you a shortlist by company size, security/compliance needs, or budget.
retrieval Not mentioned
Here are the strongest **enterprise wiki platforms for remote teams** right now: 1. **Confluence** — best overall for larger teams that need real-time collaboration, comments/@mentions, whiteboards, and deep Jira/Slack/Microsoft integrations. Atlassian explicitly positions it for remote and hybrid work. ([atlassian.com](https://www.atlassian.com/software/confluence/use-cases/remote?utm_source=openai)) 2. **Notion** — best for teams that want a flexible all-in-one wiki/workspace for docs, notes, and projects, especially if you want a lighter, more customizable setup. Notion’s remote-team guides emphasize distributed documentation and a single place for team knowledge. ([notion.so](https://www.notion.so/notion/Set-up-your-remote-team-24010d658fed4cbc8ab5e012b711b1f2?utm_source=openai)) 3. **Slite** — best for easy adoption and async-friendly knowledge sharing; it emphasizes simple docs, AI search, ownership transfer, granular permissions, audit logs, and enterprise support. ([slite.com](https://slite.com/?utm_source=openai)) 4. **Guru** — best if you want a knowledge base that lives close to team workflows and enterprise admin/support. Its enterprise offering highlights integrated collaboration tools, security, and dedicated account management. ([guru.com](https://www.guru.com/enterprise-features/?utm_source=openai)) 5. **Microsoft SharePoint** — best for Microsoft 365 organizations that want an enterprise wiki inside the Microsoft ecosystem; Microsoft documents enterprise wiki creation and page editing in SharePoint. ([support.microsoft.com](https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/office/create-and-edit-a-wiki-dc64f9c2-d1a2-44b5-ac59-b9d535551a32?utm_source=openai)) 6. **Document360** — best for documentation-heavy orgs that need strong workflows, approvals, analytics, SSO, role-based permissions, and internal/external knowledge bases. ([document360.com](https://document360.com/knowledgebase-portal/?utm_source=openai)) **My quick pick:** - **Most enterprises:** Confluence - **Best simplicity:** Slite - **Best flexible all-in-one:** Notion - **Best Microsoft-heavy orgs:** SharePoint - **Best for formal docs/support knowledge:** Document360 If you want, I can also give you a **top 3 by company size** or a **Confluence vs Notion vs Slite** comparison.
Which enterprise wiki platforms work well for HR documentation? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Good options for **HR documentation** are platforms with strong **permissions, version history, templates, and search**. Top picks: - **Atlassian Confluence** — Best all-around enterprise wiki. Strong page permissions, approval workflows via Atlassian apps, great for policies, onboarding, org charts, and SOPs. - **Microsoft SharePoint** — Best if you’re already on Microsoft 365. Excellent access control, auditability, and tight integration with Teams/Outlook/OneDrive. - **Guru** — Best for fast employee self-service. Strong search and knowledge verification, good for HR FAQs, benefits, and quick reference docs. - **Notion Enterprise** — Best for flexible, modern internal docs. Easy to use, but governance/permissions are usually less robust than Confluence or SharePoint. - **Document360** — Better as a structured internal knowledge base than a classic wiki; good if HR wants polished, searchable policy pages. **My short recommendation:** - **Most enterprises:** Confluence or SharePoint - **HR knowledge base + FAQ style:** Guru - **Simple, flexible docs:** Notion Enterprise If you want, I can also rank these for **security, ease of use, and compliance** for HR.
retrieval Not mentioned
For HR documentation, the best enterprise wiki platforms are usually: - **Confluence** — strong if you want a classic company wiki with templates, page-level permissions, and good knowledge-base structure; Atlassian explicitly has an HR knowledge base template and says Confluence works as a central repository for policies and docs. ([atlassian.com](https://www.atlassian.com/software/confluence/templates/hr-knowledge-base?utm_source=openai)) - **Microsoft SharePoint** — best if your company already lives in Microsoft 365 and you need document management plus site/page permissions; Microsoft also has an HR communication site template. ([support.microsoft.com](https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/sharepoint?utm_source=openai)) - **Notion Enterprise** — a good fit for a modern, flexible HR wiki, especially if you want easy wiki creation, verification workflows, and granular permissions on Enterprise. ([notion.com](https://www.notion.com/help/wikis-and-verified-pages?utm_source=openai)) - **Guru** — best when HR docs need permission-aware search and strong governance; Guru’s docs emphasize inherited permissions, groups/roles, and HR use cases for sensitive policies. ([help.getguru.com](https://help.getguru.com/docs/how-to-permission-a-source-or-collection?utm_source=openai)) - **Slab** — solid for a cleaner internal knowledge base with enterprise permissions and good organization, especially if you want a simple wiki-first tool. ([slab.com](https://slab.com/customer-stories/asana/?utm_source=openai)) **Quick pick:** - **Most HR teams:** Confluence or Notion - **Microsoft-heavy orgs:** SharePoint - **Sensitive, permissioned knowledge:** Guru If you want, I can narrow this to the **best 3 for your company size and stack**.
What enterprise wiki platform is best for engineering documentation? discovery
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned
**Best overall for enterprise engineering documentation: _Atlassian Confluence_** Why it’s usually the default choice: - Strong enterprise admin/security controls - Excellent integrations with Jira, Bitbucket, Slack, and Microsoft 365 - Good for cross-functional docs, RFCs, incident runbooks, and internal knowledge bases - Mature permissions, templates, and search **Best if your docs are more developer-facing and code-centric: _GitBook_** - Cleaner for API docs, engineering handbooks, and product/tech docs - Great Markdown workflow - Easier publishing and nicer reading experience than many traditional wikis **Other solid options** - **Notion** — great UX, but less ideal for large-scale enterprise governance - **Slab** — simple and polished for internal knowledge bases - **Nuclino** — lightweight and fast, but less enterprise depth - **MediaWiki** — powerful, but usually too clunky for modern engineering teams **Quick recommendation** - **Large enterprise / Jira-centric org:** **Confluence** - **Engineering org focused on docs-as-code and clean publishing:** **GitBook** If you want, I can also give you a **top 3 ranked by security, search, and developer workflow**.
retrieval Not mentioned
**Best default: Confluence.** For enterprise engineering documentation, it’s usually the strongest all-around choice because it’s built for team knowledge management, supports technical documentation, and fits especially well if your org already uses Jira. Atlassian also positions Confluence as the documentation/knowledge-sharing workspace for engineering teams. ([atlassian.com](https://www.atlassian.com/knowledge-management-software?utm_source=openai)) If you want the **best developer experience for docs-first teams**, **GitBook** is the best alternative: it offers SSO/SAML, protected docs, and AI-assisted docs experiences, which makes it very good for internal engineering docs plus API/product documentation. ([gitbook.com](https://gitbook.com/docs/account-management/sso-and-saml?utm_source=openai)) If your main goal is **ease of editing and adoption**, **Notion** is the friendliest wiki, with verification, advanced permissions, SAML SSO, and SCIM on enterprise plans. ([notion.com](https://www.notion.com/product/wikis?utm_source=openai)) **Short recommendation:** - **Enterprise engineering + Jira/Atlassian stack:** Confluence - **Docs-first, API/product documentation:** GitBook - **Fast adoption, lightweight wiki:** Notion If you want, I can give you a **ranked top 5** based on your stack, team size, and whether docs are internal-only or customer-facing.
Which enterprise wiki platforms are good for policy and procedure manuals? discovery
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned
Good enterprise wiki platforms for policy/procedure manuals: - **Atlassian Confluence** — best all-around choice for internal knowledge bases; strong permissions, versioning, templates, approvals via add-ons. - **Microsoft SharePoint Online** — best if you’re already on Microsoft 365; solid document control, workflows, and enterprise governance. - **Guru** — great for searchable, lightweight policy docs with verification workflows and fast employee adoption. - **Document360** — strong for structured knowledge bases and SOPs; good version history and publishing controls. - **XWiki** — good open-source enterprise wiki with granular permissions and customization. - **BookStack** — simpler and very usable for manuals and SOPs; best for smaller teams or self-hosted setups. - **MediaWiki + enterprise extensions** — powerful but more admin-heavy; better if you want maximum flexibility. **Best picks by scenario** - **Most companies:** Confluence - **Microsoft-heavy orgs:** SharePoint - **Need strict doc control/workflows:** SharePoint or Document360 - **Want easy employee search + verification:** Guru - **Open-source/self-hosted:** XWiki or BookStack If you want, I can rank these for **compliance-heavy** environments like HR, IT, or QA manuals.
retrieval Mentioned
Good options for policy/procedure manuals: - **Confluence** — probably the safest all-around choice for enterprise SOPs and policy manuals: it’s built for knowledge management, offers templates, versioning, permissions, and “company wiki” / knowledge base use cases. ([atlassian.com](https://www.atlassian.com/software/confluence/knowledge-base?utm_source=openai)) - **Microsoft SharePoint** — best if your org is already deep in Microsoft 365; Microsoft explicitly positions it for large centralized enterprise knowledge repositories and page permissions. ([support.microsoft.com](https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/office/create-and-edit-a-wiki-dc64f9c2-d1a2-44b5-ac59-b9d535551a32?utm_source=openai)) - **Notion** — great for a cleaner, faster-to-edit internal wiki with databases, team wikis, and pages for processes/policies; especially good for smaller or more agile teams. ([notion.com](https://www.notion.com/product/wikis?utm_source=openai)) - **MediaWiki** — best if you want open-source, highly customizable wiki software and have technical staff to administer it. ([mediawiki.org](https://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/MediaWiki?utm_source=openai)) If you want a quick pick: **Confluence** for most enterprises, **SharePoint** for Microsoft-heavy shops, **Notion** for ease of use, and **MediaWiki** for maximum control. That’s my inference based on the vendor docs above. ([atlassian.com](https://www.atlassian.com/software/confluence/knowledge-base?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also give you a **top 3 by company size** or a **feature comparison table**.
What are the best enterprise wiki platforms for onboarding new employees? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Top enterprise wiki platforms for onboarding new employees: 1. **Confluence by Atlassian** Best overall for most companies. Strong permissions, templates, search, and tight Jira/Slack integration. Great for onboarding checklists, org docs, and team handbooks. 2. **Notion Enterprise** Best for fast-moving teams and polished onboarding hubs. Easy to build, very user-friendly, great for combining docs, tasks, and databases. 3. **Guru** Best for in-the-flow onboarding knowledge. Excellent browser extension, AI search, and verified answers so new hires get trusted info fast. 4. **Microsoft SharePoint + Viva Connections** Best if you’re already on Microsoft 365. Strong for large enterprises, document control, and compliance, though less friendly than Confluence or Notion. 5. **Bloomfire** Best for knowledge management at scale. Good search, content organization, and employee self-service for onboarding FAQs and policies. 6. **Slab** Best simple, clean wiki for modern teams. Easier than Confluence, with good structure and strong readability for onboarding docs. **Best picks by use case** - **Most enterprises:** Confluence - **Best UX:** Notion - **Best for trusted internal knowledge:** Guru - **Best Microsoft-native option:** SharePoint - **Best for searchable knowledge base:** Bloomfire If you want, I can also give you a **top 3 based on company size** or a **comparison table with pricing and features**.
retrieval Not mentioned
For onboarding new employees, the best enterprise wiki platforms are usually: 1. **Confluence** — best all-around for large orgs that want a central company hub, onboarding guides, and strong integrations with Jira/Atlassian workflows. Atlassian explicitly positions it as an internal knowledge base/intranet with company hubs and onboarding templates. ([atlassian.com](https://www.atlassian.com/software/confluence/resources/guides/best-practices/knowledge-base?utm_source=openai)) 2. **Microsoft SharePoint** — best if you already live in Microsoft 365. Microsoft has built-in **New Employee Onboarding** site templates with pre-onboarding, corporate onboarding, and departmental onboarding sites, plus checklist and news-post templates. ([learn.microsoft.com](https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/sharepoint/provision-neo-hub?utm_source=openai)) 3. **Guru** — best for teams that want onboarding info delivered as verified answers inside the flow of work. Guru’s onboarding agent/template is designed to help new hires ramp quickly, and its wiki platform emphasizes permission-aware answers and knowledge quality workflows. ([help.getguru.com](https://help.getguru.com/docs/copy-of-knowledge-agent-template-call-prep-agent?utm_source=openai)) 4. **Notion** — best for smaller-to-mid enterprise teams that want a flexible, easy-to-edit company wiki. Notion has company wiki/onboarding templates, and it’s commonly used as a central place for policies, culture, and onboarding resources. ([notion.so](https://www.notion.so/notion/Notion-Onboarding-Wiki-0cac07b2231b4bdcbcd6ad9a146e32d6?utm_source=openai)) 5. **Slab** — best for clean, lightweight internal documentation. Slab positions itself as a knowledge base/wiki and has customer examples specifically using it for onboarding processes and templates. ([slab.com](https://slab.com/?utm_source=openai)) If you want a quick pick: - **Best overall:** Confluence - **Best for Microsoft shops:** SharePoint - **Best for in-workflow knowledge delivery:** Guru - **Best for flexible wiki building:** Notion If you want, I can also rank these by **ease of use, search quality, permissions, or HR onboarding fit**.
Which enterprise wiki platforms are best for cross-functional teams? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
For cross-functional enterprise teams, the best wiki platforms are usually: 1. **Atlassian Confluence** - Best overall for large orgs already using Jira/Atlassian. - Strong permissions, page linking, templates, and team spaces. - Good for product, engineering, ops, and PMO collaboration. 2. **Microsoft SharePoint / Viva Engage** - Best if your company is deep in Microsoft 365. - Strong enterprise governance, compliance, and document management. - Better for formal internal knowledge bases than lightweight wiki use. 3. **Notion Enterprise** - Best for fast-moving cross-functional teams that want flexibility. - Easy to use, great for docs, project hubs, and lightweight workflows. - Less structured than Confluence/SharePoint for very large, regulated orgs. 4. **Guru** - Best for knowledge delivery inside daily workflows. - Great for support, sales, and ops teams that need verified snippets and SOPs. - Strong browser extension and Slack/Teams integration. 5. **Slab** - Best for clean internal knowledge bases with strong search and readability. - Simpler than Confluence, more structured than Notion for documentation. - Good for cross-functional teams that want low-friction adoption. 6. **Nuclino** - Best for lightweight, fast internal wiki use. - Very easy to set up and use, with good real-time collaboration. - Better for smaller enterprise teams than highly complex orgs. **Top pick by scenario** - **Best overall enterprise wiki:** Confluence - **Best for Microsoft-heavy enterprises:** SharePoint - **Best for flexibility and ease of use:** Notion Enterprise - **Best for operational knowledge delivery:** Guru If you want, I can also rank these for **security/compliance, ease of use, search, and integrations**.
retrieval Not mentioned
For most cross-functional teams, I’d shortlist: 1. **Confluence** — best all-around enterprise wiki if you live in Jira/Atlassian or need strong permissions, templates, and deep app integrations. ([atlassian.com](https://www.atlassian.com/software/confluence/use-cases/wiki?utm_source=openai)) 2. **Notion** — best for teams that want a flexible, easy-to-build wiki with teamspaces, granular permissions, and a more modern “docs + tasks” workspace. ([notion.com](https://www.notion.com/help/guides/team-wiki?utm_source=openai)) 3. **Slab** — best if you want a cleaner, focused internal knowledge base with strong search and simple organization for company-wide docs. ([slab.com](https://slab.com/solutions/wiki/?utm_source=openai)) 4. **Microsoft SharePoint** — best for Microsoft 365-heavy orgs that need enterprise governance, permissions, and tight Teams/Office integration. ([learn.microsoft.com](https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/sharepoint/deploy-file-collaboration?utm_source=openai)) **Quick pick:** - **Engineering + product + ops:** Confluence - **Mixed business teams / fast-moving startups:** Notion - **Knowledge-base-first orgs:** Slab - **Microsoft-centric enterprises:** SharePoint ([atlassian.com](https://www.atlassian.com/software/confluence/use-cases/company-wide-collaboration?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can turn this into a **side-by-side comparison table** by price, permissions, search, and integrations.
What enterprise wiki platforms are most suitable for regulated industries? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
For regulated industries, the best enterprise wiki platforms are usually the ones with **strong access controls, audit trails, retention/governance, SSO/SAML, and deployment flexibility**. Top options: - **Confluence (Atlassian)** — Best overall for many enterprises Strong permissions, audit logs, approvals via add-ons, integrates well with Jira. Good for IT, pharma, finance, and general regulated ops. - **Bloomfire** — Best for controlled knowledge sharing Good governance, analytics, permissions, and content lifecycle controls. Popular in financial services, healthcare, and support teams. - **Guru** — Best for frontline knowledge with verification workflows “Knowledge cards” with verification, expiry, and Slack/Teams integration. Better for operational knowledge than deep documentation. - **Document360** — Best for structured internal/external knowledge bases Strong versioning, role-based access, approval workflows, and compliance-friendly documentation management. - **SharePoint + Microsoft Viva / Loop** — Best if you’re already in Microsoft 365 Enterprise-grade security, DLP, retention, eDiscovery, and compliance certifications. Good for highly regulated orgs that want tight Microsoft integration. - **Nuclino Enterprise** — Best for lightweight internal wikis Simple and fast, with permissions and SSO, but usually less ideal than Confluence/SharePoint for heavy compliance needs. If you’re in a highly regulated environment, the safest short list is: 1. **Microsoft SharePoint** 2. **Confluence Enterprise** 3. **Bloomfire** 4. **Document360** If you want, I can also give you a **regulation-by-regulation recommendation** (HIPAA, SOC 2, FINRA, FDA, GDPR) or a **feature comparison table**.
retrieval Not mentioned
For regulated industries, the best fits are usually: 1. **Microsoft SharePoint / Microsoft 365** — strongest for governance-heavy environments, especially if you already use Microsoft 365. Microsoft documents compliance controls, lifecycle management, information barriers, and support for highly regulated industries. ([learn.microsoft.com](https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/SharePoint/compliant-environment?utm_source=openai)) 2. **Atlassian Confluence Enterprise / Data Center** — a strong choice for enterprise knowledge management with compliance, audit, SSO, and data-residency options. Atlassian explicitly calls out SOC 2, ISO 27001, HIPAA, and FedRAMP-related trust resources. ([atlassian.com](https://www.atlassian.com/software/confluence/enterprise?utm_source=openai)) 3. **Document360** — best if you want a more documentation/wiki-focused product with compliance credentials; it publicly states SOC 2 Type II and GDPR alignment, plus SSO and role-based permissions. ([document360.com](https://document360.com/compliance/soc2/?utm_source=openai)) 4. **Notion Enterprise** — suitable if you want a flexible wiki with enterprise audit logs and SIEM integration, but it’s usually a better fit for moderately regulated teams than the most strict environments. ([developers.notion.com](https://developers.notion.com/compliance/overview?utm_source=openai)) 5. **Slab** — a solid simpler internal wiki with SOC 2 Type 2, GDPR, SSO, and 2FA support. ([slab.com](https://slab.com/security/?utm_source=openai)) 6. **Nuclino** — good for smaller teams that still want SSO, 2FA, encryption, and a security posture oriented around standard enterprise controls. ([nuclino.com](https://www.nuclino.com/security?utm_source=openai)) **Rule of thumb:** - **Most regulated / audit-heavy:** SharePoint, Confluence Data Center/Enterprise - **Documentation-centric:** Document360 - **Fast, flexible, lighter governance:** Notion, Slab, Nuclino ([learn.microsoft.com](https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/SharePoint/compliant-environment?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can turn this into a **comparison table by HIPAA / SOC 2 / ISO 27001 / FedRAMP / on-prem support**.
Which enterprise wiki platforms are best for product documentation? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Top enterprise wiki platforms for product documentation: 1. **Atlassian Confluence** - Best overall for large teams - Strong permissions, templates, workflows, Jira integration - Good for internal product docs, specs, release notes 2. **GitBook** - Best for polished external-facing documentation - Great Markdown support, versioning, clean UI - Strong for API docs and developer docs 3. **Notion** - Best for fast-moving teams and lightweight docs - Easy to use, flexible databases and pages - Less robust for strict governance at scale 4. **Nuclino** - Best for simple, fast internal knowledge bases - Very easy editing and collaboration - Lightweight, but less enterprise-depth than Confluence 5. **Document360** - Best for dedicated knowledge bases and customer docs - Good analytics, categorization, version control - Strong choice if you want docs separate from your main wiki 6. **Slab** - Best for clean internal documentation - Strong search and simple structure - Good for product teams that want less complexity than Confluence **My quick pick:** - **Internal enterprise wiki:** Confluence - **External product docs:** GitBook or Document360 - **Fast, modern team docs:** Notion or Slab If you want, I can also rank these by **security, search, API docs, or ease of adoption**.
retrieval Not mentioned
If you want the **best enterprise wiki platforms for product documentation**, my short list is: 1. **Confluence** — best if your company already lives in Jira/Atlassian and wants a central knowledge base with templates, permissions, versioning, and strong collaboration for software docs. ([atlassian.com](https://www.atlassian.com/software/confluence/knowledge-base?utm_source=openai)) 2. **GitBook** — best for **docs-as-code** teams; it supports Git sync, API/product guides, authenticated access, custom domains, embeds, and AI-friendly publishing. ([gitbook.com](https://gitbook.com/docs?utm_source=openai)) 3. **Document360** — best for structured customer-facing + internal product docs, especially if you want workflow/approval, analytics, versioning, and a polished knowledge base. ([document360.com](https://document360.com/information/?utm_source=openai)) 4. **Slab** — best for a cleaner internal wiki for product teams that want less clutter and GitHub-connected technical documentation. ([slab.com](https://slab.com/integrations/github/?utm_source=openai)) 5. **Nuclino** — best for lightweight, fast-moving teams that want a simple enterprise wiki with real-time collaboration and easy organization. ([nuclino.com](https://www.nuclino.com/solutions/enterprise-wiki?utm_source=openai)) 6. **BookStack** — best if you want **self-hosted/open-source** wiki software with SSO options and simple page structure. ([bookstackapp.com](https://www.bookstackapp.com/?utm_source=openai)) **My pick:** - **Most enterprises:** Confluence - **Best for public product docs:** GitBook or Document360 - **Best for internal engineering-heavy docs:** Slab - **Best for simple self-hosted:** BookStack If you want, I can also give you a **top 3 by use case** (customer docs, internal docs, API docs, regulated enterprise, self-hosted).
What are the best enterprise wiki platforms for large organizations? discovery
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
For large organizations, the best enterprise wiki platforms are usually: 1. **Atlassian Confluence** - Best overall for large, cross-functional teams - Strong permissions, auditability, templates, integrations with Jira/Atlassian - Good for engineering, product, IT, and internal docs 2. **Microsoft SharePoint Online** - Best if you’re already deep in Microsoft 365 - Enterprise-grade security, compliance, permissions, workflow integration - Better for structured intranet/document management than “wiki feel” 3. **Guru** - Best for knowledge management and frontline/internal support - Strong AI search, browser extension, and knowledge verification features - Great for sales, support, HR, and operations 4. **Notion Enterprise** - Best for flexible, modern team collaboration - Easy to use, fast to create docs/databases, strong adoption - Less ideal than Confluence/SharePoint for very strict governance 5. **Slab** - Best for clean internal documentation - Simple editor, good search, lightweight governance - Strong for fast-moving companies that want less complexity 6. **Bloomfire** - Best for enterprise knowledge sharing and discovery - Strong search, analytics, and content organization - Often used in customer support, research, and operations teams 7. **XWiki** - Best open-source enterprise wiki - Highly customizable, self-hostable, strong permissions - Good for organizations that want control and customization **My quick picks:** - **Best overall:** Confluence - **Best for Microsoft-heavy orgs:** SharePoint - **Best for internal knowledge ops:** Guru - **Best flexible modern wiki:** Notion Enterprise If you want, I can also give you a **“best by use case” comparison table** or a **shortlist for regulated industries** like finance, healthcare, or government.
retrieval Mentioned
For large organizations, the strongest enterprise wiki options are usually: - **Atlassian Confluence** — best overall if you want a mature enterprise wiki with strong collaboration and Atlassian ecosystem fit; Atlassian positions Confluence as an AI workspace for knowledge and collaboration and offers an Enterprise cloud plan for scale. ([atlassian.com](https://www.atlassian.com/software/confluence?utm_source=openai)) - **Microsoft SharePoint** — best if your company is already standardized on Microsoft 365; Microsoft documents “Enterprise wiki” sites for SharePoint and describes them as a way to share large volumes of information across the enterprise. ([support.microsoft.com](https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/office/create-and-edit-a-wiki-dc64f9c2-d1a2-44b5-ac59-b9d535551a32?utm_source=openai)) - **Notion** — best for teams that want a flexible, modern internal wiki with strong usability; Notion’s wiki feature is available on Business and Enterprise plans, and its Enterprise offering is explicitly aimed at enterprise teams. ([notion.com](https://www.notion.com/help/wikis-and-verified-pages?utm_source=openai)) - **Guru** — best for operational knowledge that needs to stay verified and current; Guru markets itself as an AI source of truth with enterprise search, verification, permissions, and auditability. ([getguru.com](https://www.getguru.com/?utm_source=openai)) - **Slite** — best for a simpler company wiki/knowledge base that prioritizes adoption and AI search; Slite’s Enterprise plan emphasizes security, control, flexibility, SSO, and scaling knowledge-sharing. ([slite.com](https://slite.com/?utm_source=openai)) - **XWiki** — best open-source choice for organizations that want deep customization and self-hosting flexibility; XWiki describes itself as an advanced open-source enterprise wiki with strong rights management and separate wikis/subwikis. ([xwiki.org](https://www.xwiki.org/?utm_source=openai)) - **MediaWiki** — best for highly customizable, open-source wiki deployments; MediaWiki says it’s used by thousands of companies and organizations and is extensible and customizable. ([mediawiki.org](https://www.mediawiki.org/?utm_source=openai)) **My short ranking for large orgs:** 1. **Confluence** 2. **SharePoint** if you’re Microsoft-first 3. **Guru** if knowledge accuracy matters most 4. **Notion** if usability/adoption matters most 5. **XWiki** if self-hosting/customization matters most If you want, I can also give you a **“best for security / best for engineering / best for HR / best for Microsoft shops”** breakdown.
Which enterprise wiki platforms support strong search and version history? discovery
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned
Strong enterprise wiki options with good **search** and **version history**: - **Atlassian Confluence** — very strong versioning, good built-in search, easy to extend with Atlassian ecosystem. - **Microsoft SharePoint Online** — excellent enterprise search, robust document/page version history, best if you’re already in Microsoft 365. - **Guru** — strong knowledge search and page history; more knowledge base than classic wiki, but widely used in enterprises. - **Notion Enterprise** — solid version history and decent search, though less “enterprise wiki” than Confluence/SharePoint. - **MediaWiki** — powerful revision history and search; best if you want an open-source, highly customizable wiki. - **Bloomfire** — good enterprise search and content versioning, geared toward knowledge management. - **Document360** — strong version control and search, especially for internal documentation/knowledge bases. If you want the safest picks for large orgs: **Confluence** or **SharePoint Online**. If you want open source: **MediaWiki**.
retrieval Not mentioned
Good enterprise wiki picks with strong search + version history: - **Atlassian Confluence** — robust page history with compare/restore, and strong workspace search across pages/labels. ([confluence.atlassian.com](https://confluence.atlassian.com/doc/page-history-and-page-comparison-views-139379.html?utm_source=openai)) - **Microsoft SharePoint** — version history for pages/files, with restore and compare; search is part of Microsoft 365/SharePoint. ([support.microsoft.com](https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/office/compare-page-versions-in-sharepoint-de7ba69d-257d-4201-b787-d5ea89fb2f08?utm_source=openai)) - **Notion (Business/Enterprise)** — good search, plus Enterprise Search across connected tools; version history is available for pages, with unlimited page history on Enterprise. ([notion.com](https://www.notion.com/help/search?utm_source=openai)) - **Slab** — unified search across internal content/integrations, and full post version history with restore; Enterprise includes unlimited version history. ([help.slab.com](https://help.slab.com/en/articles/3936158-searching-slab-content?utm_source=openai)) If you want the safest “enterprise wiki” default, I’d usually shortlist **Confluence** or **SharePoint**; if you want a cleaner modern editor, **Notion** or **Slab** are strong.
What are the best enterprise wiki platforms for project documentation? discovery 10/mo
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Top enterprise wiki platforms for project documentation: 1. **Atlassian Confluence** Best all-around choice for large orgs, especially if you use Jira. Strong page hierarchy, permissions, templates, and project docs workflows. 2. **Microsoft SharePoint + OneDrive/Teams** Best for Microsoft 365 shops. Good for governance, permissions, and internal document management, though less wiki-like than Confluence. 3. **Notion Enterprise** Best for teams that want a clean, flexible, easy-to-use workspace. Great for lightweight project documentation and fast collaboration. 4. **Document360** Best for structured knowledge bases and internal documentation. Strong versioning, search, analytics, and approval workflows. 5. **Guru** Best for knowledge that needs to live close to daily work. Good for sales, support, and ops teams; less ideal for deep project archiving. 6. **Slab** Best for modern, simple internal wikis. Strong editor, clean UX, and easy adoption. 7. **Nuclino** Best for fast, lightweight team docs. Very easy to use, but less robust for complex enterprise governance. ### Best picks by scenario - **Most enterprise-ready:** Confluence - **Best for Microsoft environments:** SharePoint - **Best ease of use:** Notion Enterprise - **Best documentation structure:** Document360 - **Best for team knowledge sharing:** Guru If you want, I can also give you a **shortlist by company size, security needs, or budget**.
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Here are the strongest enterprise wiki options for project documentation, by fit: - **Best overall: Confluence** — great for project docs, requirements, release notes, and Jira-linked workflows. Atlassian positions it as a single source of truth for software documentation and says it integrates tightly with Jira. ([atlassian.com](https://www.atlassian.com/work-management/project-collaboration/project-documentation?utm_source=openai)) - **Best for Microsoft-heavy orgs: SharePoint** — Microsoft supports both **Enterprise wiki** and **Project site** templates for capturing and sharing project info, files, and updates. ([support.microsoft.com](https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/office/create-and-edit-a-wiki-dc64f9c2-d1a2-44b5-ac59-b9d535551a32?utm_source=openai)) - **Best lightweight all-in-one workspace: Notion** — Notion describes itself as a workspace for notes, documents, projects, and data, and it has explicit wiki templates for team/company use. ([notion.so](https://www.notion.so/notion/Getting-Started-with-Notion-f0e1a6d326d84d6984d948da96965045?utm_source=openai)) - **Best dedicated knowledge-base platform: Document360** — built specifically for structured documentation/knowledge bases, with enterprise features and AI-assisted authoring/search. ([document360.com](https://document360.com/enterprise-ready/?utm_source=openai)) - **Best self-hosted/open-source option: XWiki** — an advanced open-source enterprise wiki with robust WYSIWYG editing, rights management, and lots of extensions. ([xwiki.org](https://www.xwiki.org/?utm_source=openai)) - **Best simple self-hosted option: BookStack** — easy-to-use, WYSIWYG, searchable, and supports SSO like OIDC/SAML2/LDAP for enterprise environments. ([bookstackapp.com](https://www.bookstackapp.com/?utm_source=openai)) **Quick pick:** - Engineering/project teams: **Confluence** - Microsoft 365 shops: **SharePoint** - Fast-moving cross-functional teams: **Notion** - Formal docs/support knowledge bases: **Document360** - Self-hosted/security-controlled environments: **XWiki** or **BookStack** If you want, I can also give you a **top 3 by budget**, **by security/compliance**, or **by ease of adoption**.
Which enterprise wiki platforms are best for internal SOPs? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
For internal SOPs, the best enterprise wiki platforms are usually the ones with **good permissions, strong search, versioning, templates, and easy editing**. ### Top picks 1. **Confluence (Atlassian)** - Best overall for most teams - Great for SOP templates, page hierarchy, permissions, and Jira integration - Strong ecosystem and widely adopted 2. **Notion** - Best for fast setup and clean, simple SOP docs - Very easy to maintain - Less “enterprise governance” than Confluence, but excellent for many internal teams 3. **Microsoft SharePoint** - Best if you’re already on Microsoft 365 - Strong permissions, compliance, and intranet use - Heavier to manage, but powerful for large orgs 4. **Guru** - Best for knowledge base + SOPs used in daily operations - Great search and browser-based access - More “knowledge management” than traditional wiki 5. **Document360** - Best for structured internal documentation - Strong version control, categories, and analytics - Very polished for SOP-style knowledge bases 6. **Slab** - Best lightweight enterprise wiki - Clean UI, good organization, easier than Confluence - Good for teams that want less complexity ### My quick recommendation - **Most companies:** Confluence - **Microsoft-heavy orgs:** SharePoint - **Small/fast-moving teams:** Notion or Slab - **Ops/support-heavy teams:** Guru - **Highly structured knowledge base:** Document360 If you want, I can also give you a **best-by-company-size shortlist** or a **comparison table for SOP features**.
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For internal SOPs, the best enterprise wiki platforms are usually: - **Confluence** — best overall for structured SOPs, templates, permissions, and team knowledge at scale. Atlassian explicitly positions it as a wiki / knowledge base with templates and versioning. ([atlassian.com](https://www.atlassian.com/software/confluence/use-cases/wiki?utm_source=openai)) - **Guru** — best if you want SOPs to stay current inside Slack/Teams/browser, with permission-aware answers and verification workflows. ([getguru.com](https://www.getguru.com/solutions/wiki?utm_source=openai)) - **Document360** — best for formal, documentation-heavy SOP libraries with strong search, version control, and enterprise hosting options. ([document360.com](https://document360.com/enterprise-ready/?utm_source=openai)) - **Microsoft SharePoint** — best if your company already lives in Microsoft 365; Microsoft says wikis can capture institutional knowledge and SharePoint sites can be used as wikis. ([support.microsoft.com](https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/office/create-and-edit-a-wiki-dc64f9c2-d1a2-44b5-ac59-b9d535551a32?utm_source=openai)) - **Nuclino** — best for teams that want a fast, lightweight, easy-to-use internal wiki for process docs and SOPs. ([nuclino.com](https://www.nuclino.com/solutions/internal-wiki?utm_source=openai)) **Quick pick:** - **Most companies:** Confluence - **Microsoft-heavy orgs:** SharePoint - **Need “SOPs that stay fresh”:** Guru - **Need polished doc governance:** Document360 - **Need simple and fast:** Nuclino If you want, I can narrow this to **best for 50–200 employees**, **best for regulated industries**, or **best budget option**.
What enterprise wiki platforms are best for distributed knowledge sharing? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Top enterprise wiki platforms for distributed knowledge sharing: 1. **Atlassian Confluence** Best all-around enterprise wiki. Strong permissions, templates, integrations with Jira/Slack/Teams, good for cross-team docs and process knowledge. 2. **Microsoft SharePoint + Viva Topics / Microsoft Loop** Best if you’re already in Microsoft 365. Strong governance, compliance, and enterprise search across docs, intranet, and teams. 3. **Guru** Best for fast-moving distributed teams. Great in-browser knowledge capture, verified answers, and Slack/Chrome workflow. 4. **Notion Enterprise** Best for flexible, modern docs and team wikis. Easy to use, good collaboration, but less mature for heavy governance than Confluence/SharePoint. 5. **Slab** Best for clean internal documentation and engineering/product teams. Simple structure, strong search, and easy adoption. 6. **Document360** Best for structured knowledge bases and SOP-heavy organizations. Strong analytics, versioning, and publishing controls. **Quick picks** - **Most enterprises:** Confluence - **Microsoft-first orgs:** SharePoint - **Slack-first distributed teams:** Guru - **Best UX/flexibility:** Notion - **Best for structured internal KB:** Document360 If you tell me your stack (Microsoft, Google, Slack, Jira, etc.), I can narrow it to the best 2–3.
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For distributed teams, the best enterprise wiki platforms are usually: - **Confluence** — best overall for structured team knowledge, docs, comments, @mentions, versioning, and cross-team collaboration. Great if you already use Atlassian. ([atlassian.com](https://www.atlassian.com/software/confluence/team-documentation?utm_source=openai)) - **Notion** — best for flexible, lightweight wikis with easy editing, databases, synced blocks, and page verification. Good for fast-moving teams. ([notion.com](https://www.notion.com/product/wikis?utm_source=openai)) - **Guru** — best when you want verified answers in the flow of work, especially in Slack/Teams, with strong knowledge governance. ([help.getguru.com](https://help.getguru.com/docs/using-guru-answers-to-find-trusted-information?utm_source=openai)) - **Microsoft SharePoint** — best for Microsoft 365 shops that want an enterprise wiki/intranet tied to Teams and Office. ([support.microsoft.com](https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/office/create-and-edit-a-wiki-dc64f9c2-d1a2-44b5-ac59-b9d535551a32?utm_source=openai)) - **Document360** — best for a polished, enterprise-grade knowledge base with strong internal/external doc management. ([document360.com](https://document360.com/knowledgebase-portal/?utm_source=openai)) If you want **self-hosted/open source**, look at **BookStack** or **Wiki.js**. BookStack emphasizes simple wiki docs, while Wiki.js is built for self-hosted knowledge bases with built-in search and enterprise auth options. ([bookstackapp.com](https://www.bookstackapp.com/?utm_source=openai)) **Quick pick:** - **Best overall:** Confluence - **Best simple wiki:** Notion - **Best verified knowledge:** Guru - **Best Microsoft-native:** SharePoint - **Best documentation portal:** Document360 If you want, I can narrow this to the **best 3 for your company size, budget, and tech stack**.
Which enterprise wiki platforms are good for multilingual teams? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Good enterprise wiki platforms for multilingual teams: - **Confluence (Atlassian)** — strong enterprise standard, good permissions/workflows, and supports multilingual content through page versions, spaces, and translation apps/integrations. - **Notion Enterprise** — easy to use, great for distributed teams, supports multiple languages well for content creation, though governance is lighter than Confluence. - **Microsoft SharePoint + Viva/Loop** — best if you’re already in Microsoft 365; strong enterprise controls and decent multilingual support via M365 ecosystem. - **Document360** — excellent for knowledge bases with built-in multilingual site management and translation workflows. - **Zendesk Guide** — solid if your wiki is customer-facing or support-focused; supports multiple locales and translation management. - **Guru** — strong internal knowledge base with simple UX and decent multilingual content handling, especially for fast-moving teams. - **XWiki** — open-source, enterprise-grade, and very flexible for multilingual sites; good if you want customization/control. Best picks by use case: - **Most enterprise-ready:** Confluence - **Best multilingual knowledge base:** Document360 - **Best if you use Microsoft 365:** SharePoint - **Best for simple team adoption:** Notion - **Best open-source option:** XWiki If you want, I can narrow this to **internal wiki vs customer help center vs regulated enterprise**.
retrieval Not mentioned
Good options: - **Microsoft SharePoint** — strongest for large enterprises that need multilingual sites, preferred-language UI, and content/variation workflows. ([learn.microsoft.com](https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/sharepoint/sites/plan-for-multilingual-sites)) - **Document360** — very good if you want a knowledge-base-first wiki with built-in multilingual/localization support and a single multilingual workspace. ([docs.document360.com](https://docs.document360.com/docs/localization-getting-started)) - **Confluence** — workable for multilingual teams, especially with Marketplace add-ons; native automated translation isn’t built in, so it’s better if you’re okay with extensions/manual workflows. ([support.atlassian.com](https://support.atlassian.com/confluence/kb/how-to-translate-confluence-page-content/)) - **Nuclino** — simple and clean, but language support is limited (currently English and German), so it’s not the best choice for broad multilingual teams. ([help.nuclino.com](https://help.nuclino.com/4c366057-change-your-language)) **My quick pick:** - **Best enterprise default:** SharePoint - **Best wiki/KB hybrid:** Document360 - **Best if you already use Atlassian:** Confluence + translation app If you want, I can narrow this down by your stack (Microsoft 365, Atlassian, standalone KB, or open-source).
What are the best enterprise wiki platforms for storing company procedures? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Here are the best enterprise wiki platforms for company procedures: 1. **Atlassian Confluence** **Best overall for enterprise teams.** Strong permissions, templates, version history, and tight Jira integration. Great if your company already uses Atlassian tools. 2. **Microsoft SharePoint + Viva Connections** **Best for Microsoft 365 organizations.** Excellent for internal documentation, access control, and compliance. Best when procedures need to live inside the Microsoft ecosystem. 3. **Guru** **Best for operational knowledge that needs to be surfaced in workflows.** Good for procedure cards, browser extension access, and keeping info easy for employees to find while working. 4. **Notion Enterprise** **Best for modern, flexible documentation.** Very easy to use and build procedure pages fast. Strong for smaller enterprise teams, though governance can be less structured than Confluence or SharePoint. 5. **Document360** **Best for structured knowledge bases and SOPs.** Good search, analytics, and version control. Often used for internal and customer-facing documentation. 6. **Slab** **Best for clean internal knowledge bases.** Simple UI, good search, and easy onboarding. Less heavyweight than Confluence. ### Quick pick - **Best overall:** Confluence - **Best for Microsoft shops:** SharePoint - **Best for frontline/internal workflow use:** Guru - **Best for easy adoption:** Notion Enterprise If you want, I can also rank these by **security**, **ease of use**, or **best for SOPs specifically**.
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For **company procedures**, my top picks are: 1. **Confluence** — best overall for most enterprises; it’s built for internal knowledge bases/intranets, has strong permissions, and integrates tightly with Jira/other Atlassian tools. ([atlassian.com](https://www.atlassian.com/software/confluence/resources/guides/best-practices/knowledge-base)) 2. **Notion** — best if you want a flexible, easy-to-edit wiki with strong search, synced blocks, verification, and enterprise admin controls. ([notion.com](https://www.notion.com/product/wikis)) 3. **Guru** — best for **trusted, verified answers** surfaced in Slack/Teams/browser, with AI that flags outdated content. ([getguru.com](https://www.getguru.com/solutions/wiki)) 4. **Slab** — best for a clean, simple internal wiki focused on browsing policies and procedures, with strong organization via Topics. ([slab.com](https://slab.com/)) 5. **Document360** — best when you want a more formal, structured knowledge base with version control, workflows, analytics, and enterprise controls. ([document360.com](https://document360.com/information/)) 6. **SharePoint Enterprise Wiki** — best if your company is already deep in Microsoft 365 and wants a centralized repository inside that ecosystem. ([support.microsoft.com](https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/office/create-and-edit-a-wiki-dc64f9c2-d1a2-44b5-ac59-b9d535551a32)) **Quick rule of thumb:** - **Most enterprises:** Confluence - **Fast-moving teams:** Notion - **Need verified, in-the-flow answers:** Guru - **Microsoft-heavy org:** SharePoint - **Simple, readable SOP wiki:** Slab - **More controlled documentation ops:** Document360 ([atlassian.com](https://www.atlassian.com/software/confluence/resources/guides/best-practices/knowledge-base)) If you want, I can narrow this to the **best 3 for your company size, budget, and tech stack**.
Which enterprise wiki platforms are best for IT documentation? discovery 10/mo
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
For IT documentation, the best enterprise wiki platforms are usually: 1. **Confluence (Atlassian)** - Best overall for most IT teams - Strong integrations with Jira, Azure DevOps, Slack, and lots of plugins - Good for runbooks, SOPs, architecture docs, and knowledge bases 2. **Microsoft SharePoint / Viva Engage + OneDrive** - Best if you’re already deep in Microsoft 365 - Great permissions, compliance, and internal search across Microsoft tools - Less wiki-like than Confluence, but very enterprise-friendly 3. **Notion Enterprise** - Best for smaller IT orgs or fast-moving teams - Clean editing experience, easy templates, quick onboarding - Weaker than Confluence for deep enterprise governance 4. **Guru** - Best for support/ops teams that want knowledge embedded in workflows - Strong browser extension and search - Good for short-form IT docs and FAQs, less ideal for complex architecture docs 5. **Document360** - Best for structured internal knowledge bases - Strong versioning, article lifecycle, and analytics - Better for documentation portals than general collaboration 6. **GitBook** - Best for engineering-heavy IT teams - Great for Markdown, API docs, and version-controlled documentation - Strong for technical teams that like docs-as-code ### Quick pick - **Best overall:** Confluence - **Best for Microsoft shops:** SharePoint - **Best for docs-as-code:** GitBook - **Best for simple internal knowledge base:** Document360 - **Best for lightweight collaboration:** Notion Enterprise If you want, I can also rank these by **security, search, permissions, and cost** for enterprise IT use.
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For **IT documentation**, my shortlist is: - **Confluence** — best all-around choice for enterprise IT teams. It’s built around centralized knowledge, supports code/tables/embed-heavy docs, page history, and has deep Jira/Slack/Microsoft integrations. ([atlassian.com](https://www.atlassian.com/software/confluence/use-cases/wiki)) - **Document360** — best if you want a more structured knowledge-base product for SOPs, runbooks, manuals, and internal help docs. It offers version control, workflows, analytics, SSO/role-based access, and a REST API. ([document360.com](https://document360.com/information/?utm_source=openai)) - **Microsoft SharePoint** — best if your org is already deep in Microsoft 365. Microsoft still supports wiki-style pages and enterprise wiki sites, and SharePoint is designed for collaboration, document management, and internal knowledge sharing. ([support.microsoft.com](https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/office/create-and-edit-a-wiki-dc64f9c2-d1a2-44b5-ac59-b9d535551a32)) - **Guru** — best for “knowledge where people work” use cases, especially if you want permission-aware answers and AI-assisted retrieval in Slack/Teams/browsers. ([getguru.com](https://www.getguru.com/solutions/wiki)) - **Notion** — best for teams that want a flexible, lightweight internal wiki with pages, sub-pages, databases, and shared team spaces. ([notion.so](https://www.notion.so/Notion-Startup-Pack-c03bd9cc8c944b5d9b749d6c5d3b1ae8?utm_source=openai)) **My practical ranking for IT docs:** 1. **Confluence** for most enterprises 2. **Document360** for formal documentation / KB workflows 3. **SharePoint** if you’re Microsoft-first 4. **Guru** if search and inline answers matter most 5. **Notion** for smaller or fast-moving teams If you want, I can also give you a **“best by scenario” comparison** for: - IT runbooks - SOPs / policies - network / infra docs - onboarding / internal KB - Microsoft-heavy environments
What enterprise wiki platforms are best for legal knowledge bases? discovery
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned
For a **legal knowledge base**, the best enterprise wiki platforms are usually the ones with **strong permissions, version history, auditability, search, and compliance controls**. ### Best picks 1. **Confluence (Atlassian)** - Best overall for most legal teams - Strong page permissions, versioning, comments, workflow add-ons - Works well with Jira for matter tracking - Good integrations with Microsoft 365, Slack, DocuSign 2. **Microsoft SharePoint / Viva** - Best if your firm is already on Microsoft 365 - Excellent security, retention, legal hold, and compliance features - Strong for document-heavy internal knowledge bases - More powerful than “wiki-like,” but usually the safest enterprise choice 3. **Bloomfire** - Best for searchable knowledge sharing - Strong Q&A-style knowledge base, good search, easy adoption - Useful for precedent libraries, FAQs, and internal legal guidance 4. **Guru** - Best for quick knowledge capture and verification - Good for policy snippets, playbooks, and fast updates - Less robust than Confluence/SharePoint for complex legal repositories 5. **Document360** - Best for structured knowledge base publishing - Great version control, categories, and clean navigation - Better for formal internal KBs than collaborative wiki work ### Good enterprise options if you need more control - **Alfresco** - **Notion Enterprise** (good UX, but weaker for strict legal governance than SharePoint/Confluence) - **MediaWiki** (powerful, but usually too admin-heavy for legal teams unless highly customized) ### My recommendation - **Law firm / compliance-heavy environment:** **Microsoft SharePoint** - **Collaborative legal ops team:** **Confluence** - **Search-first knowledge base:** **Bloomfire** - **Simple internal playbooks:** **Guru** If you want, I can also give you a **shortlist by firm size** or a **feature comparison table**.
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For a **legal knowledge base**, the best enterprise wiki platforms are usually: 1. **Microsoft SharePoint** — best if your firm already lives in Microsoft 365; it has version history and permissions tied to document access. ([support.microsoft.com](https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/office/what-permissions-do-i-need-for-sharepoint-versioning-95bce34c-db77-4fd4-8449-9ad7ce0363c0?utm_source=openai)) 2. **Atlassian Confluence** — strong for structured internal knowledge with space/page restrictions and audit logging. ([support.atlassian.com](https://support.atlassian.com/confluence-cloud/docs/manage-permissions-on-the-page-level/?utm_source=openai)) 3. **Document360** — best for a polished knowledge-base product with role-based permissions and audit trail features. ([docs.document360.com](https://docs.document360.com/docs/team-auditing?utm_source=openai)) 4. **Guru** — good for fast-moving legal teams that need permissioned knowledge and SCIM/role controls. ([getguru.com](https://www.getguru.com/features/user-roles-permissions?utm_source=openai)) 5. **Slab** — simpler, clean UX, with audit logs and unlimited version history on Enterprise. ([help.slab.com](https://help.slab.com/en/articles/6512729-audit-logs?utm_source=openai)) 6. **Notion Enterprise** — flexible and polished, with audit logs, SSO/SCIM, page version history, and enterprise security controls. ([notion.com](https://www.notion.com/security?utm_source=openai)) **My short take:** - **Best overall for legal/compliance-heavy teams:** **SharePoint** - **Best wiki-style collaboration:** **Confluence** - **Best dedicated knowledge base:** **Document360** - **Best lightweight modern option:** **Slab** or **Notion Enterprise** If you want, I can narrow this to: - **internal legal ops wiki** - **client-facing legal portal** - **firmwide policy/compliance KB**
Which enterprise wiki platforms are best for customer support teams? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
For customer support teams, the best enterprise wiki platforms are usually the ones that combine **fast search, strong permissions, and tight helpdesk integrations**. ### Top picks - **Guru** — Best for support teams that live in Slack/Teams and need quick, trusted answers. Strong knowledge verification, great for internal support playbooks. - **Confluence (Atlassian)** — Best all-around enterprise wiki, especially if you already use **Jira**. Good for SOPs, escalation docs, and cross-team collaboration. - **Document360** — Best for a polished **customer-facing knowledge base** plus internal docs. Strong article management and analytics. - **Notion** — Best for smaller or fast-moving support orgs that want flexibility and easy editing. Less rigid, but can get messy at scale. - **Bloomfire** — Good for larger support organizations needing searchable knowledge, Q&A, and content discovery. - **Slab** — Simple, clean internal wiki for support teams that want low friction and good organization. ### Best by use case - **Internal support knowledge base:** Guru or Confluence - **Customer help center:** Document360 - **All-purpose enterprise wiki:** Confluence - **Fast, lightweight team wiki:** Notion or Slab - **Search-heavy knowledge sharing:** Bloomfire ### My short recommendation If you want the safest enterprise choice: **Confluence**. If you want the best fit for support agents answering tickets: **Guru**. If you need a customer help center too: **Document360**. If you want, I can also give you a **comparison table by price, integrations, and support-team features**.
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For customer support teams, the best enterprise wiki platforms are usually: 1. **Confluence** — best overall if you already use Jira/Atlassian. It supports collaborative docs, page history, flexible formatting, and a built-in knowledge base flow for self-service support via Jira Service Management. ([atlassian.com](https://www.atlassian.com/software/confluence/use-cases/wiki?utm_source=openai)) 2. **Document360** — best for a dedicated customer-facing help center. It emphasizes enterprise-grade knowledge bases, helpdesk integrations like Zendesk/Freshdesk, and support-oriented workflows. ([document360.com](https://document360.com/partners/technology-partner/?utm_source=openai)) 3. **Helpjuice** — best if your main goal is reducing tickets with a fast, searchable support KB. It’s built around self-service, AI search, analytics, and support/ops use cases. ([helpjuice.com](https://helpjuice.com/?utm_source=openai)) 4. **Slab** — best for an internal support wiki / agent playbook. It focuses on clean writing, unified search, analytics, and collaboration across teams. ([slab.com](https://slab.com/solutions/wiki/?utm_source=openai)) 5. **Notion** — best for a flexible, lightweight internal wiki if your team wants docs + projects in one workspace. It’s good for building a knowledge base, though it’s less specialized for support than the tools above. ([notion.so](https://www.notion.so/notion/Set-up-your-remote-team-24010d658fed4cbc8ab5e012b711b1f2?utm_source=openai)) 6. **SharePoint / Microsoft Enterprise Wiki** — best if your company is already deep in Microsoft 365, but it’s more of a general enterprise repository than a support-first KB. ([support.microsoft.com](https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/office/create-and-edit-a-wiki-dc64f9c2-d1a2-44b5-ac59-b9d535551a32?utm_source=openai)) **My short pick:** - **Support center / customer self-service:** Document360 or Helpjuice - **Internal agent knowledge base:** Confluence or Slab - **Microsoft-heavy enterprise:** SharePoint If you want, I can also give you a **top 3 by company size** (startup, mid-market, enterprise) or a **feature-by-feature comparison table**.
What are the best enterprise wiki platforms for centralized documentation? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Here are some of the best enterprise wiki platforms for centralized documentation: 1. **Atlassian Confluence** - Best all-around choice for many enterprises - Strong permissions, templates, search, and integrations with Jira/Atlassian tools - Good for engineering, product, and internal knowledge bases 2. **Microsoft SharePoint + Viva Connections** - Best if your company is already deep in Microsoft 365 - Excellent for intranet-style documentation and governance - Strong security/compliance, but less “wiki-like” than Confluence 3. **Notion Enterprise** - Best for fast, modern knowledge management - Very easy to use, flexible docs/databases, good collaboration - Less ideal for highly structured, large-scale governance than Confluence/SharePoint 4. **Guru** - Best for searchable knowledge snippets and operational docs - Great for sales, support, and customer-facing teams - Works well when you want “just-in-time” knowledge delivery 5. **Document360** - Best for structured internal or external knowledge bases - Strong versioning, categories, and analytics - Good if documentation needs to be highly organized and publishable 6. **Slab** - Best for clean, simple team knowledge bases - Easy adoption and good search - Lighter-weight than Confluence 7. **Bloomfire** - Best for enterprise knowledge sharing and content discovery - Strong search and AI-assisted retrieval - Useful for large organizations with lots of scattered knowledge **Quick pick:** - **Most enterprises:** Confluence - **Microsoft-heavy orgs:** SharePoint - **Fastest to adopt:** Notion or Slab - **Best for support/sales knowledge:** Guru - **Best structured KB:** Document360 If you want, I can also give you a **top 3 recommendation by company size** or a **comparison table by features, security, and pricing**.
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For most enterprises, I’d shortlist these: - **Atlassian Confluence** — best if you already use Jira/Atlassian. It’s built for centralized knowledge, has templates, AI help, and tight Jira Service Management integration. ([atlassian.com](https://www.atlassian.com/software/confluence/knowledge-base?utm_source=openai)) - **Notion** — best for a flexible, modern company wiki. It offers synced blocks, wiki-style organization, and enterprise admin/analytics tools. ([notion.com](https://www.notion.com/product/wikis?utm_source=openai)) - **Document360** — best for more structured knowledge bases and documentation portals. It supports public/private/mixed access, enterprise SSO, and API-based workflows. ([document360.com](https://document360.com/information/?utm_source=openai)) - **Slab** — best for a clean internal team wiki with strong search and permissions. It emphasizes organized topics, unified search, integrations, custom domains, and SCIM/Okta support. ([slab.com](https://slab.com/solutions/wiki/?utm_source=openai)) - **Microsoft SharePoint** — best if your org is deep in Microsoft 365. Microsoft positions SharePoint as a structured knowledge repository, and it still supports enterprise wiki-style pages in Microsoft 365. ([enablement.microsoft.com](https://enablement.microsoft.com/viva/topics?utm_source=openai)) **My quick pick:** - **Engineering-heavy orgs:** Confluence - **Fast-moving cross-functional teams:** Notion - **Docs/help center + internal KB:** Document360 - **Simple internal wiki with great search:** Slab - **Microsoft-first enterprises:** SharePoint If you want, I can turn this into a **top-5 comparison table** by features, security, search, permissions, and pricing style.
Which enterprise wiki platforms are best for wiki governance and permissions? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
For **wiki governance and permissions**, the strongest enterprise options are usually: 1. **Atlassian Confluence** - Best all-around for: space/page permissions, approval workflows, auditability, and admin control - Good if you want tight integration with Jira and granular team-by-team governance 2. **Microsoft SharePoint Online** - Best for: enterprise compliance, role-based access, retention policies, and Microsoft 365 governance - Strong choice if your org already lives in Teams/Entra ID/Purview 3. **Bloomfire** - Best for: knowledge governance, content review workflows, versioning, and controlled publishing - More “managed knowledge base” than classic wiki, but very good for permissioned enterprise knowledge 4. **Guru** - Best for: verified knowledge with expert approval, role-based access, and content validation - Strong when you want lightweight governance and fast adoption 5. **Document360** - Best for: structured documentation wikis with granular roles, approvals, and content lifecycle controls - Good for internal/external knowledge bases with strong admin oversight ### Best picks by use case - **Most flexible enterprise wiki governance:** **Confluence** - **Best Microsoft-native permissions/compliance:** **SharePoint Online** - **Best controlled knowledge base:** **Bloomfire** - **Best simple governance + knowledge verification:** **Guru** - **Best doc-heavy wiki with workflows:** **Document360** If you want, I can also give you a **ranked shortlist by security/compliance features** (SSO, SCIM, audit logs, approvals, page-level permissions, etc.).
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If your priority is **governance + permissions**, the best enterprise wiki choices are: 1. **Confluence** — best overall for most enterprises. It has **global, space, and page-level permissions**, plus **page restrictions** and **space admin recovery** for locked-down environments. ([support.atlassian.com](https://support.atlassian.com/confluence-cloud/docs/what-are-space-permissions/?utm_source=openai)) 2. **Microsoft SharePoint** — best if you’re already on Microsoft 365. It supports **site, list/library, folder, and item permissions**, with centralized governance options like **SharePoint Advanced Management** and restricted-access controls. ([support.microsoft.com](https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/office/understand-groups-and-permissions-on-a-sharepoint-site-258e5f33-1b5a-4766-a503-d86655cf950d?utm_source=openai)) 3. **XWiki** — best for highly granular or self-hosted control. It offers **wiki-wide, space, page, and even programmatic rights management**, including explicit allow/deny rights. ([xwiki.org](https://www.xwiki.org/xwiki/bin/view/Documentation/UserGuide/Features/RightsManagement?utm_source=openai)) 4. **Slab** — best for simpler internal knowledge bases with solid admin controls. It supports **topic-level and post-level permissions**, **private/secret topics**, and **SCIM/Okta group sync**. ([help.slab.com](https://help.slab.com/en/articles/2677456-topic-permissions?utm_source=openai)) **Quick pick:** - **Most enterprises:** Confluence - **Microsoft-heavy orgs:** SharePoint - **Maximum control / self-hosted:** XWiki - **Cleaner, lighter KB governance:** Slab If you want, I can turn this into a **side-by-side comparison table** with governance features, auditability, and admin effort.
What are the best alternatives to leading enterprise wiki platforms? comparison
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned
Here are some of the best alternatives to enterprise wiki platforms like **Confluence**, **Notion**, and **MediaWiki**: ### Best overall - **Nuclino** — very fast, clean, and easy to adopt; great for internal knowledge bases and team docs. - **BookStack** — open-source, simple, and structured like a traditional wiki; good if you want self-hosting. ### Best for Microsoft-centric teams - **Microsoft SharePoint + Viva** — strong if you already live in Microsoft 365. - **OneNote** — lighter-weight, but useful for informal internal documentation. ### Best for open-source / self-hosted - **Wiki.js** — modern UI, Git-backed, strong permissions, good for technical teams. - **XWiki** — more enterprise-oriented open source, very flexible and powerful. - **DokuWiki** — simple, reliable, no database required. ### Best for structured knowledge bases - **Guru** — great for company knowledge capture and browser-based workflows. - **Slab** — polished, easy-to-use internal wiki for teams. - **Tettra** — good for Slack-heavy teams and lightweight documentation. ### Best for developer teams - **Outline** — modern, collaborative docs with a strong UX. - **GitBook** — excellent for product docs, engineering docs, and public/internal documentation. ### Best for large enterprises - **Document360** — strong knowledge base features and analytics. - **LumApps** — more of an employee experience/intranet platform, but good for knowledge sharing. - **Bloomfire** — focused on enterprise knowledge management and search. If you want, I can also give you: 1. **best Confluence replacements by team size**, or 2. **a shortlist based on self-hosted vs SaaS**.
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If you’re replacing a leading enterprise wiki like Confluence, the **best alternatives** usually fall into 3 buckets: **modern SaaS wikis**, **open-source/self-hosted**, and **knowledge-base-first tools**. Here are the standouts: - **Notion** — best if you want a flexible all-in-one workspace for wikis, docs, and projects. Notion’s wiki product is built around pages, team wikis, enterprise search, and enterprise admin controls. ([notion.com](https://www.notion.com/product/wikis?utm_source=openai)) - **Slab** — best if you want a clean internal knowledge base with strong focus on docs/search rather than project management. Slab positions itself as an internal knowledge base for collaboratively creating, organizing, and searching content. ([slab.com](https://slab.com/pricing/?utm_source=openai)) - **Nuclino** — best for teams that want a simple, lightweight, modern wiki. Nuclino describes itself as a unified workspace for knowledge, docs, and projects, and offers an enterprise-wiki product. ([nuclino.com](https://www.nuclino.com/solutions/enterprise-wiki?utm_source=openai)) - **BookStack** — best open-source pick if you want something easy to self-host. BookStack is MIT-licensed, self-hosted, and built around a simple WYSIWYG editor with Books/Chapters/Pages organization. ([bookstackapp.com](https://www.bookstackapp.com/?utm_source=openai)) - **XWiki** — best if you need a highly customizable enterprise wiki/app platform. XWiki calls itself an advanced open-source enterprise wiki with strong rights management, version control, and many extensions. ([xwiki.org](https://www.xwiki.org/?utm_source=openai)) - **Document360** — best when your wiki is really a knowledge base for internal or external docs. Document360 markets internal/public/mixed knowledge bases and multilingual support. ([document360.com](https://document360.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/05/Webinar-Presentation-Importance-of-creating-a-multilingual-knowledgebase.pdf?utm_source=openai)) **Quick picks** - **Most Confluence-like power:** XWiki - **Best modern SaaS:** Notion - **Best simple internal wiki:** Nuclino or Slab - **Best self-hosted:** BookStack - **Best knowledge-base style documentation:** Document360 If you want, I can also give you: 1. a **top 5 ranked list by company size**, or 2. a **Confluence vs alternatives comparison table**.
Which enterprise wiki platforms are best alternatives for teams needing advanced permissions? comparison
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Top enterprise wiki alternatives for **advanced permissions**: 1. **Confluence (Atlassian)** Best all-around choice for granular page/space permissions, team-based access, and enterprise governance. 2. **Microsoft SharePoint** Strongest option if you’re already in Microsoft 365; very detailed permissions, group policies, and compliance controls. 3. **Document360** Good for internal knowledge bases with role-based access control, section-level permissions, and approval workflows. 4. **Guru** Great for team knowledge, with card-level access controls and strong Slack/Teams integration, though less wiki-like than Confluence. 5. **Nuclino** Clean and simple, with team/workspace permissions and SSO; better for lighter enterprise use than deep permission complexity. 6. **Notion Enterprise** Flexible and popular, with workspace/page permissions and SSO/SCIM, but permissions are less mature than Confluence or SharePoint. 7. **Slab** Nice modern wiki with team and channel permissions, SSO, and decent admin controls for growing orgs. **Best picks for advanced permissions:** - **Confluence** for wiki-first teams - **SharePoint** for Microsoft-heavy enterprises - **Document360** for knowledge base + strict access control If you want, I can narrow this down by your stack (Microsoft, Google, Atlassian, etc.) or by requirements like SSO, SCIM, and audit logs.
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If you need **advanced permissions**, the best enterprise wiki alternatives are usually: 1. **Confluence** — strongest all-around enterprise pick. It supports **global, space, and user-level permissions**, plus permissions on Standard/Premium/Enterprise plans. ([atlassian.com](https://www.atlassian.com/software/confluence/resources/guides/get-started/manage-permissions?utm_source=openai)) 2. **XWiki** — best for **very granular control**. It supports **wiki-wide, space/page-level rights**, plus **programmatic rights** for more custom setups. ([xwiki.org](https://www.xwiki.org/xwiki/bin/view/Documentation/AdminGuide/Access%20Rights/?utm_source=openai)) 3. **Document360** — strong if you want a **knowledge base/wiki with role-based access control** and custom portal roles. It also supports **private/mixed reader access** and domain-based controls. ([docs.document360.com](https://docs.document360.com/docs/roles?utm_source=openai)) 4. **Notion Enterprise** — good for teams that want a flexible wiki with **advanced permissions** and SSO; less deep than Confluence/XWiki for complex permission models, but very usable. ([notion.com](https://www.notion.com/product/wikis?utm_source=openai)) 5. **Slab** — solid for internal docs with **SSO/2FA** and simpler admin control, but it’s usually not the first choice if permissions are your top priority. ([help.slab.com](https://help.slab.com/en/articles/3816044-authentication?utm_source=openai)) **Best overall for advanced permissions:** **Confluence** or **XWiki**. **Best for docs-style knowledge base with access control:** **Document360**. **Best for a modern, easy team wiki:** **Notion Enterprise**. If you want, I can rank these for your exact use case (IT/internal wiki, customer KB, regulated industry, multi-team permissions, etc.).
What are the best alternatives to the most popular enterprise wiki platform options? comparison
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned
If you mean **enterprise wiki / knowledge-base platforms like Confluence**, the best alternatives are: - **Notion** — best for fast, flexible internal docs and lightweight knowledge bases. - **Guru** — best for company-wide knowledge capture with strong browser/Slack workflows. - **Nuclino** — best for simple, clean team wikis with very low admin overhead. - **Document360** — best for polished internal/external documentation portals. - **Slab** — best for structured team wikis with a modern editor and permissions. - **Microsoft SharePoint** — best if you’re already deep in Microsoft 365 and need enterprise governance. - **BookStack** — best open-source, self-hosted wiki for teams that want simplicity. - **XWiki** — best open-source option for more advanced enterprise customization. - **MediaWiki** — best if you want maximum flexibility and a proven wiki engine, but it’s more technical. - **Slite** — best for lightweight team knowledge sharing and meeting notes. ### Best picks by scenario - **Best overall Confluence alternative:** Notion - **Best for enterprise compliance/governance:** SharePoint - **Best for internal knowledge management:** Guru - **Best self-hosted/open-source:** XWiki or BookStack - **Best documentation portal:** Document360 If you want, I can also give you a **top 5 by company size** or a **Confluence vs alternatives comparison table**.
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If you mean **alternatives to Confluence/SharePoint-style enterprise wikis**, the best picks usually break down like this: - **Slab** — best for a simple, polished internal wiki with strong search and unified search across tools. ([help.slab.com](https://help.slab.com/en/articles/3936161-advanced-searching/?utm_source=openai)) - **Guru** — best for “knowledge in the flow of work,” especially if you want permission-aware AI search in Slack, Teams, and the browser. ([help.getguru.com](https://help.getguru.com/docs/how-gurus-search-works?utm_source=openai)) - **XWiki** — best open-source/self-hosted enterprise wiki; strong rights management and a more traditional wiki platform. ([xwiki.org](https://www.xwiki.org/?utm_source=openai)) - **Document360** — best for structured knowledge bases, especially customer-facing docs and teams that want workflows, analytics, and AI search. ([document360.com](https://document360.com/information/?utm_source=openai)) - **Notion** — best if you want an all-in-one workspace that’s easier to adopt than classic enterprise wiki tools. ([notion.so](https://www.notion.so/notion-champions-20f977eb5fdd40d4a7a396f1742c3ea5?utm_source=openai)) - **SharePoint** — best if your company is already deep in Microsoft 365 and wants intranet + docs in one ecosystem. ([getguru.com](https://www.getguru.com/reference/intelligent-enterprise-search?utm_source=openai)) **My short recommendation:** - **Most teams:** Slab or Notion - **Enterprise search / knowledge delivery:** Guru - **Self-hosted / open source:** XWiki - **Public or hybrid docs:** Document360 - **Microsoft-heavy orgs:** SharePoint If you want, I can also give you a **“best alternative by use case” shortlist** for: 1. engineering teams, 2. HR/internal ops, 3. customer support, or 4. regulated enterprises.
Which enterprise wiki platforms compare best on search, structure, and collaboration? comparison 10/mo
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned
Here are the strongest enterprise wiki platforms for **search, structure, and collaboration**: | Platform | Search | Structure | Collaboration | Best for | |---|---|---|---|---| | **Atlassian Confluence** | Strong | Strong | Strong | Larger teams needing deep docs + workflows | | **Notion** | Good | Very strong | Very strong | Flexible team knowledge bases | | **Microsoft SharePoint** | Good | Strong | Good | Microsoft 365 orgs | | **Guru** | Excellent | Good | Good | Fast answers + knowledge capture | | **Slab** | Good | Strong | Strong | Clean internal docs for modern teams | | **XWiki** | Good | Excellent | Good | Highly customizable enterprise wiki | | **MediaWiki** | Basic unless extended | Excellent | Good | Open-source / highly structured knowledge | ### Best by category - **Best overall enterprise wiki:** **Confluence** - **Best search:** **Guru** or **Confluence** - **Best structure/flexibility:** **Notion** or **XWiki** - **Best collaboration UX:** **Notion** or **Slab** - **Best for Microsoft shops:** **SharePoint** - **Best open-source option:** **XWiki** or **MediaWiki** ### Quick picks - Choose **Confluence** if you want the safest enterprise default. - Choose **Notion** if you want the easiest, most flexible workspace. - Choose **Guru** if search and quick knowledge retrieval matter most. - Choose **XWiki** if you need strong enterprise control and customization. If you want, I can also rank them for **large enterprise**, **engineering teams**, or **internal knowledge base** use cases.
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If you want a quick shortlist: - **Best overall for enterprise wiki structure + collaboration:** **Confluence** - **Best for search across tools + flexible workspace:** **Notion** - **Best lightweight knowledge base / clean org browsing:** **Slab** - **Best if you live in Microsoft 365:** **SharePoint** ([atlassian.com](https://www.atlassian.com/software/confluence?utm_source=openai)) ### How they compare | Platform | Search | Structure | Collaboration | |---|---|---|---| | **Confluence** | Strong built-in search and AI-powered search | Very strong page hierarchy/wiki organization | Excellent for team workspaces and collaborative docs ([atlassian.com](https://www.atlassian.com/software/confluence?utm_source=openai)) | | **Notion** | Best-in-class if you want search across workspace + connected apps | Very flexible, database-driven structure | Strong real-time collaboration and shared workspaces ([notion.com](https://www.notion.com/help/enterprise-search?utm_source=openai)) | | **Slab** | Strong unified search across Slab + connected tools | Clear, topic-based organization | Good for collaborative internal docs and knowledge sharing ([slab.com](https://slab.com/?utm_source=openai)) | | **SharePoint** | Strong enterprise search inside Microsoft 365 | Best for intranet/site-based structure | Strong for Microsoft-centric collaboration and content sharing ([learn.microsoft.com](https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/sharepoint/overview-of-search?utm_source=openai)) | ### My take - **Choose Confluence** if you need the most “classic enterprise wiki” feel. - **Choose Notion** if search and flexible organization matter most. - **Choose Slab** if you want the simplest internal wiki experience. - **Choose SharePoint** if your company already runs on Microsoft 365. ([atlassian.com](https://www.atlassian.com/software/confluence?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also give you a **top 3 by company size** or a **scorecard for engineering, ops, and HR wikis**.
What are the best alternatives for companies that want a simpler enterprise wiki platform? comparison
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
If you want a **simpler enterprise wiki** than something like Confluence, the best alternatives are: 1. **Notion** - Best for: small-to-mid teams wanting docs + wiki + tasks in one place - Why: very easy to use, polished editor, flexible databases - Tradeoff: not ideal for complex permissions at large enterprise scale 2. **Slab** - Best for: company knowledge bases with a clean, focused wiki experience - Why: simpler than Confluence, strong search, great UX - Tradeoff: fewer advanced customization options 3. **Guru** - Best for: teams that need knowledge embedded into daily workflows - Why: strong verification/workflow features, integrates well with Slack/Chrome - Tradeoff: more “knowledge management” than full wiki 4. **Nuclino** - Best for: lightweight internal wiki and team docs - Why: extremely simple, fast, low-friction collaboration - Tradeoff: less powerful for large-scale enterprise governance 5. **BookStack** - Best for: companies wanting a self-hosted, open-source wiki - Why: straightforward structure, easy to manage, free/self-hostable - Tradeoff: fewer enterprise features and integrations 6. **Coda** - Best for: teams that want docs plus light apps/workflows - Why: more structured than a basic doc tool, still approachable - Tradeoff: can get complex if overbuilt ### Best picks by scenario - **Simplest overall:** Nuclino - **Best polished all-in-one:** Notion - **Best knowledge-base workflow:** Guru - **Best clean wiki UX:** Slab - **Best self-hosted option:** BookStack If you tell me your company size and whether you need **SSO, permissions, self-hosting, or Slack integration**, I can narrow it to the top 2–3.
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If you want a **simpler enterprise wiki** than Confluence-style tools, these are the strongest options: - **Nuclino** — best if you want the **simplest, cleanest internal wiki**. It’s built as a “modern, simple enterprise wiki” with real-time collaboration and a low-friction setup. ([nuclino.com](https://www.nuclino.com/lp/enterprise-wiki?utm_source=openai)) - **Slab** — best for **team knowledge sharing with strong usability**. It emphasizes ease of use, unified search, verification to keep content fresh, and SSO on enterprise plans. ([slab.com](https://slab.com/alternative-to/confluence/?utm_source=openai)) - **Notion** — best if you want a **flexible all-in-one workspace** that can act as a wiki. Its wiki features include verified pages, page ownership, and enterprise admin tools. ([notion.com](https://www.notion.com/help/wikis-and-verified-pages?utm_source=openai)) - **Guru** — best if your priority is a **governed, permission-aware knowledge layer**. It focuses on verified answers, automated knowledge quality, and enterprise controls. ([getguru.com](https://www.getguru.com/solutions/wiki?utm_source=openai)) - **Document360** — best if you want a **more structured knowledge-base platform** for internal docs, SOPs, and support-style documentation. It positions itself as an enterprise-grade knowledge base and has KB Site 2.0 for improved customization and search. ([document360.com](https://document360.com/?utm_source=openai)) - **XWiki** — best if you want **maximum flexibility** and an open-source enterprise wiki. It emphasizes structured wiki capabilities, customization, and open-source deployment. ([xwiki.com](https://xwiki.com/?utm_source=openai)) **Quick pick:** - **Simplest overall:** Nuclino - **Best polished team wiki:** Slab - **Best flexible workspace:** Notion - **Best governance/compliance:** Guru - **Best doc portal / KB:** Document360 - **Best open-source enterprise wiki:** XWiki If you want, I can narrow this to **top 3 based on your company size, budget, and whether you need SSO/permissions/search**.
Which enterprise wiki platforms are better than traditional document repositories? comparison
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
If you want **collaborative knowledge sharing** instead of just file storage, these enterprise wiki platforms are usually better than traditional document repositories: - **Atlassian Confluence** — best all-around enterprise wiki; strong permissions, templates, integrations with Jira/Slack. - **Guru** — best for fast internal knowledge access; good browser/Slack support and verification workflows. - **Notion** — best for flexible team wikis and lightweight docs; great UX, less “enterprise rigid.” - **Microsoft SharePoint + Viva Engage/Loop** — best if you’re already deep in Microsoft 365; more portal/wiki than classic wiki. - **Document360** — strong for product/internal knowledge bases; excellent search and article management. - **Slab** — clean modern wiki for engineering/startups; simple structure and good search. - **XWiki** — good open-source enterprise wiki with customization and on-prem options. ### Better than a document repository because they offer: - versioned collaborative editing - search across knowledge, not just files - ownership/review workflows - linking between pages - easier updates than PDFs/Word docs ### Quick picks - **Large enterprise:** Confluence or SharePoint - **Best knowledge management:** Guru - **Best modern team wiki:** Notion or Slab - **Best for product docs/internal KB:** Document360 If you want, I can also rank these by **security, scalability, or Microsoft/Google compatibility**.
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If you want a **living knowledge base** rather than a **file repository**, these are usually better: - **Confluence** — best all-around enterprise wiki for teams that need strong collaboration, page structure, and integrations. ([atlassian.com](https://www.atlassian.com/software/confluence/use-cases/wiki?utm_source=openai)) - **Notion** — best for flexible internal wikis and fast editing; its wiki features are built for centralizing and updating knowledge. ([notion.com](https://www.notion.com/help/wikis-and-verified-pages?utm_source=openai)) - **Slab** — best for a clean, focused team wiki/knowledge base with a simpler UX. ([slab.com](https://slab.com/features/?utm_source=openai)) - **Nuclino** — best for lightweight internal wikis with a simple “single source of truth” model. ([nuclino.com](https://www.nuclino.com/lp/enterprise-wiki?utm_source=openai)) - **Tettra** — best if you want an internal knowledge base that can pull in existing docs and answer repetitive questions. ([tettra.com](https://tettra.com/?utm_source=openai)) - **Coda** — best when your “wiki” also needs to behave like an interactive workspace with docs, tables, and automation. ([coda.io](https://coda.io/?utm_source=openai)) **Why these beat traditional document repositories:** they’re built around editable pages, links, search, ownership, and collaboration—not just storing files in folders. Microsoft’s own SharePoint docs frame it more as document/storage/collaboration, while its portal content is explicitly for company news, updates, policies, and links. ([support.microsoft.com](https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/office/collaborating-with-teams-sharepoint-and-onedrive-9ea6aa07-6e5e-4917-9267-d4d361da3dea?utm_source=openai)) **Quick pick:** - **Best enterprise default:** Confluence. ([atlassian.com](https://www.atlassian.com/software/confluence/overview?utm_source=openai)) - **Best ease of use:** Notion or Slab. ([notion.com](https://www.notion.com/product/wikis?utm_source=openai)) - **Best lightweight wiki:** Nuclino. ([nuclino.com](https://www.nuclino.com/solutions/internal-wiki?utm_source=openai)) - **Best “wiki + workflow” hybrid:** Coda. ([coda.io](https://coda.io/?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can rank these for **IT teams, HR, engineering, or company-wide knowledge bases**.
What are the best alternatives for an enterprise wiki platform with stronger workflow controls? comparison
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned
If you want an **enterprise wiki with stronger workflow controls** than a typical wiki, the best options are usually: ### Top alternatives - **Microsoft SharePoint Online + Microsoft Loop/Pages** - Best if you already use Microsoft 365. - Strongest for **approvals, permissions, retention, audit trails, and governance**. - **Atlassian Confluence + Jira workflows** - Good if your team already uses Atlassian. - Add-ons and Jira integration make it better for **review/approval flows** than a pure wiki. - **Document360** - Very strong for **knowledge base workflow, article approvals, version control, and roles**. - Better than many general-purpose wikis for controlled publishing. - **Guru** - Good for internal knowledge with **verification workflows** and content freshness controls. - Less robust than SharePoint for heavy enterprise governance. - **Bloomfire** - Strong internal knowledge platform with **moderation, approvals, and analytics**. - Useful for customer support, sales enablement, and training content. - **Slab** - Clean UX with decent permissions and publishing controls. - Simpler than SharePoint, but lighter on advanced workflow. - **XWiki** - Best open-source/enterprise wiki option if you want **custom workflows, approvals, and self-hosting**. - **MediaWiki + extensions** - Powerful but usually requires more admin work to get enterprise-grade workflow controls. ### Best picks by use case - **Best overall workflow/governance:** **SharePoint Online** - **Best wiki-style collaboration + task workflow:** **Confluence** - **Best knowledge base publishing control:** **Document360** - **Best open-source choice:** **XWiki** ### If “workflow controls” means: - **Approval before publishing** → Document360, SharePoint, XWiki - **Role-based editing + auditing** → SharePoint, Confluence - **Content review/expiry/verification** → Guru, Document360 - **Complex enterprise governance/compliance** → SharePoint If you want, I can give you a **shortlist by company size** or a **Confluence vs SharePoint vs Document360** comparison.
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If you want **stronger workflow controls than a typical wiki**, the best options are usually: 1. **Microsoft SharePoint + Power Automate** — best for approval-heavy, governed content. SharePoint supports content approval, and Power Automate lets you build page/document approval flows, sequential approvals, and custom approval routing. ([learn.microsoft.com](https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/sharepoint/dev/business-apps/power-automate/guidance/require-doc-approval?utm_source=openai)) 2. **Confluence + a workflow app** — best if you already live in Atlassian. Confluence’s native workflow options are limited, but the official Workflows for Confluence app adds multi-stage approvals, page restrictions, audit logs, and document lifecycle controls. ([marketplace.atlassian.com](https://marketplace.atlassian.com/apps/1222276/workflows-for-confluence-document-management-approvals?utm_source=openai)) 3. **Document360** — best for structured knowledge bases with built-in workflow management. It offers a workflow designer, custom statuses, auto-assignment, multiple assignees, and clear task visibility. ([document360.com](https://document360.com/tutorial-video/automate-your-teams-documentation-workflows/?utm_source=openai)) 4. **Guru** — best for keeping knowledge verified and current rather than running formal publishing workflows. Its verification system lets subject-matter experts review and approve cards on a recurring basis. ([help.getguru.com](https://help.getguru.com/docs/verifying-guru-cards-in-slack?utm_source=openai)) **Quick pick:** - Need **formal approvals/compliance** → **SharePoint**. - Need **wiki + approvals inside Atlassian** → **Confluence + workflow app**. - Need **purpose-built KB workflow** → **Document360**. - Need **lighter verification and trust controls** → **Guru**. ([learn.microsoft.com](https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/sharepoint/dev/business-apps/power-automate/guidance/require-doc-approval?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can turn this into a **feature-by-feature comparison table** for your team.
Which enterprise wiki platforms are best for teams comparing knowledge base software? comparison
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
For enterprise wiki / knowledge base comparisons, the best-known options are: - **Confluence (Atlassian)** — best overall for most teams; strong permissions, integrations, templates, and enterprise admin. - **Notion** — best for flexible internal docs; easier editing, but less enterprise wiki depth than Confluence. - **Guru** — best for knowledge delivery inside workflows; great for Slack/Chrome and sales/support teams. - **Microsoft SharePoint + Viva** — best if you’re already on Microsoft 365; powerful, but heavier to manage. - **Document360** — best for customer-facing or internal knowledge bases; polished KB features and analytics. - **Slab** — best for clean team wikis and onboarding docs; simple, modern, and easy to adopt. - **Nuclino** — best lightweight wiki for fast collaboration; very easy, but less robust for large enterprises. - **BookStack** — best open-source/self-hosted wiki; good if you need control and lower cost. ### Quick picks - **Best enterprise standard:** Confluence - **Best simple modern wiki:** Slab - **Best workflow knowledge tool:** Guru - **Best Microsoft stack choice:** SharePoint/Viva - **Best KB software:** Document360 If you want, I can also give you a **side-by-side comparison table** for pricing, permissions, search, AI, and integrations.
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For **enterprise wiki / knowledge base comparisons**, these are the strongest picks right now: - **Confluence** — best overall for large orgs that already live in Jira/Atlassian; strong templates, permissions, versioning, search, and enterprise knowledge-base workflows. ([atlassian.com](https://www.atlassian.com/software/confluence/knowledge-base?utm_source=openai)) - **Guru** — best for **trusted answers in the flow of work**; it’s built around a governed, permission-aware knowledge layer with cited answers in Slack/Teams/browser and self-updating content signals. ([getguru.com](https://www.getguru.com/solutions/wiki?utm_source=openai)) - **Notion** — best for teams wanting a modern, flexible wiki plus docs/projects in one workspace; it has wikis, verified pages, granular admin controls, SSO/SCIM, and enterprise search/admin tools. ([notion.com](https://www.notion.com/product/wikis?utm_source=openai)) - **Slab** — best for a clean, focused internal wiki; it emphasizes easy writing, topics, unified search, and enterprise security options like SSO/SCIM. ([slab.com](https://slab.com/solutions/wiki/?utm_source=openai)) - **Document360** — best if you need a more **dedicated knowledge base platform**, especially for customer-facing or hybrid customer/internal docs, with analytics, public/private portals, assistant widgets, and enterprise hosting options. ([document360.com](https://document360.com/features?utm_source=openai)) - **Nuclino** — best for teams that want a lightweight, fast, browser-based enterprise wiki with real-time collaboration, permissions, and simple structure. ([nuclino.com](https://www.nuclino.com/solutions/enterprise-wiki?utm_source=openai)) **Quick pick:** - **Most enterprises:** Confluence - **Best AI/answer layer:** Guru - **Best all-in-one flexibility:** Notion - **Best simple internal wiki:** Slab - **Best product docs / KB platform:** Document360 ([atlassian.com](https://www.atlassian.com/software/confluence/knowledge-base?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also make a **side-by-side comparison table** by price, permissions, AI, search, and migration effort.
What are the best alternatives for organizations that need a wiki and intranet in one? comparison
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
If you want **wiki + intranet in one tool**, the best alternatives are: ### Best all-in-one options 1. **Confluence + Atlassian Home** - Best for: mid-size to large teams already using Jira/Atlassian - Strong wiki, good team spaces, permissions, templates, and search - Not the prettiest intranet, but very solid for knowledge + internal comms 2. **Notion** - Best for: startups, fast-moving teams, lightweight intranet/wiki - Very flexible, easy to build pages, databases, handbooks, policies, and team hubs - Weakness: less “true intranet” features like advanced org-wide comms and governance 3. **Microsoft SharePoint + Viva Connections** - Best for: organizations already on Microsoft 365 - Strong internal portal/intranet plus document management and knowledge bases - Weakness: more complex to set up and maintain 4. **Happeo** - Best for: Google Workspace-centric companies - Combines intranet, social updates, and knowledge sharing in one platform - Good for internal communication and employee experience 5. **LumApps** - Best for: enterprise intranets with knowledge management - Strong branded intranet, employee communication, and content hubs - Better suited to larger organizations ### Good lighter-weight wiki/intranet tools - **Slite** — clean wiki + team hub, simpler than Confluence - **Guru** — excellent knowledge base, but less of a full intranet - **Nuclino** — fast and simple for internal docs and knowledge sharing ### Quick recommendation - **Best overall for enterprises:** **SharePoint + Viva Connections** - **Best overall for knowledge teams:** **Confluence** - **Best simple all-in-one:** **Notion** - **Best Google Workspace option:** **Happeo** - **Best polished intranet:** **LumApps** If you want, I can also give you a **top 5 ranked by company size** or **by budget**.
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If you need **one system for both wiki + intranet**, these are the strongest options: 1. **Microsoft SharePoint** — best if you already live in Microsoft 365. Microsoft says a SharePoint team site can act as a wiki, and SharePoint is positioned as an intranet platform. ([support.microsoft.com](https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/office/create-and-edit-a-wiki-dc64f9c2-d1a2-44b5-ac59-b9d535551a32?utm_source=openai)) 2. **Atlassian Confluence + Refined** — best for structured knowledge with a more polished intranet front end. Atlassian calls Confluence a wiki/intranet workspace, and Refined adds branded intranet sites on top of Confluence. ([atlassian.com](https://www.atlassian.com/software/confluence/use-cases/wiki?utm_source=openai)) 3. **Notion** — best for teams that want a lightweight all-in-one workspace. Notion says it combines wiki, projects, and docs in one workspace. ([info.notion.so](https://info.notion.so/switch/notion-vs-confluence?utm_source=openai)) 4. **LumApps** — best for enterprise employee communication + knowledge hub needs. LumApps describes itself as an intranet platform and emphasizes knowledge management / knowledge base use cases. ([wfh.lumapps.com](https://wfh.lumapps.com/?utm_source=openai)) 5. **Workvivo** — best for employee experience plus internal comms. Workvivo says it combines internal communication, engagement, recognition, intranet, and includes knowledge base/wiki capabilities. ([workvivo.com](https://www.workvivo.com/the-employee-experience-platform?utm_source=openai)) 6. **Happeo** — best for Google Workspace-heavy orgs. Happeo promotes pages, channels, and a central intranet/knowledge hub experience. ([happeo.com](https://www.happeo.com/customer-stories/dirox-creates-waves-of-intranet-innovation-with-happeo?utm_source=openai)) **Quick pick:** - **Microsoft shop:** SharePoint - **Documentation-first:** Confluence + Refined - **Simplest all-in-one:** Notion - **Enterprise comms + intranet:** LumApps or Workvivo - **Google Workspace:** Happeo If you want, I can narrow this to the **best 3 for your org size, budget, and stack**.
Which enterprise wiki platforms are best when comparing self-hosted and cloud options? comparison
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned
Here are the best enterprise wiki options, split by **cloud** and **self-hosted**: ## Best cloud platforms - **Atlassian Confluence Cloud** — best all-around enterprise wiki for teams already using Jira/Atlassian. - **Microsoft SharePoint / Viva Engage knowledge spaces** — best if you’re deep in Microsoft 365. - **Guru** — great for internal knowledge bases and fast search/verification. - **Notion** — best for lightweight, flexible docs; less “enterprise wiki” and more collaborative workspace. - **Slab** — strong modern wiki for startups and mid-market teams. ## Best self-hosted platforms - **Atlassian Confluence Data Center** — best enterprise-grade self-hosted option if you want Confluence without SaaS. - **XWiki** — best open-source enterprise wiki with strong customization and permissions. - **BookStack** — best simple, clean, self-hosted wiki for internal documentation. - **MediaWiki** — best for highly scalable, very customizable wiki-style knowledge bases. - **DokuWiki** — best low-overhead, file-based self-hosted wiki. ## Quick recommendation - **Best cloud overall:** **Confluence Cloud** - **Best self-hosted overall:** **XWiki** - **Best for Microsoft shops:** **SharePoint** - **Best simple self-hosted docs:** **BookStack** - **Best open-source at scale:** **MediaWiki** ## Cloud vs self-hosted **Cloud is better if you want:** - less maintenance - faster setup - automatic updates - easier remote access **Self-hosted is better if you need:** - full data control - strict compliance - custom integrations - on-prem or private network deployment If you want, I can give you a **top 5 by company size** or a **feature-by-feature comparison table**.
retrieval Mentioned
If you want the **best enterprise wiki** choice, I’d split it like this: - **Best cloud enterprise wiki:** **Confluence Cloud** — strongest if you want a mature enterprise platform, admin controls, and Atlassian ecosystem integration. Atlassian also says Confluence Cloud is their main cloud offering, while **Confluence Data Center** is their self-managed option. ([support.atlassian.com](https://support.atlassian.com/confluence-cloud/docs/migrate-from-confluence-cloud-to-server/?utm_source=openai)) - **Best self-hosted enterprise wiki:** **Confluence Data Center** — best if you need self-managed deployment with enterprise-scale features. Atlassian describes it as a self-managed Confluence instance. ([support.atlassian.com](https://support.atlassian.com/confluence-cloud/docs/migrate-from-confluence-cloud-to-server/?utm_source=openai)) - **Best fully self-hosted open source wiki:** **BookStack** — simple to run, MIT licensed, and built specifically for self-hosting, with LDAP/SAML2/OIDC support for enterprise environments. ([bookstackapp.com](https://www.bookstackapp.com/?utm_source=openai)) - **Best highly customizable self-hosted wiki:** **MediaWiki** — good if you want maximum flexibility and are willing to invest in setup/admin work; MediaWiki’s enterprise hub explicitly frames it around internal knowledge sharing, access control, and integration. ([mediawiki.org](https://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/Enterprise_hub)) - **Best cloud-only modern docs/wiki:** **GitBook** — strong for technical docs and enterprise controls, but it’s hosted on Google Cloud rather than self-hosted. ([gitbook.com](https://gitbook.com/docs/policies/privacy-and-security/security/security-faq?utm_source=openai)) - **Best lightweight cloud wiki:** **Slab** — polished and easy for teams, but also cloud-hosted rather than self-hosted. ([slab.com](https://slab.com/solutions/wiki/?utm_source=openai)) - **Best all-in-one cloud knowledge workspace:** **Notion** — great for company knowledge and AI/search, but it’s cloud-only; enterprise features include SAML SSO and data residency. ([notion.com](https://www.notion.com/enterprise?utm_source=openai)) **Quick rule of thumb** - Need **self-hosted**: choose **Confluence Data Center** if you want enterprise polish, or **BookStack** if you want simpler/open source. - Need **cloud**: choose **Confluence Cloud** for enterprise depth, **Notion** for flexibility, or **GitBook** for docs-centric teams. ([support.atlassian.com](https://support.atlassian.com/confluence-cloud/docs/migrate-from-confluence-cloud-to-server/?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can turn this into a **ranked shortlist by company size** or **by security/compliance needs**.
How do I organize company policies in an enterprise wiki platform? problem
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
A good enterprise wiki setup for company policies is: - **Create a top-level “Policies” hub** - Split into: **HR**, **IT/Security**, **Finance**, **Legal/Compliance**, **Operations** - **Use a standard policy page template** - Purpose - Scope - Policy statement - Procedures - Owner - Effective date / review date - Related forms or FAQs - **Add clear metadata** - Department, policy type, region, status, version, last reviewed - **Control permissions** - Open read access for employees, edit access for policy owners only - **Use versioning and approvals** - Keep one published version, archive old ones - **Link related content** - Example: “Expense Policy” links to “Travel Policy” and “Expense Report Form” - **Make policies searchable** - Use tags and consistent titles like `HR-Leave-001` - **Set review cycles** - Quarterly or annual review reminders Good platforms for this: - **Atlassian Confluence** + **Scroll Documents** or **Comala Document Management** - **Microsoft SharePoint** for Microsoft 365-heavy companies - **Notion** for smaller teams, though less ideal for strict approval workflows - **Guru** for policy Q&A and knowledge access - **Slab** for clean internal documentation If you want, I can give you a sample **policy wiki structure/template** you can copy into Confluence or SharePoint.
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A good enterprise wiki for policies should be **easy to find, hard to misuse, and simple to maintain**. ### Recommended structure - **Top-level categories** - HR / People - IT / Security - Finance / Procurement - Legal / Compliance - Operations - Workplace / Facilities - **Within each category** - Overview - Policy pages - Procedures / SOPs - Forms / templates - FAQs ### Page design For each policy page, use a standard template: - **Title** - **Purpose** - **Scope** - **Policy statement** - **Procedures** - **Roles & responsibilities** - **Exceptions / approvals** - **Related documents** - **Owner** - **Effective date** - **Review date** - **Version history** ### Navigation - Use a **master policy index** with filters by department, topic, and audience. - Add **tags/metadata** like: - department - location - employee group - status: draft / active / archived - compliance area - Link related pages heavily so users can move from policy → procedure → form. ### Governance - Assign a **policy owner** for every page. - Set a **review cadence** (e.g. quarterly or annually). - Keep **one source of truth**; archive old versions instead of editing them in place. - Use **approval workflow** before publishing changes. ### Usability tips - Write in plain language. - Put the most important rule at the top. - Keep policies separate from training guides and how-to docs. - Use search-friendly titles, like: - “Remote Work Policy” - “Expense Reimbursement Policy” - “Password and Access Control Policy” ### Common mistake to avoid Don’t organize by who wrote the policy. Organize by **how employees look for it**. If you want, I can also give you: 1. a **sample wiki taxonomy**, or 2. a **policy page template** you can paste into Confluence/Notion/SharePoint.
How can I make internal documentation easier to search and maintain? problem
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Make it easier by combining **structure + tooling + governance**: - **Use one docs home:** pick a single source of truth like **Notion**, **Confluence**, **GitBook**, or **Slab**. - **Standardize page structure:** use templates for: - purpose - owner - last reviewed - related links - steps / FAQs - **Add metadata:** tags, team, system, audience, status (draft/active/deprecated). - **Write for search:** use clear titles, common synonyms, and headings people would actually type. - **Break docs into smaller pages:** one topic per page; link related pages instead of long monoliths. - **Keep a docs index:** a curated landing page with the most-used docs and categories. - **Set ownership + review cadence:** every page should have an owner and a “review every 90 days” rule. - **Archive aggressively:** move outdated content to an archive folder or label it deprecated. - **Use good search tech:** if you host docs yourself, **Algolia DocSearch** is excellent; for developer docs, **Docusaurus** or **MkDocs Material** are strong. - **Automate freshness checks:** use tools like **Atlassian Confluence reminders**, **Notion reminders**, or a simple GitHub action for docs-as-code. If you want, I can recommend the best setup for your team size and whether your docs are more **internal ops**, **engineering**, or **company-wide**.
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Make it: - **Structured**: one topic per page, consistent headings, templates. - **Search-friendly**: clear titles, keywords in first paragraph, avoid vague names like “misc.” - **Easy to update**: assign owners, review dates, and a changelog. - **Single-source**: keep one canonical doc per topic; link out instead of copying. - **Tagged**: use labels/metadata for team, system, status, and audience. - **Readable**: short sections, bullets, examples, and “last updated” dates. A good setup: 1. **Define a taxonomy** — team / system / process / audience / status. 2. **Use templates** — for runbooks, SOPs, FAQs, architecture notes. 3. **Standardize titles** — e.g. `Service name — purpose`. 4. **Add summaries** — 2–3 lines at the top of every page. 5. **Create an index** — landing pages and curated links. 6. **Set governance** — owners, review cadence, archive stale docs. 7. **Optimize for search** — synonyms, acronyms spelled out once, searchable headings. If you want, I can give you: - a **documentation template**, or - a **searchable wiki structure** for Notion/Confluence/GitHub Docs.
How do I keep procedures updated across a growing team? problem
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Use a **single source of truth** and a **repeatable update loop**. ### What works - **Put every procedure in one place** Good tools: **Trainual**, **Process Street**, **SweetProcess**, **Confluence**, or **Notion**. - **Assign an owner to each procedure** One person is accountable for keeping it current. - **Set review dates** Example: every 90 days, or after any major system/process change. - **Make updates part of change management** If a tool, policy, or workflow changes, the SOP gets updated the same day. - **Use version history** Keep old versions so the team can see what changed. - **Collect feedback from the team** Add a “suggest edit” button or a simple form. - **Train with short demos** Record quick walkthroughs with **Loom** and link them inside the procedure. - **Announce changes in one channel** Use **Slack** or **Microsoft Teams** with a “process-updates” channel. ### Simple system 1. Create procedure in **Notion/Trainual** 2. Assign owner + review date 3. Team uses it 4. Collect issues/edits 5. Owner updates it 6. Notify team ### Best fit by team size - **Small team:** Notion + Loom + Slack - **Growing ops team:** Trainual or Process Street - **Larger company:** Confluence + Slack + a formal review calendar If you want, I can suggest the **best tool stack for your team size and industry**.
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Use a **single source of truth** and make updates part of the work, not a separate project. **Simple system:** 1. **Centralize procedures** in one place (wiki, Notion, Confluence, etc.). 2. **Assign an owner** for each procedure. 3. **Review on a schedule** — e.g. every 30/60/90 days. 4. **Tie updates to change events**: new tool, new policy, new hire feedback, incident, or process change. 5. **Use versioning** so people know what changed and when. 6. **Make it easy to report gaps** with a “suggest edit” or “flag outdated” link. 7. **Train managers** to reinforce the current version with their teams. 8. **Audit a few procedures monthly** to catch drift. **Best practice:** keep procedures short, task-based, and owned by the team that actually uses them. If you want, I can give you: - a **procedure update workflow**, or - a **template for SOP ownership and review**.
How do I prevent knowledge from getting lost when employees leave? problem
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Use a **system, not memory**: 1. **Document the “why” and “how”** - Create short SOPs, checklists, runbooks, and decision logs. - Require owners for every critical process. 2. **Capture knowledge continuously** - Record quick walkthroughs with **Loom** or **Tella**. - Store docs in **Confluence**, **Notion**, or **Guru**. 3. **Standardize handoffs** - Use exit checklists, project summaries, and “what I know” templates. - Require 2-week overlap when possible. 4. **Make knowledge searchable** - Use one source of truth, not scattered Google Docs and Slack. - Tag docs by team, project, system, and process. 5. **Cross-train** - Make sure every critical task has at least 2 people who can do it. - Rotate ownership periodically. 6. **Review before people leave** - Run a structured offboarding interview: - What breaks often? - What’s undocumented? - Who should know this? - What are the top risks? Good stacks: - **Confluence + Jira** for structured teams - **Notion** for lighter, flexible documentation - **Guru** for in-workflow knowledge capture - **Microsoft SharePoint + Teams** if you’re already in Microsoft 365 If you want, I can give you a **1-page employee offboarding knowledge template**.
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Use a **knowledge transfer system**, not just exit interviews. **What works:** 1. **Document critical processes** - SOPs, checklists, templates, decision rules. - Store in one searchable place. 2. **Make knowledge share part of the job** - Weekly notes, project docs, “how I do this” pages. - Don’t wait until someone resigns. 3. **Use a handoff process** - Require a transition doc: key contacts, current status, risks, passwords/tools, recurring tasks. - Pair the departing employee with their replacement or backup. 4. **Cross-train** - Every critical role should have at least one backup. - Rotate responsibilities occasionally. 5. **Record tribal knowledge** - Short screen recordings, Loom-style walkthroughs, meeting summaries. - Capture “why,” not just “how.” 6. **Assign ownership** - Each process should have a named owner responsible for keeping docs current. 7. **Reward documentation** - Treat good docs and mentoring as real performance contributions. **Simple rule:** if only one person knows it, it’s a risk. If you want, I can give you a **1-page offboarding checklist** or a **knowledge retention policy template**.
How can I build a single source of truth for company documentation? problem
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Build it around **one canonical home** for docs, then make everything else point back to it. ### 1) Pick one primary system Choose **one** place where approved docs live: - **Confluence** — best for engineering-heavy orgs - **Notion** — best for fast-moving teams and lightweight docs - **Guru** — best if you want verified knowledge + browser search - **Google Drive** — okay for small teams, but weaker as a true knowledge base **Rule:** if it’s official, it lives there. If it’s elsewhere, it’s a draft or a pointer. ### 2) Define doc types Separate by purpose: - **Policies** (HR, security, legal) - **Processes** (how work gets done) - **Product/technical docs** - **Team SOPs** - **Meeting notes / drafts** ### 3) Set ownership Every page needs: - **Owner** - **Last reviewed date** - **Next review date** - **Status**: Draft / Approved / Deprecated ### 4) Create a simple structure Example: - Home - Policies - How-to / SOPs - Product - Engineering - People / HR - Templates - Archive ### 5) Use templates Standardize pages with a template like: - Purpose - Scope - Steps - Links - Owner - Review date ### 6) Make search and linking easy - Use clear titles - Add tags only if needed - Link related docs - Avoid duplicated pages; replace duplicates with a canonical link ### 7) Add governance Set rules: - Only owners can approve changes - Drafts expire if not reviewed - Deprecated docs must be archived, not deleted silently - Monthly or quarterly review cycle ### 8) Migrate in phases Don’t move everything at once: 1. Start with highest-use docs 2. Consolidate duplicates 3. Mark old docs as archived 4. Redirect users to the canonical page ### 9) Integrate where people work Good options: - **Slack + Notion/Confluence/Guru** - **Google Workspace** - **Jira** for engineering workflows - **OneDrive/SharePoint** if you’re Microsoft-based ### 10) Measure adoption Track: - Search success rate - Duplicate-doc count - % docs reviewed on time - Most viewed docs - Time to find information If you want, I can recommend a **best-fit stack** for your company size and tools (e.g. 20-person startup, 200-person ops team, engineering org, etc.).
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Build it like a product, not a folder. **Core idea:** one canonical home for docs, with clear ownership, versioning, and a publishing workflow. ### 1) Define the system - Pick **one primary platform**: Notion, Confluence, Slab, GitBook, or a docs site. - Decide what belongs there: - policies - processes / SOPs - onboarding - product / engineering docs - templates - Everything else becomes a **source**, not the truth. ### 2) Establish ownership For every doc, assign: - **owner** - **review date** - **last updated** - **status**: draft / approved / deprecated If no owner exists, the doc shouldn’t be treated as authoritative. ### 3) Create a publishing workflow Use a simple flow: **draft → review → approved → published → archived** Make it hard to bypass approval for important docs. ### 4) Set doc standards Standardize: - naming conventions - page structure - templates - tags / categories - change log format Example template sections: - Purpose - Scope - Steps - Exceptions - Owner - Last reviewed ### 5) Prevent duplication - Link to the canonical doc instead of copying content. - Archive old versions. - Add a banner like: “This page is deprecated; see [canonical doc].” ### 6) Build search and navigation A single source of truth fails if people can’t find things. - strong homepage - clear taxonomy - search-friendly titles - “start here” pages for each team ### 7) Add governance Run a monthly or quarterly doc review: - stale docs - broken links - conflicting guidance - missing owners ### 8) Integrate with work Docs should live where work happens: - link docs in tickets - require doc updates in change requests - reference docs in onboarding and meeting notes ### 9) Measure it Track: - doc freshness - % docs with owners - search success rate - number of duplicate pages - time to find key info ### 10) Make one thing authoritative For each domain, define the canonical source: - HR policies → HR handbook - engineering standards → engineering docs - product decisions → decision log - customer-facing answers → support knowledge base If you want, I can also give you: 1. a **recommended tool stack**, or 2. a **step-by-step rollout plan** for a 50–500 person company.
How do I manage permissions for sensitive internal documents? problem
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Use **least-privilege access** and **role-based permissions**. **Practical setup** - Put sensitive docs in a system with **SSO + MFA** - Use **groups/roles**, not individual sharing - Separate docs by sensitivity: **public / internal / confidential / restricted** - Enable **audit logs**, **version history**, and **expiration links** - Review access **monthly or quarterly** - Remove access automatically when people change roles or leave **Good tools** - **Microsoft 365 / SharePoint / OneDrive** for most orgs - **Google Workspace + Drive** for simpler collaboration - For tighter control: **Box Enterprise** or **Dropbox Business** - For full document governance: **Egnyte** or **M-Files** **If the docs are very sensitive** - Require **MFA** - Restrict downloads/printing - Use **watermarking** - Store in a **DLP-enabled** platform like **Microsoft Purview** or **Google Vault** If you want, I can give you a **simple permission model** for a small team or a **policy template**.
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Use **least privilege**: - **Classify** documents: public / internal / confidential / restricted. - **Limit access by role**: only people who need it for work. - **Use groups, not individuals**: manage access through teams. - **Separate storage by sensitivity**: different folders/sites for different levels. - **Require MFA** for all accounts with access. - **Set expiry/review dates** for access, especially for contractors. - **Audit logs**: track who viewed, downloaded, shared, or edited. - **Disable broad sharing**: no public links; restrict external sharing. - **Encrypt** at rest and in transit. - **DLP rules**: block copying, forwarding, or downloading where possible. - **Regular access reviews**: remove stale access promptly. - **Incident process**: define what happens if a document is mis-shared. If you want, I can also give you: 1. a **simple policy template**, or 2. a **practical setup** for Google Drive, Microsoft 365, or SharePoint.
How can I improve employee onboarding with internal documentation? problem
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Improve onboarding by turning internal docs into a **self-serve onboarding system**: ### 1) Create a clear onboarding hub Use one home base in **Notion**, **Confluence**, or **Guru** with: - company overview - team/org chart - first-week checklist - role-specific learning paths - links to policies, tools, and FAQs ### 2) Make docs task-based Write docs around what new hires need to **do**, not just what they need to **know**: - “How to request access” - “How we ship a feature” - “How to file expenses” - “How to handle customers” ### 3) Add role-specific onboarding paths Separate docs by function: - Sales - Engineering - Support - Marketing Each path should include goals for day 1, week 1, and month 1. ### 4) Use short, searchable articles Keep pages: - short - titled clearly - searchable with tags and categories - updated regularly ### 5) Include videos and walkthroughs Pair written docs with quick demos using: - **Loom** for async video - **Scribe** for auto-generated step-by-step guides ### 6) Assign doc owners Every important page should have: - an owner - last-updated date - review cadence ### 7) Build a FAQ from real questions Track repeat onboarding questions in Slack/Teams and turn them into docs. ### 8) Measure onboarding success Track: - time to first task completion - time to productivity - common doc searches - repeated questions - new hire satisfaction ### Good stack examples - **Notion + Loom + Scribe** - **Confluence + Jira + Loom** - **Guru** for searchable internal knowledge If you want, I can also give you a **sample onboarding doc structure** or a **30-60-90 day template**.
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Use internal documentation to make onboarding **self-serve, consistent, and role-specific**. ### What to document - **Company basics:** mission, org chart, tools, acronyms, key contacts - **Role guides:** what success looks like in 30/60/90 days - **Step-by-step processes:** common workflows, approvals, FAQs - **Tool guides:** how to access systems, templates, and where files live - **Policies:** time off, security, expense rules, communication norms - **Examples:** good work samples, checklists, past projects ### How to improve onboarding with docs - Build a **new hire hub** with everything in one place - Turn tacit knowledge into **checklists and how-tos** - Write docs for **specific roles**, not just general company info - Keep pages **short, searchable, and current** - Add **screenshots, examples, and “if/then” guidance** - Assign a **doc owner** for each page so it doesn’t rot - Use docs to reduce repeated questions from managers and HR - Make onboarding a **guided path**: Day 1, Week 1, Month 1 ### Good structure 1. Welcome and overview 2. Setup tasks 3. Team and role expectations 4. Core processes 5. FAQ and support contacts ### Best practice After each onboarding cycle, ask new hires: - What was confusing? - What did you have to ask someone? - What doc was missing? Then update the docs immediately. If you want, I can also give you: - a **sample onboarding documentation outline** - a **Notion/Confluence template** - or a **30/60/90-day onboarding plan**.
How do I reduce duplicated documentation across departments? problem
0/2 mentions 2 responses
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To reduce duplicated documentation across departments: 1. **Create a single source of truth** Pick one primary repository for policies, SOPs, FAQs, and templates. Examples: **Confluence**, **Notion**, or **SharePoint**. 2. **Use shared templates** Standardize doc formats so teams fill in the same sections instead of reinventing them. 3. **Assign document owners** Every doc should have one accountable owner and a review date. 4. **Build a reusable content library** Store common sections like legal boilerplate, onboarding steps, and product descriptions as modular blocks. 5. **Map overlap first** Audit existing docs and identify where multiple departments maintain the same content. 6. **Set governance rules** Decide: what lives centrally, what can be department-specific, and when a new doc is allowed. 7. **Link instead of copy** Encourage teams to reference the master doc rather than duplicating it. 8. **Automate discoverability** Use search and tagging so people can find the right doc fast. Tools like **Atlassian Confluence**, **Guru**, or **Microsoft SharePoint** help here. If you want, I can give you a simple **documentation governance policy** template you can use internally.
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Reduce it by treating documentation as a **shared product**, not separate department files. **What to do:** - **Create one source of truth** for each topic (policy, process, FAQ, SOP). - **Assign document owners** and reviewers across departments. - **Use modular docs**: one canonical page + department-specific add-ons. - **Standardize templates** so everyone writes the same way. - **Build a content map** to identify duplicates and overlaps. - **Link instead of copy**: reference the master doc rather than re-creating it. - **Set review cycles** so outdated copies get removed. - **Use a central wiki/knowledge base** with permissions and search. **Simple rule:** If two departments need the same info, keep **one maintained version** and let both teams consume it. **Best quick win:** Start with the top 10 most duplicated docs, merge them, and assign owners. If you want, I can give you a **step-by-step cleanup process** or a **doc governance model**.
How can I standardize SOPs in one place? problem
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Use a **single source of truth** for all SOPs and force every team to work from it. ### Best way to standardize SOPs 1. **Pick one SOP platform** - **Notion** (easy, flexible) - **Confluence** (best for larger teams) - **Guru** (great for searchable internal knowledge) - **Trainual** (excellent for SOPs + onboarding) 2. **Create one SOP template** Include: - Purpose - Scope - Owner - Step-by-step process - Tools needed - Exceptions - Version/date - Approval 3. **Set governance** - One owner per SOP - Review every 6 or 12 months - Approval before publishing - Archive old versions 4. **Use version control** - Keep edits in one place only - Don’t allow random copies in Google Docs, email, or Slack 5. **Link SOPs to training** - Use **Trainual**, **Lessonly**, or **Docebo** - Make completion part of onboarding 6. **Make it searchable** - Tag by department, process, and system - Use a strong search tool like **Confluence** or **Guru** ### Simple recommendation - Small team: **Notion** - Mid-size ops team: **Trainual** - Large company: **Confluence + a document approval process** If you want, I can give you a **ready-to-use SOP template** or help you choose the best platform for your team size.
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Use a **single source of truth** for all SOPs, then enforce a standard format. **Simple setup:** 1. **Pick one home** Use one platform only: Notion, Confluence, SharePoint, Google Drive, or a wiki. 2. **Create a SOP template** Standard sections: - Title - Owner - Purpose - Scope - Trigger - Steps - Tools/links - Exceptions - QA/checklist - Version/date 3. **Use one naming system** Example: `OPS-ONBOARD-001 Employee Onboarding`. 4. **Assign owners** Every SOP needs one accountable owner and a review cadence. 5. **Add version control** Track draft, approved, retired, and last reviewed date. 6. **Use tags/categories** Group by team, process, system, or priority. 7. **Lock publishing rules** Only approved SOPs go live; old versions are archived. 8. **Link from everywhere else** Don’t copy SOPs into emails/docs—link back to the master page. **Best practice:** Make the SOP library searchable and only allow edits through a controlled review process. If you want, I can give you: - a **ready-to-use SOP template** - a **Notion/Confluence structure** - or a **full SOP governance policy**.
How do I keep remote teams aligned on internal processes? problem
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
To keep remote teams aligned on internal processes: - **Document the process once** in a single source of truth: **Notion**, **Confluence**, or **Google Workspace**. - **Make it visual** with step-by-step SOPs, checklists, and flowcharts. - **Use async updates** so everyone sees changes: **Slack**, **Microsoft Teams**, or **Loom** for short walkthroughs. - **Assign clear owners** for each process and decision. - **Set review cadences**: weekly ops check-ins, monthly process audits. - **Track work in one system** like **Asana**, **Jira**, or **Monday.com**. - **Standardize onboarding** with playbooks and recorded demos. - **Version-control process docs** so people know what’s current. Best simple stack: **Notion + Slack + Asana + Loom**. If you want, I can also give you a **sample remote team SOP template**.
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Use a **single source of truth** and make the process easy to follow. - **Document everything**: SOPs, checklists, decision rules, handoff steps. - **Standardize communication**: same tools, same formats, same response expectations. - **Clarify ownership**: every process has one clear owner. - **Use recurring cadence**: weekly syncs, async status updates, monthly process reviews. - **Make work visible**: shared boards in Asana, Jira, Notion, or Trello. - **Train and reinforce**: onboarding, examples, and quick refreshers. - **Measure compliance**: track missed steps, cycle time, rework, and errors. - **Keep it lightweight**: if a process is too hard to follow, people won’t follow it. A simple rule: **document → assign → review → improve**. If you want, I can turn this into a **remote team operating playbook** or a **1-page process alignment template**.
How much does an enterprise wiki platform cost? transactional
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Enterprise wiki pricing usually ranges from **$5 to $25+ per user/month**, but can go much higher for large deployments. ### Common examples - **Atlassian Confluence**: about **$6.05/user/mo** (Standard), **$11.55/user/mo** (Premium), and **custom enterprise pricing** for Enterprise. - **Notion**: around **$18/user/mo** on Business; Enterprise is custom. - **Guru**: typically **custom pricing**, often starts around **$10–$15/user/mo** in practice. - **Slite**: around **$10–$15/user/mo**; enterprise is custom. - **Microsoft SharePoint Online**: often bundled with **Microsoft 365**, so cost depends on your license (commonly **$6–$22/user/mo** for business/enterprise plans). ### What drives the cost - Number of users - SSO/SAML, SCIM, audit logs, compliance - Advanced permissions and analytics - Storage, API access, integrations - Dedicated support / SLA / custom onboarding ### Rule of thumb - **Small team:** $0–$10/user/mo - **Mid-market:** $10–$25/user/mo - **Enterprise:** **custom**, often **$25k–$250k+/year** depending on size and requirements If you want, I can compare **Confluence vs Notion vs SharePoint vs Guru** for enterprise use.
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Enterprise wiki platforms usually price in one of three ways: **per user/month**, **custom enterprise quote**, or **bundle with a larger suite**. Common entry points are about **$5/user/month** for SharePoint Plan 1, **$20/user/month** for Notion Business, while **enterprise tiers are typically custom-priced**. ([microsoft.com](https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/microsoft-365/sharepoint/compare-sharepoint-plans)) A practical budget range: - **Small/medium team:** about **$5–$20 per user/month**. ([microsoft.com](https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/microsoft-365/sharepoint/compare-sharepoint-plans)) - **Enterprise:** usually **custom quote**; for example, Atlassian says Confluence Enterprise pricing is available only by contacting sales, and Document360 also uses custom quotes for its higher tiers. ([atlassian.com](https://www.atlassian.com/en/software/confluence/pricing?utm_source=openai)) - **Large deployments:** Atlassian’s backup/restore pricing page shows Confluence annual estimates of **$5,000 for 1,000 users**, **$13,000 for 3,000**, **$21,000 for 5,000**, and **$39,000 for 10,000**. ([atlassian.com](https://www.atlassian.com/platform/infrastructure/backup/pricing?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can narrow this to a **specific platform** (Confluence, Notion, SharePoint, Document360, etc.) and estimate cost for your team size.
Is there a free enterprise wiki platform for teams? transactional
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned
Yes — a few good free options for teams are: - **Wiki.js** — modern, open-source, easy to self-host - **BookStack** — very user-friendly, great for internal docs - **MediaWiki** — the classic wiki platform, very flexible but more technical - **DokuWiki** — simple, lightweight, no database needed If you want the best “enterprise-style” free option for most teams, I’d start with **BookStack** or **Wiki.js**. If you want, I can also suggest the best one based on your setup (self-hosted, cloud, SSO, permissions, etc.).
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Yes—but usually with limits. Best options: - **Confluence Free**: free forever for **up to 10 users** with **2 GB storage**. ([atlassian.com](https://www.atlassian.com/en/software/confluence/pricing?utm_source=openai)) - **Slab Free**: free forever for **up to 10 users + guests**. ([slab.com](https://slab.com/pricing/?utm_source=openai)) - **BookStack**: **fully free, open source, self-hosted**; no paid version. Good if you’re okay hosting it yourself. ([bookstackapp.com](https://www.bookstackapp.com/?utm_source=openai)) If you want a polished hosted product, **Confluence** is the safest “enterprise-style” free option. If you want truly free at scale and can self-host, **BookStack** is the best fit. ([atlassian.com](https://www.atlassian.com/en/software/confluence/pricing?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can recommend the best one for your team size and whether you need SSO, permissions, or self-hosting.
What is the pricing for enterprise wiki software? transactional
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Enterprise wiki pricing varies a lot by vendor, user count, and security needs. Typical ranges: - **Atlassian Confluence**: about **$6–$12/user/month** for standard plans; **Enterprise** is **custom pricing** - **Notion**: around **$12–$18/user/month**; **Enterprise** is **custom** - **Guru**: usually **~$15–$20/user/month**; **Enterprise** is **custom** - **Slite**: around **$10–$15/user/month**; **Enterprise** is **custom** - **Microsoft SharePoint Online**: often bundled with **Microsoft 365**, starting around **$6–$22/user/month** depending on plan - **Nuclino**: about **$5–$8/user/month**; enterprise/custom options available Typical enterprise-level add-ons that raise cost: - SSO/SAML - SCIM provisioning - Audit logs - Advanced permissions - Data residency/compliance - Dedicated support / SLA Rule of thumb: - **Small team**: $5–$15/user/month - **Mid-market**: $10–$25/user/month - **Enterprise**: **custom**, often **$20+/user/month equivalent** If you want, I can compare **Confluence vs Notion vs Guru vs SharePoint** for enterprise use.
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Enterprise wiki pricing usually falls into two buckets: **per-user SaaS pricing** for mid-market tools, and **custom sales quotes** for larger enterprise deployments. Typical public prices today range from about **$5–$20 per user/month**, while enterprise tiers are often **custom**. ([atlassian.com](https://www.atlassian.com/en/software/confluence/pricing)) Examples: - **Confluence**: Standard starts at **$5.42/user/month**; **Enterprise is quote-based**. ([atlassian.com](https://www.atlassian.com/en/software/confluence/pricing?utm_source=openai)) - **Notion**: Business is **$20/member/month**; **Enterprise is custom pricing**. ([notion.com](https://www.notion.com/pricing?utm_source=openai)) - **Slab**: Business is **$12.50/user/month billed annually**; **Enterprise is custom**. ([slab.com](https://slab.com/pricing/)) - **Nuclino**: Business is a paid tier with enterprise/security features like SSO and audit logs; large teams can contact sales for higher-volume needs. ([nuclino.com](https://www.nuclino.com/pricing?utm_source=openai)) - **SharePoint Online**: **Plan 1 is $5/user/month**, and Microsoft 365 bundles that include SharePoint start higher. ([microsoft.com](https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/microsoft-365/sharepoint/compare-sharepoint-plans?utm_source=openai)) Rule of thumb: if you want a simple internal wiki for a small team, expect **$5–$15/user/month**; if you need **SSO, SCIM, audit logs, data controls, and enterprise support**, expect a **custom quote**. ([atlassian.com](https://www.atlassian.com/en/software/confluence/pricing)) If you want, I can give you a **shortlist by company size** (startup, 50-user team, enterprise) with the best-value options.
Which enterprise wiki platforms have a free tier? transactional
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned
A few enterprise wiki platforms offer a **free tier** (usually for small teams / limited users): - **Confluence Cloud (Atlassian)** — free for up to **10 users** - **Notion** — free personal/workspace tier; often used as an internal wiki, but admin/security features are limited - **ClickUp Docs** — free tier available; docs/wiki use is supported - **Nuclino** — free plan available with limits on items/storage - **GitBook** — free tier available; good for docs/wiki-style knowledge bases - **Slab** — no true free enterprise tier for most org use, but has trials/promos occasionally - **Outline** — typically paid/self-hosted; no standard free hosted tier - **DokuWiki** / **MediaWiki** — free/open source, but self-hosted rather than SaaS If you want, I can narrow this down to the **best free enterprise wiki options for IT/security, product docs, or internal knowledge bases**.
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Yes — a few enterprise wiki/knowledge-base platforms still have free tiers: - **Confluence Cloud** — free plan for up to **10 users**. ([atlassian.com](https://www.atlassian.com/en/software/confluence/pricing?utm_source=openai)) - **Notion** — has a **Free** plan for individuals/small teams. ([notion.com](https://www.notion.com/pricing?utm_source=openai)) - **Slab** — free for up to **10 users**. ([slab.com](https://slab.com/pricing/?utm_source=openai)) - **Nuclino** — free plan with limits (e.g. **50 items**, **3 canvases**). ([nuclino.com](https://www.nuclino.com/pricing?utm_source=openai)) - **Guru** — offers a **free Starter** plan for up to **10 users**. ([getguru.com](https://www.getguru.com/blog/introducing-guru-starter-free-knowledge-management-for-growing-teams?utm_source=openai)) - **BookStack** — fully **free and open source** if you self-host it. ([bookstackapp.com](https://www.bookstackapp.com/?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can narrow this to the **best free tier for a team wiki**, **best self-hosted option**, or **best with SSO/enterprise controls**.
What are the cheapest enterprise wiki platform options? transactional
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned
If you want the **cheapest enterprise wiki** options, the best value is usually **self-hosted open source** or **low-tier SaaS**. ### Cheapest options to consider 1. **BookStack** - **Very cheap/free** if self-hosted - Clean UI, good for internal docs/wiki use - Great for SMB/enterprise teams that want simple structure 2. **MediaWiki** - **Free** open source - Very scalable, widely proven - More setup/admin overhead than newer tools 3. **DokuWiki** - **Free** open source - Lightweight, no database required - Good if you want low maintenance 4. **Confluence Cloud (Atlassian)** - Cheapest mainstream enterprise SaaS wiki option - Good if you already use Jira/Atlassian - Pricing is per-user and can grow fast 5. **Nuclino** - Usually one of the **lowest-cost hosted wiki tools** - Simple, modern, easy to adopt - Less “enterprise-heavy” than Confluence, but very affordable 6. **Slab** - Competitive SaaS pricing for team knowledge bases - Good UX, less admin burden - Often cheaper than full enterprise platforms ### Best cheap picks by use case - **Absolute lowest cost:** **BookStack** - **Most proven free enterprise wiki:** **MediaWiki** - **Lowest-effort cheap SaaS:** **Nuclino** - **Best if you need enterprise workflows:** **Confluence Cloud** ### Short recommendation If budget is the top priority, start with: - **BookStack** if self-hosting is okay - **Nuclino** if you want hosted and affordable - **Confluence** only if you need Atlassian integration If you want, I can make a **ranked list with estimated per-user pricing** and compare **self-hosted vs SaaS**.
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If you mean **lowest-cost wiki tools that can still work for businesses**, the cheapest options I found are: | Platform | Lowest entry price | Notes | |---|---:|---| | **Nuclino** | **Free**, paid features start from **~$5/user/month** | Lightweight wiki/knowledge base; enterprise-ish controls like SSO, audit log, and security controls are in Business. ([nuclino.com](https://www.nuclino.com/pricing?utm_source=openai)) | | **Confluence Cloud** | **Free** up to 10 users; **Standard $5.42/user/month** (annual billing) | More traditional enterprise wiki; Enterprise is custom pricing. ([atlassian.com](https://www.atlassian.com/en/software/confluence/pricing?utm_source=openai)) | | **Notion** | **Free**; **Plus $10/member/month** | Popular as a wiki, but true enterprise tier is custom pricing. ([notion.com](https://www.notion.com/pricing)) | | **Slite** | **Standard $8/member/month** | Knowledge base/wiki style; Enterprise is custom. ([slite.com](https://slite.com/pricing?utm_source=openai)) | **Cheapest overall:** - **Nuclino** if you want the lowest paid entry point. ([nuclino.com](https://www.nuclino.com/pricing?utm_source=openai)) - **Confluence** if you want the cheapest more “classic enterprise wiki” option. ([atlassian.com](https://www.atlassian.com/en/software/confluence/pricing?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also give you: 1. a **best-by-budget shortlist** for 5, 25, or 100 users, or 2. a **true enterprise features comparison** (SSO, SCIM, audit logs, permissions).
What enterprise wiki platform offers the best value for money? transactional
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned
**Best value for money overall: _Atlassian Confluence_** Why it’s usually the best deal: - Strong enterprise features out of the box - Good integrations with Jira, Slack, Microsoft Teams, etc. - Easy to adopt across teams - Solid admin/security controls - Widely used, so hiring and support are easier **If you want the cheapest serious enterprise option:** - **XWiki** — strong open-source choice, good for self-hosted deployments - **MediaWiki** — very low cost, but more technical and less polished for business users **If you want a more modern, simpler UX:** - **Notion Business/Enterprise** — great usability, but can get pricey at scale and is less traditional as an enterprise wiki - **Slab** — clean and easy, but less comprehensive than Confluence **My quick recommendation:** - **Best value:** Confluence - **Best low-cost self-hosted:** XWiki - **Best simple modern UX:** Notion If you tell me your team size, budget, and whether you need cloud or self-hosted, I can narrow it to the best pick.
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If you want **best value for money**, my pick is: **1) Best overall value for most enterprises: Confluence** - It’s a mature enterprise wiki with unlimited pages/spaces, audit logs, 24/7 support on higher tiers, and enterprise controls like SSO/SCIM via Atlassian Guard. ([atlassian.com](https://www.atlassian.com/en/software/confluence/pricing?utm_source=openai)) - Atlassian’s pricing is per-user and enterprise pricing is custom, so the value depends on your user count and whether you already use Jira/Atlassian. ([atlassian.com](https://www.atlassian.com/en/software/confluence/pricing?utm_source=openai)) **2) Cheapest solid dedicated wiki: Slab** - Public pricing is straightforward: **$6.67/user/month billed annually** for Startup, **$12.50/user/month** for Business, and Enterprise starts at **100+ users** with custom pricing. ([slab.com](https://slab.com/pricing/)) - If you mainly want an internal knowledge base with lower cost and less platform complexity, Slab is usually the best bargain. That’s an inference from its pricing and feature set. ([slab.com](https://slab.com/pricing/)) **3) Best value if you’re already in Microsoft 365: SharePoint** - SharePoint Online starts at **$5/user/month** for Plan 1, and Microsoft 365 Business Standard includes SharePoint plus the broader Microsoft suite at **$12.50/user/month**. ([microsoft.com](https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/microsoft-365/sharepoint/compare-sharepoint-plans)) - For orgs already paying for Microsoft 365, SharePoint can be the best cost-efficient “wiki” option. That’s an inference based on bundle pricing. ([microsoft.com](https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/microsoft-365/sharepoint/compare-sharepoint-plans)) **Bottom line:** - **Standalone wiki:** **Confluence** - **Lowest price dedicated wiki:** **Slab** - **Best if you already use Microsoft 365:** **SharePoint**. ([slab.com](https://slab.com/pricing/)) If you want, I can give you a **3-way pick for your team size and stack** (e.g. Microsoft 365 vs Jira vs “none of the above”).
How much do knowledge base and wiki platforms charge per user? transactional
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It varies a lot, but here are **common per-user prices** for popular **knowledge base / wiki** tools: - **Notion**: about **$12/user/mo** (Plus), **$18/user/mo** (Business) - **Confluence Cloud**: about **$6.05/user/mo** (Standard), **$11.55/user/mo** (Premium) - **Guru**: about **$15/user/mo** (Builder), often quote-based for teams - **Slite**: about **$8/user/mo** (Standard), **$12.50/user/mo** (Premium) - **Nuclino**: about **$5/user/mo** (Standard), **$10/user/mo** (Premium) - **Document360**: usually **quote-based**; often not published per-user - **Helpjuice**: usually **quote-based** - **Coda**: about **$10/user/mo** (Pro), **$30/user/mo** (Team) A few notes: - Many platforms charge per **editor/user**, not per reader. - Enterprise plans are often **custom pricing**. - Some tools are cheaper if you only need internal wiki docs, while support-focused KBs cost more. If you want, I can make a **side-by-side table** of the best options for **small teams, startups, or enterprise**.
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It varies a lot, but common **per-user** prices look like this: - **Confluence**: **$5.42/user/month** (Standard) and **$10.44/user/month** (Premium). ([atlassian.com](https://www.atlassian.com/en/software/confluence/pricing)) - **Notion**: **$10/member/month** (Plus) and **$20/member/month** (Business). ([notion.com](https://www.notion.com/pricing)) - **Helpjuice**: starts at **$249/month for 30 users**, then **$449/month for 100 users** or **$799/month for unlimited users**. ([helpjuice.com](https://helpjuice.com/pricing)) - **Document360**: **quote-based**; pricing isn’t published as a per-user rate on the page. ([document360.com](https://document360.com/pricing/)) So, for many wiki/knowledge base tools, you’ll usually see **about $5–$20 per user/month** for seat-based products, while others are **flat-rate or quote-based**. ([atlassian.com](https://www.atlassian.com/en/software/confluence/pricing)) If you want, I can make a **side-by-side pricing table of the top 10 wiki/KB platforms**.
Are there enterprise wiki platforms with unlimited users? transactional
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned
Yes — a few enterprise wiki platforms offer **unlimited users**, usually either: - **self-hosted / self-managed**, or - **flat-rate cloud plans** that don’t price by seat Examples: - **Confluence (Atlassian)** — unlimited users on **Data Center** (self-hosted). Cloud is seat-based. - **MediaWiki** — fully open source, unlimited users if you self-host it. - **BookStack** — open source, unlimited users when self-hosted. - **DokuWiki** — open source, unlimited users when self-hosted. - **XWiki** — enterprise-friendly, unlimited users on self-hosted or hosted setups depending on provider. - **Notion** — some plans are seat-based, so usually not the best fit if you need truly unlimited users. - **Slab** — typically seat-based, so usually not unlimited. - **Nuclino** — seat-based. If you want **enterprise-grade + unlimited users**, the most common picks are: 1. **Confluence Data Center** 2. **XWiki** 3. **MediaWiki** 4. **BookStack** for a simpler internal wiki If you want, I can narrow this down by: - **self-hosted vs cloud** - **SSO / permissions / audit logs** - **budget** - **best Confluence alternatives**
retrieval Not mentioned
Yes — **some enterprise wiki platforms do offer unlimited-user licensing**, especially self-hosted or data-center editions. For example, **Atlassian Confluence Data Center** can be licensed for an **unlimited number of users**. ([atlassian.com](https://www.atlassian.com/licensing/purchase-licensing?utm_source=openai)) A couple of caveats: - **Confluence Cloud** is tiered; Atlassian says individual cloud products support up to **10,000 users**, while an organization can have **unlimited users** across its cloud sites. ([confluence.atlassian.com](https://confluence.atlassian.com/cloud/functional-differences-in-atlassian-cloud-744721664.html?utm_source=openai)) - Many other wiki tools are priced **per user** and don’t advertise true unlimited-user plans. For example, **Nuclino** charges per user, and **Notion** is also per-seat on paid plans. ([nuclino.com](https://www.nuclino.com/pricing?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can give you a short list of **enterprise wiki platforms with the best fit for unlimited users**, including self-hosted options.
What enterprise wiki platforms offer a trial before purchase? transactional
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Several enterprise wiki platforms offer a trial or free plan before you buy: - **Confluence (Atlassian)** — free trial, widely used for internal knowledge bases. - **Notion Business / Enterprise** — free trial and free tier; popular for team wiki-style docs. - **Guru** — typically offers a demo/trial for enterprise evaluation. - **Document360** — free trial for knowledge base/wiki-style documentation. - **Slite** — free trial, good for team wikis and internal docs. - **Nuclino** — free trial, lightweight enterprise wiki option. - **Tettra** — free trial/demo for internal knowledge management. - **BookStack** — open source/self-hosted, so no purchase trial, but you can test it freely. - **XWiki** — open source with hosted enterprise plans; trial/demo options available. - **Helm** / **Helpjuice** — usually demo/trial available for enterprise customers. If you want, I can narrow this to the **best options for IT teams, SOPs, or company knowledge bases**.
retrieval Not mentioned
Yes — several enterprise wiki / knowledge-base platforms offer a trial before purchase: - **Atlassian Confluence**: **7-day free trial** for Standard or Premium; **30-day trial** for Confluence Data Center. ([atlassian.com](https://www.atlassian.com/en/software/confluence/pricing?utm_source=openai)) - **Document360**: **14-day free trial**, **no credit card required**. ([document360.com](https://document360.com/pricing/?utm_source=openai)) - **Nuclino**: **14-day free trial**, **no credit card required**. ([nuclino.com](https://www.nuclino.com/pricing?utm_source=openai)) - **Guru**: offers a **free trial**; Guru also says larger teams can get **30-day free trials** for Builder/Expert plans. ([getguru.com](https://www.getguru.com/get-started?utm_source=openai)) - **Slab**: **14-day trial** for Startup and Business plans. ([help.slab.com](https://help.slab.com/en/articles/3412482-managing-your-subscription?utm_source=openai)) - **Helpjuice**: **14-day free trial**, **no credit card**. ([helpjuice.com](https://helpjuice.com/sign_up?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can narrow this to the **best enterprise options** based on security, SSO, and admin controls.
Which enterprise wiki platforms are affordable for small teams? transactional
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned
For small teams, the most affordable **enterprise-style wiki platforms** are usually: - **Notion** — very good value, flexible docs/wiki, easy to start small. - **Confluence Cloud (Atlassian)** — classic enterprise wiki; affordable for small teams, especially if you already use Jira. - **Nuclino** — lightweight, simple wiki/knowledge base, often cheaper than full enterprise suites. - **Slab** — polished internal wiki with clean search and permissions; good for small teams. - **BookStack** — open-source and self-hostable, extremely budget-friendly if you have technical support. - **Outline** — modern team wiki, nice UX, good for growing startups; often priced reasonably. - **MediaWiki** — free/open-source, but more admin-heavy and less polished out of the box. - **Guru** — more knowledge base than wiki, but useful for team knowledge sharing; pricing can be moderate. ### Best picks by budget - **Lowest cost:** BookStack, MediaWiki - **Best balance:** Notion, Nuclino, Outline - **Most enterprise-ready:** Confluence Cloud, Guru If you want, I can also rank these by **price**, **ease of use**, or **best for remote teams**.
retrieval Not mentioned
Yes—these are the most affordable **enterprise-style wiki platforms** for small teams right now: | Platform | Why it’s affordable | Notes | |---|---|---| | **Confluence** | Free for up to **10 users**; paid cloud plans available after that. Atlassian also explicitly recommends its free cloud plans for small teams. ([atlassian.com](https://www.atlassian.com/en/software/confluence/pricing?utm_source=openai)) | Best if you want a classic team wiki with enterprise controls. | | **Slab** | Free forever for up to **10 users**; Startup is **$6.67/user/month billed annually**. ([slab.com](https://slab.com/pricing/?utm_source=openai)) | Very strong value for small teams that want a polished internal knowledge base. | | **Nuclino** | Free plan available; Starter adds unlimited items/canvases and paid plans begin at a lower-cost tier. ([nuclino.com](https://www.nuclino.com/pricing?utm_source=openai)) | Good lightweight wiki/knowledge base option. | | **Notion** | Free plan, then **Plus $10/seat/month** and **Business $20/seat/month**. ([notion.com](https://www.notion.com/pricing?utm_source=openai)) | Great if you want docs + wiki + lightweight project work in one place. | | **Zoho Learn** | Official pricing page shows a free option and per-user pricing for paid plans; Zoho markets it as an affordable knowledge/learning platform. ([zoho.com](https://www.zoho.com/learn/pricing.html?utm_source=openai)) | Best budget pick if you also want training/onboarding content. | **My quick picks:** - **Cheapest solid enterprise wiki:** **Slab** - **Best free-to-start enterprise option:** **Confluence** - **Best all-in-one docs/wiki experience:** **Notion** - **Best lightweight/internal knowledge base:** **Nuclino** - **Best budget training + wiki combo:** **Zoho Learn** If you want, I can narrow this down by **team size, must-have features, and budget per user**.

TOM — Top of Mind (15 prompts)

What are the best enterprise wiki platforms for internal documentation?
2/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are the best enterprise wiki platforms for internal documentation: 1. **Confluence (Atlassian)** Best overall for large teams already using Jira/Atlassian. Strong permissions, templates, page hierarchy, and integrations. 2. **Notion** Best for teams that want a flexible all-in-one workspace. Great UX, easy editing, databases, and lightweight knowledge base use. 3. **Guru** Best for fast-moving teams and support/sales documentation. Good browser extension, AI search, and knowledge verification workflows. 4. **Microsoft SharePoint / Viva** Best for organizations already deep in Microsoft 365. Strong enterprise security, compliance, and intranet/document management. 5. **Slab** Best for clean, simple internal docs. Easy to use, modern interface, strong search, and good team knowledge sharing. 6. **Document360** Best when you want a more structured knowledge base with strong versioning, analytics, and publishing controls. 7. **Nuclino** Best for lightweight, fast wiki-style documentation. Simple, collaborative, and easy to navigate. ### Quick picks - **Best enterprise standard:** Confluence - **Best UX/flexibility:** Notion - **Best for knowledge validation:** Guru - **Best for Microsoft shops:** SharePoint - **Best simple team wiki:** Slab If you want, I can also give you a **top 3 by company size** or a **comparison table with pricing and features**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned
Here are the strongest enterprise wiki platforms for internal documentation: ### Best overall **Atlassian Confluence** - Best for: teams already using Jira/Atlassian - Why: mature permissions, great collaboration, strong templates, huge ecosystem - Watch out for: can get cluttered; search/organization needs governance ### Best for Microsoft 365 shops **Microsoft SharePoint + Viva** - Best for: companies standardized on Microsoft 365 - Why: deep Teams/OneDrive/Office integration, solid permissions and intranet/document management - Watch out for: less “wiki-like” and can feel complex to manage ### Best for product/engineering docs **Notion** - Best for: fast-moving teams, startup-to-midmarket internal docs - Why: extremely easy to use, flexible databases/pages, excellent UX - Watch out for: enterprise governance and advanced knowledge architecture are weaker than Confluence/SharePoint ### Best for IT/service knowledge bases **Guru** - Best for: searchable internal knowledge and support workflows - Why: strong browser/search workflow, great for operational knowledge, Slack/Teams integrations - Watch out for: less suitable as a full company wiki/intranet ### Best open-source/self-hosted **MediaWiki** - Best for: highly customizable, self-hosted environments - Why: proven at scale, very flexible, open source - Watch out for: dated UX and higher admin overhead ### Best modern self-hosted wiki **BookStack** - Best for: clean internal documentation on your own infrastructure - Why: simple interface, easy to structure, good editor experience - Watch out for: fewer enterprise collaboration features ## Quick picks - **Most enterprises:** Confluence - **Microsoft-heavy orgs:** SharePoint - **Simple, fast internal docs:** Notion - **Knowledge base for frontline/support teams:** Guru - **Self-hosted/open source:** BookStack or MediaWiki ## What to prioritize Look for: - SSO/SAML, SCIM - Fine-grained permissions - Version history and approval workflows - Strong search - Templates and content governance - Audit logs/compliance If you want, I can also give you: 1. a **top 5 ranked list by company size**, or 2. a **feature comparison table** of Confluence vs Notion vs SharePoint vs Guru.
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
Here are the strongest enterprise wiki platforms for internal documentation, by common use case: ### Best overall - **Confluence (Atlassian)** Best all-around choice for large teams. Strong page structure, permissions, templates, Jira integration, and mature ecosystem. ### Best for Microsoft 365 orgs - **Microsoft SharePoint** Ideal if your company already lives in Teams, Outlook, and OneDrive. Great governance and intranet-style documentation. ### Best modern knowledge base / internal docs - **Notion** Very easy to use, fast to set up, and excellent for flexible internal docs. Less ideal for strict enterprise governance at scale. ### Best for engineering teams - **GitBook** Clean docs experience, great for technical documentation, versioning, and internal developer portals. ### Best open-source/self-hosted - **BookStack** Simple, effective, and easy to self-host. Good if you want a traditional wiki with low complexity. - **MediaWiki** Very powerful and highly customizable, but more maintenance-heavy and less polished out of the box. ### Best for security/compliance-heavy enterprises - **Confluence Data Center** Better fit when you need on-prem control, advanced permissions, and enterprise governance. - **XWiki** Strong enterprise self-hosted option with flexibility and access controls. ### Best for IT/service-management teams - **Guru** Good for searchable team knowledge and workflows, especially for support and operations. - **Slite** Simple team docs with a cleaner experience than traditional wikis. ## Quick recommendation - **Most enterprises:** Confluence - **Microsoft-heavy orgs:** SharePoint - **Fast-moving teams/startups:** Notion - **Engineering docs:** GitBook - **Self-hosted/open source:** BookStack or XWiki If you want, I can also give you a **top 5 ranked list by security, ease of use, and enterprise features**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best enterprise wiki platforms for internal documentation: 1. **Confluence (Atlassian)** - Best all-around choice for most enterprises - Strong permissions, templates, versioning, and Jira integration - Good for team docs, SOPs, and knowledge bases 2. **Microsoft SharePoint / Viva Engage + Loop** - Best if you’re already in the Microsoft 365 ecosystem - Strong document management and governance - Better for structured intranets than a classic wiki feel 3. **Notion Enterprise** - Best for fast, flexible internal knowledge bases - Very user-friendly and great for mixed docs/projects - Less rigorous than Confluence for complex enterprise governance 4. **Guru** - Best for knowledge capture and searchable internal answers - Strong browser/Slack integrations - Great for support, HR, and operations teams 5. **Document360** - Best for dedicated knowledge base/wiki workflows - Clean publishing, analytics, and strong organization - Good for internal and external documentation 6. **Slite** - Best for lightweight team documentation - Simple, modern, and easy adoption - Less enterprise-heavy than Confluence or SharePoint 7. **BookStack** - Best open-source option - Simple structure, self-hostable, low cost - Good if you want control and basic wiki features **Quick picks:** - **Most enterprises:** Confluence - **Microsoft-heavy orgs:** SharePoint - **Fastest adoption:** Notion Enterprise - **Knowledge base/search focus:** Guru - **Open source/self-hosted:** BookStack If you want, I can also give you a **ranked shortlist by company size, security needs, or budget**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
Top enterprise wiki platforms for internal documentation: 1. **Atlassian Confluence** - Best for: large orgs already using Jira/Atlassian - Pros: strong permissions, templates, page hierarchy, approvals, integrations - Good pick if you want a classic enterprise wiki 2. **Notion Enterprise** - Best for: teams that want wiki + docs + project tracking in one tool - Pros: very easy to use, flexible databases, fast collaboration - Good pick if you want a modern, lightweight internal knowledge base 3. **Guru** - Best for: knowledge that needs to surface inside Slack, Chrome, and support workflows - Pros: AI search, verification workflows, strong knowledge delivery - Good pick for sales, support, and operations teams 4. **Slab** - Best for: clean internal docs with a simple editor and strong search - Pros: polished UI, easy onboarding, good structure for team wikis - Good pick if you want simpler than Confluence 5. **Microsoft SharePoint / Viva Topics** - Best for: Microsoft 365-centered enterprises - Pros: deep security/compliance, enterprise governance, native Microsoft integration - Good pick if your company lives in Teams, Outlook, and OneDrive 6. **Document360** - Best for: more formal knowledge bases and documentation portals - Pros: versioning, analytics, structured docs, strong publishing controls - Good pick if you need stricter documentation management ### Quick recommendation - **Best overall enterprise wiki:** **Confluence** - **Best modern all-in-one:** **Notion Enterprise** - **Best for knowledge delivery:** **Guru** - **Best for Microsoft shops:** **SharePoint** If you want, I can also give you a **ranked shortlist by company size, budget, or security/compliance needs**.
Which enterprise wiki platforms are most popular right now?
3/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
The most popular enterprise wiki platforms right now are: 1. **Atlassian Confluence** Probably the most widely used dedicated enterprise wiki. Strong for team docs, knowledge bases, and Jira integration. 2. **Microsoft SharePoint / Viva Topics / OneNote** Very common in Microsoft-heavy organizations. SharePoint is often the de facto internal knowledge hub. 3. **Notion** Extremely popular for modern internal wikis and lightweight knowledge management, especially in startups and mid-sized companies. 4. **Guru** Popular for team knowledge bases with browser extensions and fast “knowledge in the flow of work” use cases. 5. **Document360** Common for customer-facing and internal knowledge bases; strong documentation/KB features. 6. **Slab** Well-liked for clean internal wikis and engineering/product documentation. 7. **Nuclino** Popular for simple, fast team wikis and knowledge sharing. If you want, I can also rank these by: - **best for large enterprises** - **best for startups** - **best for technical teams** - **best Confluence alternatives**
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
Right now, the most popular enterprise wiki platforms are: 1. **Atlassian Confluence** - Still the default choice for many companies. - Best for: internal documentation, team wikis, integration with Jira. - Common in: engineering, product, IT. 2. **Microsoft SharePoint / Viva Engage + SharePoint** - Very common in larger Microsoft 365 organizations. - Best for: company intranets, document management, governance-heavy environments. 3. **Notion** - Extremely popular for modern, lightweight internal wikis. - Best for: startups, cross-functional teams, fast-moving docs. - Less traditional “enterprise,” but widely adopted by enterprises now. 4. **Guru** - Popular for knowledge bases and team knowledge capture. - Best for: sales, support, operations, searchable quick-reference docs. 5. **Slab** - A strong modern wiki option with a clean UX. - Best for: company handbooks, internal knowledge sharing. 6. **Document360** - Popular for more structured knowledge bases. - Best for: customer-facing and internal documentation. 7. **GitBook** - Very popular for engineering/docs teams. - Best for: technical documentation, API docs, product docs. **If you want the safest enterprise pick:** - **Confluence** for general internal wiki use - **SharePoint** if you’re already deep in Microsoft 365 - **Notion** if you want the most user-friendly modern wiki If you want, I can also rank these by **best for large enterprises**, **best UX**, or **best value**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
The most popular enterprise wiki platforms right now are usually: 1. **Atlassian Confluence** — still the default choice for many large companies. 2. **Microsoft SharePoint** — very common in Microsoft 365-heavy organizations. 3. **Notion** — increasingly popular for internal docs/wiki use, especially in faster-moving teams. 4. **Guru** — popular for knowledge bases tied to internal support and enablement. 5. **Slab** — well-liked for clean, simple team wikis. 6. **Bloomfire** — common for customer support and sales knowledge bases. 7. **XWiki** — used by orgs wanting an open-source, highly customizable wiki. 8. **MediaWiki** — less “enterprise product” and more platform, but still widely used in big orgs. If you want the safest “most popular” shortlist, it’s **Confluence, SharePoint, Notion, and Guru**. If you want, I can also rank these by: - best for large enterprises - best for IT/governance - best for ease of use - best value for money
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
The most popular enterprise wiki platforms right now are: 1. **Atlassian Confluence** — still the most common choice for large teams, especially if they already use Jira. 2. **Microsoft SharePoint / Viva Engage / Microsoft 365 knowledge tools** — very popular in Microsoft-heavy enterprises. 3. **Notion** — increasingly popular for internal knowledge bases and cross-functional docs. 4. **Guru** — strong for searchable, team-curated knowledge in support/sales/ops. 5. **Slab** — clean, modern internal wiki for engineering and product teams. 6. **Document360** — popular for enterprise knowledge bases and customer-facing docs. 7. **Nuclino** — lightweight, fast, and easy for smaller enterprise teams. 8. **XWiki** — open-source enterprise wiki option with strong customization. 9. **MediaWiki** — still used in some enterprises, especially for highly customizable internal wikis. If you want the safest “default” picks: - **Confluence** for larger orgs - **Notion** for ease of use - **SharePoint** for Microsoft-centric enterprises - **Guru** for knowledge management workflows If you want, I can also rank them by **best for IT**, **best for engineering**, or **best for large regulated enterprises**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
The most popular enterprise wiki platforms right now are generally: 1. **Atlassian Confluence** — the default choice for many mid-size to large companies; still the biggest “classic wiki” in enterprises. 2. **Microsoft SharePoint / Microsoft Viva** — very common in Microsoft-heavy organizations; often used as an intranet + knowledge hub. 3. **Notion** — hugely popular for modern internal docs and lightweight wikis, especially in startups and fast-growing teams. 4. **Guru** — popular for searchable internal knowledge bases, especially support and operations teams. 5. **Document360** — strong for enterprise knowledge bases and customer/internal documentation. 6. **Slite** — popular with product, engineering, and remote-first teams. 7. **GitBook** — widely used for developer docs and technical wikis. 8. **MediaWiki** — still used in some large orgs, but less common for new enterprise deployments. If you want the safest “most commonly adopted” answer: **Confluence, SharePoint, and Notion** are the big three. If you want, I can also rank them by **enterprise scale**, **ease of use**, or **best for engineering teams**.
What are the top enterprise wiki platform options for companies?
3/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are the top enterprise wiki platform options companies usually evaluate: 1. **Atlassian Confluence** - Best all-around enterprise wiki for teams already using Jira/Atlassian - Strong permissions, templates, search, and integrations 2. **Microsoft SharePoint / Viva Engage + Teams** - Best for Microsoft 365-heavy organizations - Good for internal knowledge bases, document management, and enterprise governance 3. **Notion Enterprise** - Best for modern, lightweight company knowledge bases - Easy to use, fast to adopt, great for cross-functional docs 4. **Guru** - Best for knowledge capture inside workflows - Strong browser/Slack integrations and “knowledge cards” for support/sales teams 5. **Slab** - Best for clean internal documentation and knowledge sharing - Simple interface, good editor, strong search 6. **Document360** - Best for structured knowledge bases and help centers - Good for customer-facing and internal documentation 7. **Bloomfire** - Best for enterprise knowledge management at scale - Strong search, content organization, and analytics 8. **Nuclino** - Best for simple, fast team wikis - Lightweight and easy, but less enterprise-heavy than Confluence/SharePoint ### Quick picks - **Large enterprise / IT / product teams:** Confluence - **Microsoft-centric company:** SharePoint - **Fast-moving startup:** Notion - **Support/sales enablement:** Guru - **Clean internal wiki:** Slab If you want, I can also give you a **top 5 comparison table by pricing, permissions, search, and ease of use**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned
Top enterprise wiki / knowledge-base platforms for companies include: 1. **Atlassian Confluence** - Best for: internal docs, team collaboration, Jira integration - Why: very common in enterprises, strong permissions, templates, search 2. **Microsoft SharePoint / Microsoft Viva Engage + OneDrive/Teams ecosystem** - Best for: companies already on Microsoft 365 - Why: enterprise governance, access control, deep M365 integration 3. **Notion Business / Enterprise** - Best for: lightweight, modern knowledge bases and internal wikis - Why: easy to use, fast setup, strong UX, good for cross-functional teams 4. **Guru** - Best for: company knowledge base + AI-assisted answers - Why: good for support/sales/internal ops, browser extension, verification workflows 5. **Slab** - Best for: clean internal knowledge base for growing teams - Why: simple editor, good structure, strong search, less complex than Confluence 6. **Document360** - Best for: product documentation and customer-facing / internal docs - Why: robust knowledge base features, analytics, versioning, categories 7. **Nuclino** - Best for: fast, lightweight team wiki - Why: minimal setup, easy linking, good for small-to-mid teams 8. **Zendesk Guide** - Best for: support knowledge bases - Why: tightly tied to customer support workflows, help center publishing 9. **GitBook** - Best for: engineering/product documentation - Why: clean docs experience, strong markdown workflow, good for technical teams 10. **MediaWiki** - Best for: highly customizable, self-hosted wiki needs - Why: open source, flexible, but usually needs more admin effort ### Quick picks - **Most common enterprise choice:** Confluence - **Best for Microsoft shops:** SharePoint - **Best modern UX:** Notion - **Best for knowledge management:** Guru - **Best for docs-heavy teams:** Document360 or GitBook If you want, I can also rank these by **security, search, ease of use, and enterprise features**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
Top enterprise wiki/platform options for companies: 1. **Atlassian Confluence** Best all-around enterprise wiki for teams already using Jira/Atlassian. Strong permissions, templates, search, and workflows. 2. **Microsoft SharePoint / Viva Connections** Best for Microsoft 365 organizations. More of a broad intranet/knowledge platform than a pure wiki, but very common in enterprises. 3. **Notion Business / Enterprise** Great for modern, flexible internal docs and lightweight knowledge bases. Easy to use, but can get messy without governance. 4. **Document360** Best for structured knowledge bases and internal/external documentation. Strong versioning, categories, and analytics. 5. **Guru** Best for searchable team knowledge and quick answers inside workflows. Strong browser extension and Slack/Teams integration. 6. **Nuclino** Simple, fast collaborative wiki for smaller enterprise teams or departments. Clean UI, easy adoption. 7. **Slab** Good for polished internal knowledge bases with strong editor experience and team docs. 8. **XWiki** Open-source, highly customizable enterprise wiki option. Better if you want self-hosting and deep control. 9. **BookStack** Open-source, very easy to use for documentation-style wikis. Good for IT/docs teams, though less enterprise-heavy than Confluence/SharePoint. 10. **MediaWiki** The classic wiki engine, highly extensible and open-source. Best when you need maximum flexibility and have admin/development resources. **Quick picks:** - **Best overall:** Confluence - **Best for Microsoft shops:** SharePoint - **Best simple modern UX:** Notion - **Best knowledge management:** Guru - **Best open-source enterprise choice:** XWiki If you want, I can also rank these by **security, scalability, ease of use, or cost**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
Top enterprise wiki platform options for companies: 1. **Confluence (Atlassian)** Best all-around choice for large teams; strong integrations with Jira, Slack, Microsoft 365, and tons of apps. 2. **Notion Enterprise** Great for modern internal knowledge bases and lightweight wiki/workspace use; very user-friendly. 3. **Microsoft SharePoint / Viva Engage** Best if your company is already deep in Microsoft 365; strong permissions and enterprise governance. 4. **Guru** Excellent for searchable company knowledge and team knowledge cards; popular for sales/support ops. 5. **Document360** Strong for structured knowledge bases and internal/external documentation; clean authoring and analytics. 6. **ClickUp Docs** Useful if you want docs/wiki built into a broader project management platform. 7. **Nuclino** Simple, fast, and easy to adopt; good for internal wikis and team documentation. 8. **Slab** Clean, modern internal wiki with strong search and organization; good for knowledge sharing. If you want, I can also rank these by: - **best for large enterprises** - **best for Microsoft-heavy companies** - **best for ease of use** - **best for compliance/security**
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
Top enterprise wiki platform options for companies: 1. **Confluence (Atlassian)** Best overall for most enterprises. Strong permissions, templates, search, integrations with Jira/Slack, and broad adoption. 2. **Microsoft SharePoint / Viva Connections** Best for Microsoft 365 shops. Great for intranet-style knowledge bases and tight integration with Teams, OneDrive, and Office apps. 3. **Notion Enterprise** Best for modern, flexible internal docs and team wikis. Easy to use, fast to adopt, but less traditional enterprise governance than Confluence/SharePoint. 4. **Guru** Best for knowledge that needs to be surfaced in workflows. Strong browser extension and Slack/Teams integrations for just-in-time answers. 5. **Document360** Best for structured knowledge bases and documentation. Good analytics, versioning, and customer/internal wiki use cases. 6. **Slab** Best for clean internal knowledge bases. Simple interface, strong search, and easy onboarding. 7. **Nuclino** Best for lightweight, fast team wikis. Very easy to use, but lighter on enterprise admin features. 8. **BookStack** Best open-source option for self-hosted enterprise wiki needs. Simple, organized, and cost-effective. 9. **XWiki** Best open-source, highly customizable enterprise wiki. Strong for teams that want control and extensibility. 10. **MediaWiki** Best if you want maximum flexibility and have technical admins. Powerful, but usually needs more maintenance/customization. If you want, I can also rank these by: - **best for large enterprises** - **best open-source** - **best Microsoft 365 integration** - **best for internal knowledge management**
Which enterprise wiki platforms are best for knowledge sharing?
3/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned
Top enterprise wiki platforms for knowledge sharing: - **Confluence (Atlassian)** — Best all-around for teams already using Jira/Atlassian; strong collaboration, permissions, templates, and search. - **Microsoft SharePoint + Viva Connections** — Best for Microsoft 365 shops; great for intranets, document sharing, and internal knowledge portals. - **Notion Enterprise** — Best for lightweight, flexible knowledge bases and fast adoption; very easy to edit and organize. - **Guru** — Best for verified, in-workflow knowledge sharing; strong browser extension and Slack integration. - **Slab** — Best for clean, modern internal docs with strong usability and simple governance. - **Document360** — Best for formal knowledge bases and documentation; good analytics and versioning. - **XWiki** — Best open-source enterprise wiki; highly customizable and self-hostable. - **MediaWiki** — Best if you want a proven open-source wiki engine, though it usually needs more customization/admin work. **Best picks by use case** - **Overall enterprise standard:** Confluence - **Microsoft-centric orgs:** SharePoint - **Fast-moving teams/startups:** Notion - **Support/sales knowledge:** Guru - **Open-source/self-hosted:** XWiki If you want, I can narrow this to the **best 3 for your company size, budget, and stack**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
Top enterprise wiki platforms for knowledge sharing: 1. **Atlassian Confluence** Best all-around enterprise wiki. Strong for team docs, project knowledge, permissions, and integrations with Jira/Slack. 2. **Guru** Best for fast, trusted knowledge sharing. Great for sales/support/internal FAQs with browser extensions and verification workflows. 3. **Notion** Best for flexible, modern knowledge bases. Easy to use, good for cross-functional teams, but can get messy at scale without governance. 4. **Microsoft SharePoint + Viva Topics/Engage** Best for Microsoft 365 organizations. Strong enterprise controls, search, and document management, though less “wiki-like” out of the box. 5. **Slab** Best for clean internal documentation. Simple editor, good structure, and strong search—popular for growing teams. 6. **Document360** Best for dedicated knowledge bases. Strong versioning, analytics, and publishing workflows, especially for support and customer-facing docs. **Best picks by need:** - **Most enterprise-ready:** Confluence - **Best for sales/support knowledge:** Guru - **Best for flexibility:** Notion - **Best for Microsoft shops:** SharePoint - **Best for polished documentation:** Slab or Document360 If you want, I can narrow this to the **best 3 for your company size and tech stack**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
Top enterprise wiki platforms for knowledge sharing: - **Confluence (Atlassian)** — Best overall for most teams. Strong integrations, permissions, templates, and page collaboration. - **Notion** — Best for fast-moving teams that want wiki + docs + lightweight project management in one tool. - **Guru** — Best for verified, in-workflow knowledge sharing; great for Slack/Chrome/browser-based knowledge capture. - **Microsoft SharePoint / Viva Engage** — Best for organizations already on Microsoft 365, especially large enterprises with compliance needs. - **Document360** — Best for structured internal knowledge bases and SOP-heavy documentation. - **Slab** — Best for clean, modern team wikis with strong search and simple editing. - **MediaWiki** — Best if you need open-source and highly customizable, but it needs more admin effort. **Quick pick:** - Most companies: **Confluence** - Microsoft-heavy orgs: **SharePoint** - Simple, modern wiki: **Slab** or **Notion** - Verified internal answers: **Guru** - Help-center style knowledge base: **Document360** If you want, I can also rank them by **ease of use, security, search, or pricing**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
Top enterprise wiki platforms for knowledge sharing: 1. **Atlassian Confluence** Best all-around choice for team documentation, SOPs, and cross-functional knowledge bases. Strong permissions, page versioning, and tight Jira integration. 2. **Microsoft SharePoint** Best if your company is already in Microsoft 365. Great for intranets, document management, and enterprise governance. 3. **Notion** Best for fast, flexible knowledge sharing and lightweight internal wikis. Easy to use, but less robust for large-scale governance than Confluence/SharePoint. 4. **Guru** Best for knowledge base + search + browser-based access. Good for customer support, sales, and ops teams that need quick answers. 5. **Document360** Best for structured knowledge bases and internal/external documentation. Strong analytics and publishing workflow. 6. **Slab** Best for clean team wikis with a modern UI and simple collaboration. Popular with product and engineering teams. 7. **Nuclino** Best for simple, fast internal wikis and process docs. Lightweight and easy to adopt. **My quick recommendation:** - **Large enterprise / governance:** Confluence or SharePoint - **Fast, modern internal wiki:** Notion or Slab - **Search-first knowledge sharing:** Guru - **Formal knowledge base:** Document360 If you want, I can also rank these by **security, ease of use, and cost**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
Top enterprise wiki platforms for knowledge sharing: - **Confluence (Atlassian)** — Best all-around choice; strong team docs, permissions, search, integrations, and templates. - **Notion Enterprise** — Best for flexible knowledge bases and fast collaboration; very easy to use, though less rigid for complex governance. - **Microsoft SharePoint / Viva Topics** — Best if you’re already deep in Microsoft 365; strong enterprise controls and intranet-style knowledge sharing. - **Guru** — Best for searchable, “answer-first” internal knowledge; great for sales/support teams and Slack/Teams workflows. - **Document360** — Best for structured internal/external knowledge bases; good versioning, categories, and publishing workflows. - **XWiki** — Best open-source enterprise wiki; highly customizable and self-hostable. - **MediaWiki** — Best for highly customizable, technical, or self-managed wiki environments; more admin-heavy. - **Slab** — Best for clean, simple internal documentation for mid-sized teams. Quick picks: - **Best overall:** Confluence - **Best for Microsoft shops:** SharePoint - **Best for ease of use:** Notion Enterprise - **Best for support/sales knowledge:** Guru - **Best self-hosted/open source:** XWiki If you want, I can also rank them by **security, search, workflow, or cost**.
What are the most recommended enterprise wiki platforms?
1/5 mention 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
Most commonly recommended enterprise wiki platforms: 1. **Atlassian Confluence** Best all-around choice for large teams, especially if you already use Jira/Atlassian. 2. **Microsoft SharePoint / Viva Connections** Best for Microsoft 365-heavy organizations and intranets/document management. 3. **Notion Enterprise** Great for fast-moving teams that want a modern, flexible wiki with docs + project pages. 4. **Guru** Strong for “knowledge at work” use cases, especially sales/support/internal ops with browser and Slack integrations. 5. **Slab** Clean, simple enterprise wiki for teams that want less complexity than Confluence. 6. **Document360** Good for structured internal knowledge bases and documentation-heavy orgs. 7. **Nuclino** Lightweight, fast, and easy to adopt for smaller enterprise teams or departments. 8. **Stack Overflow for Teams** Best when your main need is technical knowledge sharing and Q&A for engineers. ### Quick picks - **Best overall:** Confluence - **Best for Microsoft shops:** SharePoint - **Best modern/easy UX:** Notion Enterprise - **Best knowledge delivery:** Guru - **Best for engineering teams:** Stack Overflow for Teams If you want, I can also rank them by **security, search, ease of use, or pricing**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
The most commonly recommended **enterprise wiki platforms** are: 1. **Atlassian Confluence** - Best overall for large teams already using Jira/Atlassian. - Strong permissions, templates, integrations, and governance. 2. **Microsoft SharePoint + OneDrive/Teams** - Best for Microsoft 365-centric enterprises. - Good for internal knowledge bases, intranets, and compliance-heavy orgs. 3. **Guru** - Best for fast access to verified internal knowledge. - Strong browser/Slack/Teams knowledge delivery. 4. **Notion** - Best for modern, flexible team wikis. - Great UX, but less traditional enterprise governance than Confluence/SharePoint. 5. **Slab** - Best for clean, simple company wikis. - Easy to adopt, strong writing and search experience. 6. **Document360** - Best for structured knowledge bases and documentation portals. - Often used for both internal and customer-facing docs. 7. **Nuclino** - Best for lightweight, fast collaboration. - Simpler than Confluence, good for smaller enterprises or teams. ### Quick recommendation - **Most enterprise-standard:** Confluence - **Best for Microsoft shops:** SharePoint - **Best for knowledge validation/workflows:** Guru - **Best modern flexible wiki:** Notion If you want, I can also give you a **top 5 by use case** or a **comparison table with pricing, pros, and cons**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
The most commonly recommended **enterprise wiki platforms** are: 1. **Atlassian Confluence** Best all-around choice for large teams already using Jira/Atlassian. Strong permissions, page history, templates, and integrations. 2. **Microsoft SharePoint / Viva Topics** Best for Microsoft 365-heavy organizations. Good for intranets, document management, and enterprise permissions. 3. **Notion Enterprise** Best for modern, flexible internal knowledge bases. Very easy to use, though governance can be lighter than Confluence/SharePoint. 4. **Guru** Best for searchable, team-verified knowledge. Great for customer support, sales, and ops teams. 5. **Slab** Best for clean, simple internal wikis with strong editor UX and organization. 6. **Document360** Best if you need a formal knowledge base with analytics, versioning, and both internal/external docs. 7. **Nuclino** Best for lightweight, fast team wikis with minimal setup. **If you want the safest enterprise pick:** - **Confluence** for broad enterprise wiki needs - **SharePoint** for Microsoft-centric companies - **Guru** for knowledge-base workflows If you want, I can also give you a **top 3 by use case** or a **comparison table**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
The most commonly recommended enterprise wiki platforms are: 1. **Atlassian Confluence** Best all-around choice for large organizations, especially if you already use Jira/Atlassian. Strong permissions, workflows, and integrations. 2. **Microsoft SharePoint / Viva Topics** Best for Microsoft 365-heavy companies. Good for intranet-style knowledge management and enterprise governance. 3. **Notion Enterprise** Popular for modern, flexible docs and lightweight knowledge bases. Great UX, but less rigid than Confluence/SharePoint. 4. **Guru** Best for searchable internal knowledge and team knowledge sharing, especially for sales, support, and ops teams. 5. **Slab** Clean, easy-to-use wiki for fast-growing teams. Strong writing experience and simple structure. 6. **Document360** Best if you want a more formal knowledge base / documentation portal with analytics and customer-facing docs options. 7. **GitBook** Great for engineering and product documentation, especially if your team likes Markdown and developer workflows. 8. **Nuclino** Lightweight, fast, and easy to adopt. Good for smaller enterprise teams or departments. ### Quick picks - **Best overall:** Confluence - **Best for Microsoft shops:** SharePoint - **Best modern UX:** Notion - **Best internal knowledge retrieval:** Guru - **Best for docs/KB portal:** Document360 - **Best for engineering docs:** GitBook If you want, I can also rank these by **security, ease of use, or enterprise governance**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
The most commonly recommended **enterprise wiki platforms** are: 1. **Atlassian Confluence** - Best all-around choice for large teams already using Jira/Atlassian. - Strong permissions, templates, page history, and integrations. 2. **Microsoft SharePoint / Viva Engage + SharePoint knowledge sites** - Best for Microsoft 365-heavy organizations. - Strong governance, security, and enterprise compliance. 3. **Guru** - Best for fast-moving support/sales/internal knowledge teams. - Strong browser extension, verification workflows, and search. 4. **Notion Enterprise** - Best for flexible internal docs and lightweight wiki use. - Easier to use than many traditional wiki tools, but less rigid governance than Confluence/SharePoint. 5. **Tettra** - Best for team knowledge bases, especially if you use Slack. - Simple, focused, and easy to adopt. 6. **XWiki** - Best open-source enterprise wiki option. - Highly customizable, good for self-hosting and more technical teams. 7. **MediaWiki** - Best if you want a proven open-source wiki engine. - Powerful, but usually needs more setup and admin effort. ### Quick picks - **Best overall:** Confluence - **Best Microsoft stack:** SharePoint - **Best for knowledge management:** Guru - **Best flexible modern wiki:** Notion - **Best open source:** XWiki If you want, I can also give you a **ranked shortlist by company size, budget, or use case**.
What enterprise wiki platform should a business choose?
1/5 mention 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
For most businesses, **Atlassian Confluence** is the safest default choice. **Best overall:** - **Confluence** — strongest for team documentation, SOPs, project knowledge, permissions, and integrations with Jira/Slack. Good enterprise admin controls. **Best if you already use Microsoft 365:** - **SharePoint + Viva Topics** — best fit for companies deep in Microsoft, though it’s more of a document/portal system than a clean wiki. **Best for lightweight, modern knowledge sharing:** - **Notion** — easy to adopt, very user-friendly, great for smaller teams and fast-moving companies. **Best for internal knowledge base / searchable answers:** - **Guru** — strong for sales, support, and ops teams that want verified, searchable snippets inside daily workflows. **Best for engineering/technical docs:** - **BookStack** or **Confluence** — BookStack is simpler; Confluence is more enterprise-ready. **Simple recommendation:** - If you want **enterprise-grade wiki + collaboration**: **Confluence** - If you want **Microsoft-native**: **SharePoint** - If you want **easiest user experience**: **Notion** If you tell me your company size, tools (Microsoft/Google/Jira), and main use case, I can recommend one exact platform.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
For most businesses, the safest enterprise wiki picks are: - **Atlassian Confluence Cloud** — best all-around choice if you use Jira/Slack/Google Workspace/Microsoft 365. Strong permissions, templates, search, and admin controls. - **Microsoft SharePoint Online** — best if you’re already deep in Microsoft 365 and want intranet + wiki-style knowledge base in one place. - **Notion Enterprise** — best for fast-moving teams that want a modern, easy editor and lightweight knowledge base. - **Guru** — best for customer support, sales, and ops teams that need knowledge surfaced inside workflows. - **Document360** — best if you want a polished internal/external knowledge base with strong article management. **My default recommendation:** - Choose **Confluence Cloud** for a classic enterprise wiki. - Choose **SharePoint Online** if Microsoft is your core stack. - Choose **Notion Enterprise** if usability matters more than heavy governance. If you want, I can give you a 1-minute decision matrix based on your company size, tools, and compliance needs.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
For most businesses, **Atlassian Confluence** is the safest default choice. ### Best picks by use case - **Best overall enterprise wiki:** **Confluence** - Strong permissions, versioning, integrations, and scaling - Best if you already use Jira/Atlassian - **Best for simple internal docs and knowledge bases:** **Notion** - Easier to use, faster to adopt - Great for smaller teams or less rigid documentation needs - **Best for searchable, employee-facing knowledge:** **Guru** - Strong “knowledge in the flow of work” features - Good for sales, support, and ops teams - **Best Microsoft 365 shop:** **SharePoint** - Best fit if your company already lives in Teams, Outlook, and Microsoft 365 - More enterprise governance, but clunkier UX - **Best lightweight team wiki:** **Slab** - Clean interface, easy adoption - Good for startups and mid-sized teams ### My recommendation - If you want a **true enterprise wiki**: **Confluence** - If you want **easiest adoption**: **Notion** - If you’re **Microsoft-first**: **SharePoint** If you want, I can give you a **1-minute decision matrix** based on company size, budget, and existing tools.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
For most businesses, the best enterprise wiki choice is usually: **1) Confluence (Atlassian)** — best overall - Best for: company-wide knowledge base, internal docs, project collaboration - Why: mature permissions, great integrations with Jira/Slack/Google/Microsoft, strong page history and search - Good if you already use Atlassian tools **2) Notion** — best for flexible modern docs - Best for: smaller-to-mid teams that want a wiki + lightweight project docs - Why: very easy to use, fast to set up, great templates - Tradeoff: less robust governance/admin than Confluence for larger enterprises **3) Microsoft SharePoint / Viva Connections** — best for Microsoft 365 shops - Best for: organizations deep in Outlook, Teams, OneDrive, and Microsoft compliance - Why: strong enterprise controls, security, and native Microsoft integration - Tradeoff: can feel heavier and less user-friendly as a wiki **4) Guru** — best for internal knowledge retrieval - Best for: support, sales, ops teams that need fast answers in-browser/Slack - Why: strong knowledge capture + verification workflows - Tradeoff: not as full-featured as a traditional wiki platform ### Simple recommendation - **Choose Confluence** if you want the safest default enterprise wiki. - **Choose SharePoint** if your company is Microsoft-first. - **Choose Notion** if ease of use matters most. - **Choose Guru** if the goal is fast, verified answers inside daily workflows. If you want, I can give you a **top 3 shortlist based on company size, budget, and tech stack**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
For most businesses, the best **enterprise wiki** depends on what you already use: - **Atlassian Confluence** — best overall for teams already on Jira/Atlassian. Strong permissions, templates, search, integrations. - **Microsoft SharePoint + Viva Connections** — best if you’re a Microsoft 365 shop. Good for internal knowledge, policies, and intranet-style use. - **Guru** — best for fast-moving teams that want knowledge surfaced inside Slack, Chrome, and other tools. - **Notion Enterprise** — best for a flexible, easy-to-use wiki with docs + project work in one place. - **Document360** — best if you want a dedicated knowledge base/wiki with strong publishing and version control. - **MediaWiki** — best if you want open-source and have technical admin support. **My default recommendation:** - Choose **Confluence** for a classic enterprise wiki. - Choose **SharePoint** if you’re deeply invested in Microsoft 365. - Choose **Notion Enterprise** if ease of use matters most. If you tell me your stack (Microsoft, Google, Jira, Slack, etc.) and company size, I can narrow it to one best pick.
What are the best wiki tools for enterprises?
3/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
The best enterprise wiki tools are usually the ones that balance **permissions, search, integrations, workflows, and admin control**. Top picks: 1. **Atlassian Confluence** Best overall for most enterprises. Strong permissions, great with Jira/Slack/Google Workspace/Microsoft 365, lots of templates, and mature admin controls. 2. **Microsoft SharePoint + Viva Connections** Best if your company is deep in Microsoft 365. Good for intranet-style knowledge bases, governance, and identity management. 3. **Guru** Best for internal knowledge that needs to surface fast inside Slack, Chrome, and support workflows. Strong for sales/support teams. 4. **Notion Enterprise** Best for teams that want a modern, flexible wiki with easy editing. Less traditional enterprise governance than Confluence/SharePoint, but very popular. 5. **Document360** Best for structured knowledge bases and customer-facing/internal documentation. Good search, versioning, and publishing workflows. 6. **Slab** Best for clean internal documentation with strong usability. Good editor, permissions, and search. 7. **Bloomfire** Best for large organizations needing knowledge sharing, Q&A, and rich content search. **My quick recommendation:** - **Most enterprises:** Confluence - **Microsoft-centric orgs:** SharePoint - **Fast-moving teams:** Notion or Guru - **Formal documentation/KB:** Document360 If you want, I can also give you a **top 3 by company size** or a **side-by-side comparison table**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
Top enterprise wiki tools: - **Atlassian Confluence** — the most common enterprise wiki; strong permissions, workflows, integrations, and Microsoft/Slack/Jira support. - **Notion Enterprise** — best for a modern, flexible internal knowledge base with great UX and quick adoption. - **Document360** — strong for structured knowledge bases, SOPs, and external/internal docs with solid analytics. - **Guru** — great if you want knowledge surfaced inside Slack, Chrome, and your browser workflow. - **Microsoft SharePoint / Viva Connections** — best if your company is already deep in Microsoft 365. - **Coda** — good for teams that want wiki + lightweight apps/databases in one place. - **Slite** — simple, clean team wiki with good knowledge management features. - **Nuclino** — fast, lightweight, and easy to roll out for internal documentation. - **Zendesk Guide** — best when the wiki is mainly customer support knowledge. **Best overall for most enterprises:** **Confluence** **Best modern UX:** **Notion Enterprise** **Best Microsoft-first orgs:** **SharePoint** **Best support knowledge base:** **Document360** or **Zendesk Guide** If you want, I can also give you a **top 5 by use case** or a **comparison table by security, search, and permissions**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
Best enterprise wiki tools, by common fit: 1. **Confluence (Atlassian)** - Best overall for large teams already using Jira/Atlassian - Strong permissions, templates, search, workflows, integrations 2. **Microsoft SharePoint + Viva / Loop** - Best for Microsoft 365 organizations - Great for intranet-style knowledge bases, compliance, and document-heavy teams 3. **Notion Enterprise** - Best for fast-moving teams that want a modern, simple UI - Good docs/wiki hybrid; less rigid than Confluence 4. **Guru** - Best for knowledge delivery inside Slack/Chrome - Strong for customer support, sales, and internal knowledge that needs to stay current 5. **Document360** - Best for structured internal/external knowledge bases - Strong publishing, versioning, and analytics 6. **Slab** - Best for clean internal documentation and onboarding - Easy to use, good search, nice permissions model 7. **XWiki** - Best open-source/self-hosted option - Good if you need more control and customization 8. **MediaWiki** - Best open-source at very large scale - Powerful, but usually needs more admin/customization effort than enterprise suites ### Quick picks - **Most enterprises:** Confluence - **Microsoft shop:** SharePoint - **Best modern UX:** Notion - **Best for support/sales knowledge:** Guru - **Best self-hosted:** XWiki If you want, I can also give you a **top 5 ranked by security/compliance, ease of use, or price**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
Top enterprise wiki tools, by category: - **Confluence (Atlassian)** — best all-around enterprise wiki. Strong permissions, team collaboration, Jira integration, mature ecosystem. - **Notion Enterprise** — best for modern internal knowledge bases and lightweight docs. Very easy to use, but less rigorous for large, complex governance. - **Microsoft SharePoint + OneDrive/Teams** — best if you’re already deep in Microsoft 365. Good enterprise controls, but less wiki-like and more complex to manage. - **Guru** — best for searchable internal knowledge and “just-in-time” answers. Great browser/workflow integrations. - **Slab** — best for clean internal docs/wiki UX. Simple, fast, and easy to adopt. - **Nuclino** — best for fast, lightweight team wikis. Minimalist and easy to set up. - **XWiki** — best open-source enterprise wiki. Strong customization and on-prem options. - **MediaWiki** — best if you want maximum flexibility and open-source scale. Powerful, but usually needs more admin work. - **Document360** — best for knowledge bases and customer-facing docs, also usable internally. - **BookStack** — best simple open-source wiki for teams that want organized docs with low complexity. ### Best picks by scenario - **Large enterprise / governance-heavy:** Confluence, SharePoint - **Best modern UX:** Notion, Slab - **Best internal knowledge delivery:** Guru - **Best open-source/on-prem:** XWiki, MediaWiki, BookStack - **Best for Jira/engineering teams:** Confluence If you want, I can also give you: 1. a **top 3 recommendation** for your company size, 2. a **comparison table**, or 3. the **best option for regulated industries** like healthcare, finance, or government.
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
Top enterprise wiki tools, by common use case: - **Confluence (Atlassian)** — best all-around enterprise wiki; strong permissions, workflows, templates, Jira integration. - **Notion Enterprise** — best for modern, lightweight knowledge bases; easy to use, good collaboration, less rigid than Confluence. - **Microsoft SharePoint + Viva Connections** — best for Microsoft 365-heavy orgs; strong governance, intranet + docs, but more complex. - **Guru** — best for internal knowledge delivery; great for searchable team knowledge and browser-based answers. - **Slab** — best for clean, simple company wikis; strong writing UX and structure, easier than Confluence. - **BookStack** — best open-source option; simple wiki/book/chapter/page model, self-hostable. - **XWiki** — best for highly customizable self-hosted enterprise wiki; powerful but more admin-heavy. - **MediaWiki** — best for large-scale, highly structured public/internal wiki setups; very flexible, but less business-friendly out of the box. Best picks by scenario: - **Largest enterprises / governance:** Confluence or SharePoint - **Fast-moving product teams:** Notion or Slab - **Knowledge-base + support workflows:** Guru - **Self-hosted/open-source:** XWiki or BookStack If you want, I can also rank them by **security, search, admin control, and ease of use**.
Which internal wiki platforms are best for teams?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are the best internal wiki platforms for teams, by common use case: - **Notion** — Best overall for most teams Flexible, easy to use, great for docs, wikis, project tracking, and databases in one place. - **Confluence** — Best for larger orgs / Jira users Strong permissions, mature wiki features, excellent if your team already uses Atlassian products. - **Slite** — Best simple team wiki Clean interface, easy onboarding, good for fast-moving teams that want less complexity than Confluence. - **Guru** — Best for knowledge base + internal answers Good if you want verified answers surfaced in Slack/Chrome and lightweight knowledge sharing. - **Nuclino** — Best lightweight collaborative wiki Fast, minimalist, and easy to organize—good for small teams that want speed over bells and whistles. - **ClickUp Docs** — Best if you already use ClickUp Handy for teams wanting docs, tasks, and wiki content in one system. - **Tettra** — Best for Slack-centric teams Good for internal Q&A and maintaining knowledge directly from Slack workflows. **Quick picks:** - Small team: **Notion** or **Nuclino** - Engineering/product org: **Confluence** - Slack-heavy support/ops team: **Guru** or **Tettra** - Need docs + tasks together: **ClickUp** If you want, I can narrow this to the **best wiki platform for your team size, budget, and tools**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
Best internal wiki platforms for teams: - **Notion** — best all-around for small to mid-size teams; flexible docs, databases, and lightweight wiki structure. - **Confluence** — best for larger orgs, especially if you use Jira/Atlassian; strong permissions, templates, and enterprise features. - **Slab** — best for a clean, simple team wiki; easy to use and good for documentation-first teams. - **Guru** — best for knowledge that needs to live in workflows; strong browser/Slack integrations and verification features. - **Nuclino** — best for fast, lightweight internal wikis; very easy setup and simple collaboration. - **Coda** — best if your wiki needs to behave more like a living workspace with docs + apps + automation. Quick picks: - **Best overall:** Notion - **Best enterprise:** Confluence - **Best simple wiki:** Slab - **Best for internal knowledge delivery:** Guru If you want, I can also rank them for **startup**, **remote team**, or **enterprise** use cases.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
Best internal wiki platforms for teams: 1. **Notion** Best all-around for docs + wiki + lightweight project tracking. Easy to use, very flexible, great for startups and small teams. 2. **Confluence** Best for larger orgs already using Jira/Atlassian. Strong permissions, templates, and enterprise controls. 3. **Guru** Best for team knowledge that needs to be fast to search and easy to keep up to date. Good for support/sales/internal ops. 4. **ClickUp Docs** Best if you want wiki + tasks in one place. Solid for teams already using ClickUp. 5. **Coda** Best for customizable internal systems and docs that act like apps. Great for ops-heavy teams. 6. **Slab** Best for a clean, modern wiki experience. Simple structure, strong search, easy adoption. **Quick picks:** - **Startups/small teams:** Notion - **Engineering/product teams:** Confluence - **Sales/support knowledge base:** Guru - **All-in-one work hub:** ClickUp Docs - **Process-heavy teams:** Coda - **Simple team wiki:** Slab If you want, I can also give you a **best choice by team size, budget, or use case**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
Best internal wiki platforms for teams: - **Notion** — best all-around for flexible docs, lightweight databases, and fast adoption. - **Confluence** — best for larger companies, especially if you use Jira/Atlassian. - **Slite** — best for clean team wikis with strong writing/editing UX. - **Guru** — best for living knowledge bases and browser-based knowledge surfacing. - **Nuclino** — best for simple, fast, minimal internal knowledge bases. - **Coda** — best if your wiki needs docs + workflows + lightweight apps. - **GitBook** — best for technical teams and documentation-heavy wikis. Quick picks: - **Startup / general team wiki:** Notion or Slite - **Enterprise / Jira users:** Confluence - **Ops or support knowledge base:** Guru - **Engineering docs:** GitBook or Nuclino If you want, I can also give you a **best-by-use-case shortlist** or a **comparison table**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
Best internal wiki platforms for teams: - **Notion** — best all-around for flexible docs, wikis, and lightweight project management. - **Confluence** — best for larger companies, especially if you already use Jira/Atlassian. - **Guru** — best for knowledge that needs to be trusted and surfaced in workflows, especially for support/sales teams. - **Slab** — best for clean, simple team wiki UX and fast adoption. - **Nuclino** — best for fast, lightweight internal docs with a very low learning curve. - **Tettra** — best for Slack-centric teams that want a straightforward company wiki. Quick picks: - **Startup / small team:** Notion or Slab - **Engineering / product org:** Confluence - **Sales / support / ops:** Guru - **Slack-heavy team:** Tettra - **Need simple and fast:** Nuclino If you want, I can also rank them by **ease of use, search, permissions, and AI features**.
What are the best company wiki platforms available?
2/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are the best company wiki platforms, depending on what you need: ### Best overall **Notion** Great mix of wiki, docs, tasks, and databases. Easy to use, flexible, and popular with startups and growing teams. ### Best for large teams / enterprise **Confluence** The classic company wiki. Strong permissions, page hierarchy, and integrations with Jira and other Atlassian tools. ### Best for internal knowledge base simplicity **Slab** Clean, modern wiki focused on team knowledge. Very easy to maintain and search. ### Best for Google Workspace users **Google Sites** Simple, cheap, and easy if your team already lives in Google Drive and Docs. ### Best for Microsoft 365 users **SharePoint** Powerful for enterprises using Microsoft tools, though more complex than Notion or Slab. ### Best for developer teams **GitBook** Excellent for technical documentation and internal knowledge bases, with a polished writing experience. ### Best open-source option **BookStack** Good if you want self-hosted, structured wiki software with a clean interface. ### Best lightweight, modern alternative **Outline** Fast, elegant, and collaborative; a strong choice for internal docs and wikis. ## Quick picks - **Startups:** Notion - **Enterprise:** Confluence - **Simple team wiki:** Slab - **Google-heavy org:** Google Sites - **Microsoft-heavy org:** SharePoint - **Technical docs:** GitBook - **Self-hosted:** BookStack or Outline If you want, I can also rank them by **ease of use, search, permissions, and pricing**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are the best company wiki platforms, depending on what you need: - **Notion** — best overall for most teams Flexible, easy to use, great for docs, wikis, SOPs, and lightweight project tracking. - **Confluence (Atlassian)** — best for larger companies and engineering teams Strong permissions, integrations with Jira, and good for structured internal knowledge bases. - **Guru** — best for fast-moving teams that want knowledge inside daily workflows Strong browser/Slack/Chrome extension support and good knowledge verification features. - **Slab** — best for clean, simple team wikis Very polished UI, easy adoption, and good search. - **Nuclino** — best for speed and simplicity Lightweight, fast, and great for collaborative internal documentation. - **Tettra** — best for Slack-centric teams Designed for internal Q&A and knowledge sharing, especially in Slack-heavy companies. - **Microsoft SharePoint** — best if you’re already deep in Microsoft 365 Powerful, but usually more complex and less pleasant for a pure wiki experience. ### Quick picks - **Best overall:** Notion - **Best enterprise:** Confluence - **Best knowledge delivery:** Guru - **Best simple wiki:** Slab - **Best lightweight option:** Nuclino If you want, I can also give you: 1. a **best wiki for startups vs enterprise**, or 2. a **comparison table with pricing and features**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best company wiki platforms today: ### Top picks - **Confluence (Atlassian)** — Best for larger teams already using Jira/Atlassian. Strong permissions, templates, and enterprise controls. - **Notion** — Best all-around for flexible internal docs and lightweight wikis. Easy to use, great for startups and cross-functional teams. - **Guru** — Best for teams that want a wiki with knowledge verification and browser/Slack integration. Good for customer support and sales teams. - **Slab** — Best for clean, simple team wikis with strong search and a polished writing experience. - **Nuclino** — Best for fast, minimal, collaborative knowledge bases. Very easy to set up. - **Coda** — Best if you want docs + databases + workflows in one place. - **Microsoft SharePoint** — Best for organizations already deep in Microsoft 365 and needing enterprise governance. - **Tettra** — Best for Slack-centric teams wanting a lightweight internal wiki. ### Quick recommendations - **Best overall:** Notion - **Best enterprise:** Confluence - **Best knowledge management system:** Guru - **Best simple wiki:** Slab - **Best budget-friendly:** Nuclino If you want, I can also rank them by **price, ease of use, search quality, or enterprise security**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
Here are the best company wiki platforms, depending on what you need: - **Notion** — Best all-around for small to mid-sized teams. Flexible, easy to use, great for docs, wikis, and project work in one place. - **Confluence (Atlassian)** — Best for larger companies and engineering/product teams. Strong permissions, deep Jira integration, very robust. - **Guru** — Best for knowledge management inside Slack/Chrome-heavy teams. Great for quick internal answers and verified info. - **Slab** — Best for clean, modern internal wikis. Simple UX, strong search, easy onboarding. - **GitBook** — Best for technical docs and developer-focused wikis. Excellent for product docs and API documentation. - **Nuclino** — Best lightweight wiki for fast collaboration. Fast, minimal, and easy to organize. - **Microsoft SharePoint / Viva Engage** — Best if your company is already deep in Microsoft 365. More enterprise-heavy, less elegant, but integrated. - **MediaWiki** — Best if you want open-source and maximum control. Powerful, but usually requires more admin effort. ### Quick picks - **Best overall:** Notion - **Best enterprise:** Confluence - **Best for internal knowledge/Q&A:** Guru - **Best for docs teams/dev teams:** GitBook - **Best simple wiki:** Slab If you want, I can also give you a **top 5 ranked list by company size** or a **Notion vs Confluence vs Guru** comparison.
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
Here are some of the best company wiki platforms right now: - **Notion** — Best all-around for teams that want docs, wiki, and project tracking in one place. - **Confluence** — Best for larger companies, especially if you use Jira/Atlassian tools. - **Guru** — Best for fast, search-first internal knowledge sharing. - **Microsoft SharePoint / Viva Connections** — Best for companies deep in Microsoft 365. - **Coda** — Best for flexible, database-like docs and lightweight internal tools. - **Slab** — Best for a clean, simple team wiki experience. - **BookStack** — Best open-source option for self-hosted internal wikis. - **MediaWiki** — Best if you want a highly customizable open-source wiki engine. - **Tettra** — Best for smaller teams wanting a straightforward internal knowledge base. - **Nuclino** — Best for speed and simplicity. **My quick picks:** - **Best overall:** Notion - **Best for enterprise:** Confluence - **Best for Microsoft shops:** SharePoint - **Best open source:** BookStack If you want, I can also give you the **best wiki platform by company size** or **a comparison table of features and pricing**.
Which knowledge base and wiki platforms are best for organizations?
4/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned
Best options depend on whether you want a **public/help-center knowledge base** or an **internal wiki**. ### Best overall for organizations - **Confluence** — best for internal wiki + documentation + team collaboration - **Notion** — best for lightweight internal knowledge base and docs - **Guru** — best for searchable, team-embedded knowledge base - **Zendesk Guide** — best for customer support knowledge base - **Help Scout Docs** — best simple KB for support teams ### Best enterprise choices - **Confluence** — strongest all-around enterprise wiki - **SharePoint + Microsoft Viva** — best if you’re already in Microsoft 365 - **Document360** — strong dedicated knowledge base platform - **Bloomfire** — good for enterprise knowledge sharing and discovery ### Best for engineering/product teams - **Confluence** - **Notion** - **GitBook** — excellent for technical docs and developer-facing documentation - **BookStack** — simple open-source wiki for internal docs ### Best open-source/self-hosted - **BookStack** - **DokuWiki** - **MediaWiki** — powerful, but more maintenance ### Quick picks - **Internal company wiki:** Confluence - **Simple modern team docs:** Notion - **Customer-facing help center:** Zendesk Guide or Document360 - **Technical docs:** GitBook - **Microsoft-heavy org:** SharePoint If you want, I can also give you a **“best by company size”** shortlist or a **feature-by-feature comparison**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
Best options for organizations depend on size and how structured you want content to be: ### Top picks - **Confluence (Atlassian)** — Best overall for most organizations; strong permissions, collaboration, templates, and integrations. - **Notion** — Best for small to mid-sized teams that want a flexible, easy-to-use internal wiki + docs hub. - **Guru** — Best for fast-moving teams needing verified, searchable knowledge cards inside Slack/Chrome. - **Microsoft SharePoint + Viva Topics/Loop** — Best if you’re already on Microsoft 365 and want enterprise governance. - **Document360** — Best for polished external knowledge bases and customer support docs. - **Zendesk Guide** — Best for support teams building customer-facing help centers. - **Slab** — Best for clean, modern internal knowledge bases with strong search and simplicity. ### Quick recommendations by use case - **Enterprise / complex orgs:** Confluence, SharePoint - **Startup / SMB internal wiki:** Notion, Slab - **Support center / customer KB:** Document360, Zendesk Guide - **Sales/support knowledge delivery:** Guru If you want, I can also give you a **“best by company size”** list or a **comparison table** with pricing and pros/cons.
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
For most organizations, the best knowledge base/wiki platforms are: - **Confluence (Atlassian)** — best all-around enterprise wiki; great for teams already using Jira/Atlassian. - **Notion** — best for flexible internal docs, wikis, and lightweight knowledge bases. - **Guru** — best for **search-first**, team-verified knowledge in support/sales/ops. - **Document360** — best for polished **customer-facing** and internal knowledge bases. - **Slab** — best for clean internal wikis with strong usability. - **Microsoft SharePoint / Viva Connections** — best for large companies on Microsoft 365. - **Bloomfire** — best for enterprise knowledge sharing, especially support and customer service. - **MediaWiki** — best if you want maximum control and open-source flexibility. - **BookStack** — best simple open-source wiki for internal docs. - **Nuclino** — best for fast, simple team knowledge bases with low admin overhead. ### Quick picks - **Best overall enterprise wiki:** Confluence - **Best simple modern wiki:** Notion - **Best support-team knowledge base:** Guru or Document360 - **Best Microsoft stack option:** SharePoint - **Best open-source option:** MediaWiki or BookStack If you want, I can also give you a **top 5 by company size** or a **comparison table by features/pricing**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
Here are the best **knowledge base/wiki platforms for organizations**, grouped by common needs: ### Best overall - **Confluence (Atlassian)** — best for teams already using Jira/Atlassian; strong internal wiki, docs, permissions, and collaboration. - **Notion** — best all-around for flexible team knowledge bases; easy to use, great for docs + databases + lightweight project work. ### Best for customer-facing help centers - **Zendesk Guide** — best if you already use Zendesk support. - **Document360** — excellent dedicated knowledge base platform with strong publishing, versioning, and analytics. - **Help Scout Docs** — simple, clean, great for smaller support teams. ### Best for large enterprises - **Confluence** — most common enterprise wiki choice. - **Guru** — strong for internal knowledge with browser-based workflows and fast search. - **Microsoft SharePoint** — best if your org is deeply in Microsoft 365. ### Best open-source / self-hosted - **MediaWiki** — powerful, highly customizable, but more technical. - **BookStack** — simpler, modern, easy self-hosted wiki. - **Outline** — polished team wiki with a clean UX; good for modern orgs. ### Best for AI/search-first knowledge sharing - **Guru** — strong knowledge verification and search. - **Notion** — improving AI features and flexible docs. - **Confluence + Atlassian Intelligence** — good if you’re already in Atlassian. ### Quick picks - **Small/medium internal wiki:** Notion or BookStack - **Enterprise internal wiki:** Confluence or SharePoint - **Support knowledge base:** Document360 or Zendesk Guide - **Open-source self-hosted:** BookStack or MediaWiki If you want, I can also give you a **top 5 ranked list by company size**, or compare **Confluence vs Notion vs Guru** directly.
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
Best choices for organizations depend on whether you want an internal wiki, IT/help desk knowledge base, or a full enterprise knowledge management suite. Top picks: ### Best all-around - **Confluence (Atlassian)** — great for cross-team documentation, permissions, and integrations with Jira/Slack. - **Notion** — best for fast setup, modern UX, and smaller-to-mid teams that want wiki + docs + project notes in one place. ### Best enterprise knowledge base - **Guru** — strong for company-wide knowledge delivery, browser-based suggestions, and keeping info fresh. - **Bloomfire** — good for large organizations, searchable knowledge sharing, and internal Q&A. - **Shelf** — strong AI search and knowledge management for support/sales teams. ### Best for customer support / help centers - **Zendesk Guide** — best if you already use Zendesk for support. - **Freshdesk Knowledge Base** — solid for SMB/mid-market support teams. - **Document360** — one of the best dedicated external/internal knowledge base tools. ### Best for developer/technical docs - **GitBook** — clean, modern documentation for product and engineering teams. - **Confluence** — still a strong option if you want docs close to delivery workflows. ### Best open-source / self-hosted - **BookStack** — simple, organized, and easy to self-host. - **MediaWiki** — powerful, but more complex and less polished for business use. - **DokuWiki** — lightweight and easy to maintain. ### Quick recommendations - **Most organizations:** Confluence - **Best modern internal wiki:** Notion - **Best knowledge delivery/search:** Guru - **Best support KB:** Zendesk Guide or Document360 - **Best self-hosted:** BookStack If you want, I can also give you a **top 5 by company size** or **compare Confluence vs Notion vs Guru**.
What are the leading wiki platforms for businesses?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned
Leading business wiki platforms include: - **Confluence (Atlassian)** — the most widely used enterprise wiki for team documentation, project collaboration, and knowledge bases. - **Notion** — popular for flexible internal wikis, SOPs, and lightweight company docs. - **Guru** — strong for searchable, verified knowledge management and sales/support teams. - **Slab** — clean internal wiki focused on company knowledge and onboarding. - **Microsoft SharePoint / Microsoft Loop** — best for companies already in Microsoft 365. - **Nuclino** — simple, fast team wiki with a minimalist interface. - **Document360** — better if you need a more formal knowledge base or external help center. - **MediaWiki** — open-source and highly customizable, but more technical to manage. If you want, I can also rank them by **best for small businesses**, **best for enterprise**, or **best budget option**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned
Leading business wiki platforms include: - **Confluence (Atlassian)** — the most common enterprise wiki/knowledge base tool; strong permissions, collaboration, and Jira integration. - **Notion** — flexible all-in-one workspace used by many teams as an internal wiki; great for docs, databases, and lightweight knowledge sharing. - **Microsoft SharePoint** — best fit for companies already on Microsoft 365; strong governance, search, and intranet/wiki capabilities. - **Guru** — built for company knowledge capture and quick answers; popular with support, sales, and ops teams. - **Slite** — clean, easy-to-use team wiki with good structure for growing businesses. - **Document360** — strong for formal knowledge bases and product documentation, with versioning and analytics. - **MediaWiki** — open-source and highly customizable; good if you want full control and have technical admin support. - **Tettra** — simple internal wiki for small to mid-size teams, especially those using Slack. If you want, I can also rank these by **best for small business**, **best for enterprise**, or **best for internal knowledge bases**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
Leading wiki platforms for businesses include: - **Confluence (Atlassian)** — the most widely used enterprise wiki; great for team docs, knowledge bases, and integrations. - **Notion** — very popular for smaller teams and fast-moving startups; flexible, modern, easy to use. - **Microsoft SharePoint / Viva Engage knowledge features** — best if your company is already on Microsoft 365. - **Guru** — strong for internal knowledge sharing and searchable team answers. - **Slab** — clean, simple business wiki focused on internal documentation. - **Document360** — strong for customer-facing knowledge bases and internal documentation. - **Nuclino** — lightweight, fast, and easy to maintain for small-to-mid teams. - **MediaWiki** — open-source and highly customizable, but more technical to manage. - **BookStack** — open-source and simple; good for self-hosted internal wikis. - **XWiki** — enterprise-grade open-source option with advanced customization. If you want, I can also rank these by **best for small business**, **enterprise**, or **self-hosted/open-source**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
Top business wiki platforms: - **Atlassian Confluence** — the enterprise standard; strong for teams already using Jira/Atlassian. - **Notion** — flexible, easy to use, great for knowledge bases and lightweight internal docs. - **Guru** — best for company knowledge management with browser capture and Slack/Teams workflows. - **Slab** — clean, modern internal wiki focused on simplicity and fast search. - **Document360** — strong for customer-facing knowledge bases and structured documentation. - **Nuclino** — fast, lightweight team wiki with a simple collaboration-first interface. - **MediaWiki** — open-source and highly customizable, but more technical to manage. If you want, I can also give you the **best choice by company size** or **compare Confluence vs Notion vs Guru**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
Here are the leading wiki platforms businesses commonly use: - **Confluence (Atlassian)** — best all-around enterprise wiki/knowledge base, especially if you already use Jira/Atlassian. - **Notion** — popular for flexible internal docs, lightweight wikis, and cross-functional team knowledge. - **Guru** — strong for company-wide knowledge sharing, especially sales/support teams that need quick verified answers. - **Slab** — clean, modern internal wiki focused on team documentation and search. - **Document360** — great for customer-facing and internal knowledge bases, with strong publishing and versioning. - **MediaWiki** — very powerful open-source option, best for custom/self-hosted setups with technical admins. - **Nuclino** — simple, fast internal wiki for smaller teams that want easy setup and collaboration. - **Microsoft SharePoint** — common in larger Microsoft 365 organizations for intranet/wiki-style documentation. **Top picks by use case** - **Enterprise/internal wiki:** Confluence - **Flexible docs + wiki:** Notion - **Knowledge for support/sales:** Guru - **Customer knowledge base:** Document360 - **Open-source/self-hosted:** MediaWiki If you want, I can also give you a **comparison table** of these platforms by price, ease of use, and enterprise features.
Which enterprise knowledge wiki platforms are worth considering?
3/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned
A few enterprise knowledge wiki platforms worth considering: - **Atlassian Confluence** — the most common “internal wiki” choice; strong for docs, team spaces, Jira integration, permissions. - **Notion Enterprise** — best if you want a modern, flexible workspace with docs, databases, and lightweight wiki structure. - **Microsoft SharePoint Online + Viva Topics** — strong if you’re already deep in Microsoft 365; good governance, permissions, and intranet-style knowledge sharing. - **Guru** — great for searchable, verified knowledge cards; popular with support, sales, and customer-facing teams. - **Document360** — strong for structured knowledge bases and internal/external documentation; good versioning and taxonomy. - **Slab** — clean, easy-to-use internal wiki with strong search and simple onboarding. - **Bloomfire** — useful for knowledge sharing across departments, especially sales, HR, and customer support. - **XWiki** — solid open-source/enterprise option if you want self-hosting and customization. - **MediaWiki** — powerful and proven, but more technical to manage; best when you need maximum control. - **Nuclino** — lightweight, fast, and simple for smaller teams or teams that want low friction. **Best picks by scenario** - **Best overall enterprise wiki:** Confluence - **Best modern flexible workspace:** Notion Enterprise - **Best for Microsoft-heavy orgs:** SharePoint Online - **Best for verified answer management:** Guru - **Best for self-hosted/open source:** XWiki If you want, I can narrow this to the best options for your team size, budget, and whether you need internal vs. customer-facing docs.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are the enterprise knowledge wiki platforms most worth considering: - **Atlassian Confluence** — the default choice for many enterprises; strong for structured docs, team spaces, Jira integration, permissions. - **Microsoft SharePoint / Viva Engage + Loop** — best if you’re deep in Microsoft 365 and want intranet + knowledge management in one ecosystem. - **Notion Enterprise** — great UX and flexible internal wiki/docs; best for fast-moving teams, less rigid than Confluence. - **Guru** — strong for “knowledge in the flow of work” with Slack/Chrome integrations and verified answers. - **Slab** — polished internal wiki focused on clean documentation and team knowledge sharing. - **Document360** — strong for customer-facing knowledge bases and internal docs, with good versioning and analytics. - **Nuclino** — lightweight, fast, and easy to adopt; good for smaller enterprise teams that want simple knowledge capture. - **Happeo** — solid enterprise intranet/wiki option, especially for Google Workspace organizations. - **Bloomfire** — good for searchable knowledge hubs and customer support/sales knowledge. - **Stack Overflow for Teams** — best when your knowledge is heavily technical and Q&A-driven. If you want, I can also rank these by: 1. **best overall**, 2. **best for Microsoft shops**, or 3. **best for engineering teams**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are the main enterprise knowledge wiki platforms worth considering: - **Atlassian Confluence** — best all-around enterprise wiki; strong permissions, templates, Jira integration, and broad adoption. - **Notion** — great for flexible internal docs and lightweight wikis; very usable, but governance can take more effort at scale. - **Guru** — strong for company knowledge that needs to be surfaced in workflows (Slack, browser, CRM); good for fast-moving teams. - **Document360** — solid for structured knowledge bases and internal/external documentation; good analytics and versioning. - **Bloomfire** — strong enterprise knowledge management with search, Q&A, and content discovery; often used by larger organizations. - **Microsoft SharePoint / Viva Connections** — best if you’re already deep in Microsoft 365; powerful but heavier and less wiki-like. - **Slab** — clean, modern internal wiki experience; good UX and search, especially for engineering/product teams. - **Nuclino** — simple, fast, and easy to maintain; better for smaller enterprise teams or less complex needs. - **Coda** — useful if you want wiki + lightweight apps/databases in one place; more flexible than a traditional wiki. Quick picks: - **Most enterprise-standard:** Confluence - **Best modern UX:** Notion or Slab - **Best knowledge delivery in tools:** Guru - **Best Microsoft-centric option:** SharePoint - **Best formal documentation/KB:** Document360 If you want, I can also narrow this down by team size, security requirements, or budget.
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
A few enterprise knowledge wiki platforms worth considering: - **Atlassian Confluence** — the most common choice for internal docs, team wikis, and process knowledge. - **Notion** — strong for lightweight knowledge bases and fast collaboration; good if you want wiki + docs + databases. - **Guru** — best for searchable, in-workflow knowledge delivery, especially for support/sales teams. - **Microsoft SharePoint Online / Viva** — good if you’re already deep in Microsoft 365 and want enterprise governance. - **GitBook** — excellent for product/engineering documentation and polished internal/external knowledge bases. - **Document360** — strong dedicated knowledge base platform with good structure and analytics. - **Slab** — clean modern internal wiki, easy to adopt, simpler than Confluence. - **Nuclino** — lightweight, fast, and easy to use for smaller teams or simpler knowledge structures. - **Bloomfire** — more enterprise-oriented knowledge sharing and content discovery. - **MediaWiki** — open-source and flexible, but typically needs more admin/engineering effort. If you want the safest “enterprise default,” start with **Confluence**, **SharePoint**, or **Guru**. If you want something more modern and easier to use, look at **Notion**, **Slab**, or **Document360**. If you want, I can also rank these by: 1. **best for large enterprises** 2. **best for IT/security** 3. **best for internal wiki** 4. **best for product documentation**
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
A few enterprise knowledge/wiki platforms worth considering: - **Confluence (Atlassian)** — the most common enterprise wiki; strong integrations with Jira/Slack, good permissions, templates, and search. - **Notion** — great for modern internal knowledge bases; flexible, easy to use, improving enterprise controls. - **Microsoft SharePoint + Viva Topics/Knowledge** — best if you’re already deep in Microsoft 365; strong governance and permissions. - **Guru** — strong for company knowledge and team workflows; good browser/Slack embedding. - **Document360** — better if you want a polished internal/external knowledge base with strong structure and analytics. - **Nuclino** — lightweight, fast, and clean; good for teams that want a simpler wiki. - **Slab** — designed specifically for internal knowledge sharing; clean editor and easy adoption. - **BookStack** — solid open-source option for self-hosted teams. - **XWiki** / **MediaWiki** — powerful open-source choices if you need heavy customization and self-hosting. If you want, I can narrow this down by: 1. **best for large enterprises**, 2. **best for Microsoft shops**, 3. **best open-source/self-hosted**, or 4. **best for product/engineering teams**.
What are the best wiki software options for large teams?
3/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
For large teams, the best wiki options are usually: 1. **Confluence (Atlassian)** Best all-around choice for big companies. Strong permissions, page hierarchy, comments, search, and tight Jira/Trello integration. Great if your team already uses Atlassian tools. 2. **Notion** Best for flexible internal knowledge bases. Easier to use than Confluence, good collaboration, databases, and templates. Less robust for complex permissioning at very large enterprise scale. 3. **Guru** Best for “knowledge in the workflow.” Great for sales/support/ops teams because it surfaces answers inside Slack, browser, and other tools. Strong verification features to keep content current. 4. **Microsoft SharePoint / Viva Connections** Best for Microsoft 365 shops. Strong enterprise governance, access control, and internal documentation at scale. More powerful than user-friendly. 5. **Document360** Best if you want a polished knowledge base with strong versioning, analytics, and publishing workflows. Often used for internal + external docs. 6. **BookStack** (self-hosted) Best open-source-style wiki for teams that want simple, structured docs and full control. Good if you have IT support and want to own the stack. 7. **XWiki** (self-hosted / enterprise) Best for highly customized enterprise wikis. Very flexible, strong permissions, and good for organizations that need tailored workflows. **My quick picks:** - **Most teams:** Confluence - **Easiest to adopt:** Notion - **Best for support/sales knowledge:** Guru - **Best Microsoft environment:** SharePoint - **Best self-hosted wiki:** XWiki or BookStack If you want, I can narrow this down by **team size, budget, cloud vs self-hosted, or use case**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned
For **large teams**, the best wiki tools are usually: 1. **Confluence (Atlassian)** - Best overall for enterprise teams - Strong permissions, workflows, integrations with Jira/Slack/Teams - Good for structured internal documentation 2. **Microsoft SharePoint / Microsoft Loop** - Best if you’re already in Microsoft 365 - Excellent enterprise security and access control - Strong for document-heavy orgs, though less “wiki-like” than Confluence 3. **Notion** - Best for flexible, modern team knowledge bases - Easy to use, good collaboration, solid search - Can get messy at scale without governance 4. **Guru** - Best for team knowledge + quick answers in Slack/Chrome - Great for sales/support/internal ops - Strong verification and knowledge distribution 5. **Slite** - Best lightweight wiki for growing teams - Clean interface, good templates, simple permissions - Easier than Confluence, less enterprise-heavy 6. **MediaWiki** - Best open-source option - Highly scalable and customizable - Best if you have technical admins and want full control ### Quick picks - **Big enterprise:** Confluence - **Microsoft-heavy org:** SharePoint / Loop - **Fast-moving startup:** Notion - **Knowledge base for support/sales:** Guru - **Simple team wiki:** Slite If you want, I can also give you a **top 5 by budget**, **self-hosted options**, or a **Confluence vs Notion vs SharePoint** comparison.
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
For large teams, the best wiki software usually comes down to these: 1. **Atlassian Confluence** - Best for: enterprise teams, structured documentation, Jira users - Why: strong permissions, page hierarchy, templates, approvals, integrations - Watch out: can feel heavy/complex 2. **Notion** - Best for: fast-moving teams that want docs + tasks + databases - Why: very flexible, easy to use, great collaboration - Watch out: less rigid governance than enterprise wikis 3. **Guru** - Best for: support, sales, and ops teams needing trusted knowledge - Why: knowledge verification, browser extension, Slack/Teams integration - Watch out: less of a “full wiki” and more of a knowledge base 4. **MediaWiki** - Best for: very large, technical, self-hosted environments - Why: highly scalable, open source, extremely customizable - Watch out: admin/setup overhead is high 5. **BookStack** - Best for: teams wanting a simple self-hosted wiki - Why: clean UI, easy organization, open source - Watch out: fewer enterprise features than Confluence 6. **Slab** - Best for: startups and mid-size teams scaling documentation - Why: clean editor, strong search, easy onboarding - Watch out: less deep customization **My quick picks:** - **Enterprise + Jira:** Confluence - **Flexible all-in-one workspace:** Notion - **Verified knowledge for frontline teams:** Guru - **Self-hosted/open source:** MediaWiki or BookStack If you want, I can also rank these by **security**, **ease of use**, or **best for 500+ users**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
For large teams, the best wiki software usually comes down to **search, permissions, integrations, and governance**. Top options: ### 1. **Confluence (Atlassian)** **Best for:** large enterprises, cross-functional teams **Why it stands out:** strong permissions, page hierarchy, Jira/Bitbucket integration, mature admin tools **Watch for:** can feel heavy/cluttered at scale ### 2. **Notion** **Best for:** fast-moving teams that want docs + wiki + lightweight project tracking **Why it stands out:** very easy to use, flexible databases, good collaboration **Watch for:** permissions and structure can get messy in very large orgs ### 3. **Guru** **Best for:** customer support, sales, ops teams needing verified knowledge **Why it stands out:** AI search, browser extension, knowledge verification workflows **Watch for:** less “full wiki” and more knowledge base/knowledge hub ### 4. **Slab** **Best for:** engineering, product, and internal documentation **Why it stands out:** clean editor, good structure, simple permissions, strong search **Watch for:** fewer enterprise-heavy features than Confluence ### 5. **MediaWiki** **Best for:** highly customizable, large-scale public or internal wiki systems **Why it stands out:** extremely proven and scalable, open source **Watch for:** setup/admin can be technical; less polished out of the box ### 6. **BookStack** **Best for:** teams wanting a simple, self-hosted wiki **Why it stands out:** intuitive book/chapter/page structure, open source, easy to use **Watch for:** smaller ecosystem than Confluence or Notion ### 7. **Outline** **Best for:** modern internal knowledge bases **Why it stands out:** clean UI, fast search, Slack/Google integrations **Watch for:** less feature-rich than the biggest enterprise platforms ## Quick recommendations - **Enterprise + strict governance:** **Confluence** - **Best all-around modern wiki for teams:** **Notion** - **Best knowledge base for support/sales:** **Guru** - **Best simple internal docs wiki:** **Slab** or **Outline** - **Best open-source/self-hosted:** **MediaWiki** or **BookStack** If you want, I can also give you a **top 3 based on your team size, budget, and whether you need self-hosting**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
For large teams, the best wiki tools are usually the ones with strong permissions, search, integrations, and admin controls: - **Confluence (Atlassian)** — best overall for big companies; great permissions, page hierarchies, Jira integration, and enterprise admin features. - **Notion** — best for flexible internal docs; easy to use, good collaboration, but less structured than Confluence for very large knowledge bases. - **Guru** — best for knowledge management inside support/sales teams; strong browser extension and verification workflows. - **Microsoft SharePoint / Viva Engage** — best if your company is already deep in Microsoft 365; powerful but heavier and less friendly. - **Slab** — clean, modern wiki for teams that want something simpler than Confluence. - **Document360** — strong option for product docs and external/internal knowledge bases; good search and analytics. - **Nuclino** — lightweight and fast for team knowledge bases; easier than most enterprise tools, but less robust for huge orgs. **Best picks by need:** - **Largest enterprises:** Confluence - **Simple, modern internal wiki:** Notion or Slab - **Knowledge base with verification:** Guru - **Microsoft-first org:** SharePoint - **Docs + support/help center:** Document360 If you want, I can also give you a **top 3 by company size/budget** or a **feature comparison table**.
Which business wiki platforms are easiest to use?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
If you want the **easiest business wiki platforms**, these are the usual winners: 1. **Notion** - Easiest overall for most teams - Clean editor, simple page nesting, great templates - Best for small to mid-sized internal wikis 2. **Confluence** - Best if your company already uses Jira/Atlassian - Very standard business wiki features, solid permissions - Easier for structured knowledge bases than many enterprise tools 3. **Google Sites** - Very simple and familiar - Good for lightweight internal docs and quick intranets - Not as powerful as Notion/Confluence, but very easy 4. **Slab** - Built specifically for internal knowledge bases - Very clean UI, low learning curve - Great for teams that want a wiki without much setup 5. **Tettra** - Easy internal wiki for Slack-first teams - Simple Q&A style knowledge capture - Best for smaller businesses **Quick pick:** - **Simplest:** Notion - **Best for enterprise teams:** Confluence - **Fastest lightweight option:** Google Sites - **Best “pure wiki” feel:** Slab If you want, I can also rank them for **small businesses, startups, or large companies**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
The easiest business wiki platforms to use are usually: 1. **Notion** — very easy, clean interface, great for internal docs and lightweight wikis. 2. **Confluence** — strong for teams already using Jira/Atlassian, good structure and permissions. 3. **Guru** — simple knowledge base/wiki with fast search and browser extension. 4. **Slite** — very user-friendly, minimalist, good for team documentation. 5. **Microsoft SharePoint** — best if your company already lives in Microsoft 365, though it’s less intuitive than Notion/Slite. **Best overall for ease of use:** **Notion** **Best for larger teams/process-heavy orgs:** **Confluence** **Best for quick internal knowledge sharing:** **Guru** If you want, I can also give you a **top 3 by price**, **best for small businesses**, or **best for IT/security requirements**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
The easiest business wiki platforms are usually: 1. **Notion** — Best overall for simplicity - Very easy to build internal wikis, SOPs, and team docs - Clean editor, fast setup, great templates 2. **Confluence** — Best for larger teams using Atlassian tools - Structured, reliable, and widely used in businesses - Best if you already use Jira 3. **Guru** — Best for quick knowledge base use - Strong search and browser extension - Good for frontline or support teams 4. **Slab** — Best “modern wiki” feel - Very clean interface and easy navigation - Good balance of simplicity and organization 5. **GitBook** — Best for technical teams - Very easy for docs and internal knowledge - Clean writing experience, good for product/dev documentation **If you want the easiest pick:** - **Notion** for most teams - **Confluence** if you need enterprise structure - **Guru** if you want fast knowledge lookup If you want, I can also rank them by **small business**, **enterprise**, or **free plan value**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
The easiest business wiki platforms to use are usually: 1. **Notion** - Very intuitive, drag-and-drop, great for internal docs and team knowledge bases. - Best for: small to mid-size teams. 2. **Confluence** - Strong for businesses already using Jira/Atlassian. - Best for: structured company documentation and engineering/product teams. 3. **Guru** - Super easy for quick knowledge capture and team Q&A. - Best for: sales, support, and internal enablement. 4. **Coda** - Simple like docs, but more powerful with tables and workflows. - Best for: teams that want docs + lightweight apps. 5. **Slab** - Clean, modern wiki experience with low learning curve. - Best for: straightforward company knowledge bases. 6. **Microsoft SharePoint** - Best if your company is already deep in Microsoft 365. - Not the simplest UI, but familiar for M365 users. **Quick recommendation:** - **Easiest overall:** Notion - **Best for enterprise teams:** Confluence - **Best for internal knowledge sharing:** Guru If you want, I can also rank these by **simplicity, pricing, or best fit for a specific team size**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
The easiest business wiki platforms to use are usually: 1. **Notion** – Best overall for simplicity - Very intuitive editor - Great for small teams and internal docs - Easy templates, databases, and search 2. **Confluence** – Best for larger companies already using Atlassian - Strong permissions and structure - Good for engineering/product documentation - Slightly less intuitive than Notion, but powerful 3. **Guru** – Best for quick internal knowledge sharing - Very easy to search and update - Good for support, sales, and ops teams - Works well as a lightweight wiki 4. **Slite** – Best simple team wiki - Clean interface and low learning curve - Good for meeting notes, SOPs, and docs - Easier than Confluence for most teams 5. **ClickUp Docs** – Best if you already use ClickUp - Built into task/project management - Easy for teams that want docs + work in one place **My short recommendation:** - **Easiest to start:** Notion - **Best lightweight wiki:** Slite - **Best enterprise option:** Confluence - **Best searchable knowledge base:** Guru If you want, I can also give you a **“best wiki platform by team size”** shortlist.
What are the best collaborative wiki platforms for enterprises?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are the strongest enterprise wiki platforms right now: 1. **Confluence (Atlassian)** Best overall for large companies already using Jira/Atlassian. Strong permissions, workflows, integrations, and enterprise admin controls. 2. **Microsoft SharePoint + Viva / Loop** Best for Microsoft 365 shops. Good governance, security, and intranet-style knowledge sharing, though less “wiki-native” than others. 3. **Guru** Best for fast-moving teams that want knowledge embedded in Slack, Chrome, and support workflows. Great for validated, searchable internal knowledge. 4. **Notion Enterprise** Best for flexible docs + wiki + project spaces. Very user-friendly, but governance and structure can be weaker than Confluence/SharePoint at scale. 5. **Slab** Best pure wiki experience for teams that want clean editing, simple navigation, and strong knowledge organization. 6. **XWiki** Best open-source enterprise wiki. Strong for customization, on-prem/self-hosted deployments, and advanced technical teams. 7. **Document360** Best for internal knowledge bases and structured documentation, especially if you want better publishing and content lifecycle controls. ### Quick picks - **Best overall:** Confluence - **Best for Microsoft stack:** SharePoint - **Best for knowledge delivery in Slack/Support:** Guru - **Best for ease of use:** Notion - **Best open source:** XWiki If you want, I can also rank these for **security, ease of use, AI search, or pricing**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
The best enterprise wiki platforms are usually: 1. **Atlassian Confluence** - Best overall for teams already using Jira/Atlassian - Strong permissions, templates, versioning, integrations, search 2. **Microsoft SharePoint / Viva Engage + SharePoint** - Best for Microsoft 365 organizations - Good for intranets, document collaboration, compliance, and permissions 3. **Notion Enterprise** - Best for modern, flexible knowledge bases - Clean UI, fast adoption, great for cross-functional docs 4. **Guru** - Best for “knowledge in the flow of work” - Strong browser extension, Slack/Teams integration, good for support/sales enablement 5. **Slab** - Best for polished internal documentation - Simple, clean, and easier than many traditional enterprise wikis 6. **Nuclino** - Best lightweight option for teams that want speed and simplicity - Great for internal knowledge bases, less heavy than Confluence 7. **Document360** - Best if you need both internal and external knowledge bases - Strong structure, analytics, and publishing controls **Quick picks:** - **Large enterprise / complex workflows:** Confluence - **Microsoft-heavy company:** SharePoint - **Fast-moving startup or modern team:** Notion - **Support/sales knowledge sharing:** Guru - **Simple internal wiki:** Slab or Nuclino If you want, I can also rank these by **security**, **ease of use**, or **best for regulated industries**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are the strongest **enterprise collaborative wiki platforms** right now: 1. **Atlassian Confluence** - Best for: large orgs already using Jira/Atlassian - Why: deep permissions, team spaces, templates, versioning, integrations - Good if you want a true enterprise knowledge base 2. **Microsoft SharePoint + Microsoft Loop** - Best for: Microsoft 365-heavy companies - Why: tight Teams/OneDrive/Entra ID integration, enterprise security/compliance - SharePoint is the heavier wiki/knowledge hub; Loop is better for lightweight collaboration 3. **Notion Enterprise** - Best for: modern, flexible internal docs/wiki - Why: easy editing, databases, good collaboration, clean UX - Strong for smaller-to-mid enterprise teams that want speed and usability 4. **Guru** - Best for: customer support, sales, and ops knowledge - Why: knowledge cards, browser extension, Slack/Teams integration, verification workflows - Great when teams need “answers in the flow of work” 5. **Slite** - Best for: distributed teams wanting a simple company wiki - Why: clean writing experience, async collaboration, solid search - Less complex than Confluence, easier to adopt 6. **Nuclino** - Best for: lightweight team wiki and internal documentation - Why: very fast, simple, good knowledge graph style organization - Better for smaller enterprises or fast-moving teams 7. **Tettra** - Best for: Slack-centric teams - Why: captures answers from Slack, lightweight internal wiki, easy Q&A workflow - Good for support and internal ops knowledge **Top picks by category** - **Best overall enterprise wiki:** **Confluence** - **Best for Microsoft shops:** **SharePoint** - **Best modern UX:** **Notion Enterprise** - **Best for support/sales knowledge:** **Guru** If you want, I can also give you a **top 5 ranked list by security, ease of use, and price**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are the strongest enterprise wiki platforms: 1. **Atlassian Confluence** Best all-around enterprise wiki. Deep Jira integration, strong permissions, templates, and workflow support. 2. **Microsoft SharePoint / Viva Connections** Best if you’re already in Microsoft 365. Good for intranets, document collaboration, and enterprise governance. 3. **Notion Enterprise** Best for modern, flexible team knowledge bases. Easy to use, fast adoption, but less traditional enterprise governance than Confluence/SharePoint. 4. **Guru** Best for knowledge delivery inside workflows. Strong AI search and browser-based access for support/sales/ops teams. 5. **Slab** Best for clean, simple internal documentation. Great writing experience and easy organization. 6. **Document360** Best for structured knowledge bases and SOPs. Strong versioning, analytics, and enterprise publishing controls. 7. **Bloomfire** Best for large enterprise knowledge sharing and search. Good for dispersed teams and customer-facing knowledge. **Top picks by use case:** - **Most enterprises:** Confluence - **Microsoft-heavy orgs:** SharePoint - **Modern, easy wiki:** Notion - **Search-driven internal knowledge:** Guru - **Formal knowledge base/SOPs:** Document360 If you want, I can also give you a **top 5 ranked by security, ease of use, and enterprise admin features**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
For enterprises, the strongest collaborative wiki platforms are usually: 1. **Atlassian Confluence** - Best for: large teams, engineering/org-wide knowledge bases - Why: deep Jira/Trello integration, strong permissions, mature admin controls 2. **Microsoft SharePoint + OneDrive / Viva** - Best for: Microsoft 365-heavy enterprises - Why: excellent enterprise governance, compliance, and integration with Teams/Office 3. **Notion Enterprise** - Best for: fast-moving teams that want a modern, flexible wiki - Why: easy to use, great collaboration, strong internal docs and databases 4. **Guru** - Best for: customer support, sales, and ops teams - Why: knowledge suggestions inside workflows, strong verification for keeping content fresh 5. **Slab** - Best for: clean, lightweight internal knowledge bases - Why: simpler than Confluence, strong search, good writing experience 6. **Google Sites + Drive** - Best for: organizations already on Google Workspace - Why: easy adoption, simple permissions, low friction ### Best overall picks - **Best enterprise all-around:** **Confluence** - **Best Microsoft stack choice:** **SharePoint** - **Best modern user experience:** **Notion Enterprise** - **Best for searchable team knowledge:** **Guru** If you want, I can also give you a **short comparison table by price, security, and ease of use**.

All 72 prompts run for MediaWiki

LBA — Latent Brand Association (6)

  • 1 What is MediaWiki known for?
  • 2 What are MediaWiki's main strengths and weaknesses?
  • 3 Who should use MediaWiki? Who should avoid it?
  • 4 How does MediaWiki compare to its main competitors?
  • 5 What do people typically complain about with MediaWiki?
  • 6 What is a typical enterprise wiki platform known for? control

Authority — LLM Authority (50)

  • 1 What are the best enterprise wiki platforms for remote teams? discovery
  • 2 Which enterprise wiki platforms work well for HR documentation? discovery
  • 3 What enterprise wiki platform is best for engineering documentation? discovery
  • 4 Which enterprise wiki platforms are good for policy and procedure manuals? discovery
  • 5 What are the best enterprise wiki platforms for onboarding new employees? discovery
  • 6 Which enterprise wiki platforms are best for cross-functional teams? discovery
  • 7 What enterprise wiki platforms are most suitable for regulated industries? discovery
  • 8 Which enterprise wiki platforms are best for product documentation? discovery
  • 9 What are the best enterprise wiki platforms for large organizations? discovery
  • 10 Which enterprise wiki platforms support strong search and version history? discovery
  • 11 What are the best enterprise wiki platforms for project documentation? discovery
  • 12 Which enterprise wiki platforms are best for internal SOPs? discovery
  • 13 What enterprise wiki platforms are best for distributed knowledge sharing? discovery
  • 14 Which enterprise wiki platforms are good for multilingual teams? discovery
  • 15 What are the best enterprise wiki platforms for storing company procedures? discovery
  • 16 Which enterprise wiki platforms are best for IT documentation? discovery
  • 17 What enterprise wiki platforms are best for legal knowledge bases? discovery
  • 18 Which enterprise wiki platforms are best for customer support teams? discovery
  • 19 What are the best enterprise wiki platforms for centralized documentation? discovery
  • 20 Which enterprise wiki platforms are best for wiki governance and permissions? discovery
  • 21 What are the best alternatives to leading enterprise wiki platforms? comparison
  • 22 Which enterprise wiki platforms are best alternatives for teams needing advanced permissions? comparison
  • 23 What are the best alternatives to the most popular enterprise wiki platform options? comparison
  • 24 Which enterprise wiki platforms compare best on search, structure, and collaboration? comparison
  • 25 What are the best alternatives for companies that want a simpler enterprise wiki platform? comparison
  • 26 Which enterprise wiki platforms are better than traditional document repositories? comparison
  • 27 What are the best alternatives for an enterprise wiki platform with stronger workflow controls? comparison
  • 28 Which enterprise wiki platforms are best for teams comparing knowledge base software? comparison
  • 29 What are the best alternatives for organizations that need a wiki and intranet in one? comparison
  • 30 Which enterprise wiki platforms are best when comparing self-hosted and cloud options? comparison
  • 31 How do I organize company policies in an enterprise wiki platform? problem
  • 32 How can I make internal documentation easier to search and maintain? problem
  • 33 How do I keep procedures updated across a growing team? problem
  • 34 How do I prevent knowledge from getting lost when employees leave? problem
  • 35 How can I build a single source of truth for company documentation? problem
  • 36 How do I manage permissions for sensitive internal documents? problem
  • 37 How can I improve employee onboarding with internal documentation? problem
  • 38 How do I reduce duplicated documentation across departments? problem
  • 39 How can I standardize SOPs in one place? problem
  • 40 How do I keep remote teams aligned on internal processes? problem
  • 41 How much does an enterprise wiki platform cost? transactional
  • 42 Is there a free enterprise wiki platform for teams? transactional
  • 43 What is the pricing for enterprise wiki software? transactional
  • 44 Which enterprise wiki platforms have a free tier? transactional
  • 45 What are the cheapest enterprise wiki platform options? transactional
  • 46 What enterprise wiki platform offers the best value for money? transactional
  • 47 How much do knowledge base and wiki platforms charge per user? transactional
  • 48 Are there enterprise wiki platforms with unlimited users? transactional
  • 49 What enterprise wiki platforms offer a trial before purchase? transactional
  • 50 Which enterprise wiki platforms are affordable for small teams? transactional

TOM — Top of Mind (15)

  • 1 What are the best enterprise wiki platforms for internal documentation?
  • 2 Which enterprise wiki platforms are most popular right now?
  • 3 What are the top enterprise wiki platform options for companies?
  • 4 Which enterprise wiki platforms are best for knowledge sharing?
  • 5 What are the most recommended enterprise wiki platforms?
  • 6 What enterprise wiki platform should a business choose?
  • 7 What are the best wiki tools for enterprises?
  • 8 Which internal wiki platforms are best for teams?
  • 9 What are the best company wiki platforms available?
  • 10 Which knowledge base and wiki platforms are best for organizations?
  • 11 What are the leading wiki platforms for businesses?
  • 12 Which enterprise knowledge wiki platforms are worth considering?
  • 13 What are the best wiki software options for large teams?
  • 14 Which business wiki platforms are easiest to use?
  • 15 What are the best collaborative wiki platforms for enterprises?