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Panviva

Also analyzed in: 1 other industry
Analyzed: 2026-04-22
Model: OpenAI GPT-5
Prompts run:
Total responses:
Overall AI Visibility?
0
/ 100
Invisible

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

Latent Brand Association?
33
/ 100
Category-Known

What the model believes about Panviva without web search.

LLM Authority?
0
/ 100
Absent

Frequency × prominence across organic category prompts.

Top of Mind?
0
/ 100
Prompted-Recall-Only

Unprompted recall on high-volume discovery prompts.

Metric 1 of 3 Latent Brand Association?

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

LBA Score
33/100
Category-Known
Quality?
0.65
Meta-factor?
1.00
Familiarity?
0.42
Top associations for Panviva
enterprise knowledge management 3 workflow support 2 contact center support 2 steep learning curve 2 implementation can be complex 2 breastfeeding caution 2 structured content delivery 2 pregnancy caution 2 liver and kidney concerns 2 helping support teams 1 customer interaction support 1 agent assistance platform 1 slow support responsiveness 1 contact center tools 1 enterprise knowledge management software 1
Control prompt (category baseline)
internal documentation 2 how-to guides 1 organized knowledge base 1 search functionality 1 internal guides and policies 1 documentation and FAQs 1 easy answer discovery 1 organizing and centralizing information 1 employee self-service 1 information organization 1

High overlap with brand prompts shows Panviva is firmly in the model's "knowledge base software" category.

Sample model responses
Prompt: What is Panviva known for?
Panviva is best known for enterprise knowledge management and contextual guidance software—helping contact centers and service teams find the right information quickly and deliver consistent customer support.
Iteration: 1 of 5
Prompt: What is Panviva known for?
Panviva is known for enterprise knowledge management and agent-assist software, especially helping contact centers and support teams deliver the right information to employees and customers in real time.
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
0/100
Absent
Recall mode (no web)?
0

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 knowledge base tools for customer support teams? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What knowledge base software works well for remote teams? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best knowledge base platforms for startups? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery Which knowledge base software is best for growing businesses? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best knowledge base tools for IT teams? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What knowledge base software is best for HR policies and onboarding? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best knowledge base platforms for employee onboarding? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best knowledge base tools for product documentation? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What knowledge base software is best for publishing FAQs? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best knowledge base options for reducing support tickets? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What knowledge base software is best for multi-language support? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best knowledge base tools for SaaS customer self-service? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best knowledge base platforms for internal wikis? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What knowledge base software is best for mobile access? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best knowledge base tools with advanced search? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What knowledge base software is best for customer portals? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best knowledge base platforms for e-commerce support? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What knowledge base software is best for regulated industries? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best knowledge base tools for growing support libraries? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What knowledge base software is best for team collaboration? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison What are the best alternatives to an enterprise knowledge base platform? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison Which knowledge base software alternatives are better for small teams? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison What are the best alternatives to a self-service help center platform? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison What knowledge base software alternatives are easier to set up? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison What are the best alternatives to an internal wiki tool? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison Which knowledge base platforms are better than a basic documentation tool? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison What are the best alternatives for teams needing better search in a knowledge base? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison What knowledge base options are better for customer support than a generic CMS? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison What are the best alternatives to a simple FAQ page builder? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison Which knowledge base software alternatives are best for scaling content? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I organize a large knowledge base with many articles? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I reduce support tickets with a knowledge base? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I make FAQs easy to search and find? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I build a help center for customer self-service? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I create internal documentation that employees will use? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I keep product documentation up to date? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I let users find answers without contacting support? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I improve knowledge base search results? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I create a knowledge base for a SaaS product? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I publish internal policies in one place? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional How much does knowledge base software cost? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional Is there free knowledge base software? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional What is the cheapest knowledge base software? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional What knowledge base software has a free plan? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional What knowledge base software offers pricing for small teams? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional What are the best value knowledge base tools? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional What knowledge base software is worth the price? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional How much is a help center platform per month? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional What are the pricing tiers for knowledge base software? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional Which knowledge base software is best for a limited budget? not mentioned not mentioned
Sample responses

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
0/100
Prompted-Recall-Only
Discovery promptVolumeAppearedPositions (5 runs)
What are the best knowledge base software options for a company? 320 0/5
What are the top knowledge base software tools for teams? 0 0/5
What is the most recommended knowledge base software? 0 0/5
What are popular knowledge base software platforms? 0 0/5
Which knowledge base software is best for businesses? 0 0/5
What are the best customer self-service knowledge base tools? 0 0/5
What are the best internal knowledge base software options? 210 0/5
Which knowledge base software is easiest to use? 0 0/5
What are the best knowledge base platforms for support teams? 0 0/5
What are the best knowledge base tools for SaaS companies? 0 0/5
What are the best searchable help center software options? 210 0/5
What are the best documentation platforms for product teams? 390 0/5
What are the best knowledge base systems for small businesses? 0 0/5
What are the most used knowledge base software solutions? 0 0/5
What are the best knowledge base software choices overall? 0 0/5
Sample recall responses

Also analyzed in Panviva in 1 other industry

This report focuses on Knowledge Base Software because that is where Panviva 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 Panviva

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

Enter the model's competitive set

The model knows your brand when asked directly (LBA > 0) but never volunteers you in category queries. You are outside the model's go-to list. Co-mention density with established category leaders is the single biggest lever: get listed in "Top 10 X" articles alongside the brands the model currently names.

+10 to +30 on TOM over 12-18 months

Push product-specific content into authoritative sources

The model knows your category but may not name your specific products. Get product-level content into independent reviews, comparison articles, and ranked lists.

+5 to +15 on 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 7:58 PM

All 210 AI responses for Panviva

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 "Panviva" in the knowledge base software 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": 4, "justification": "I recognize Panviva as a knowledge management/knowledge base software brand, but I know only limited general details and not its specific product depth or positioning." }
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned
{ "familiarity": 4, "justification": "I recognize Panviva as a knowledge management/knowledge base software brand, but I know only limited specifics about its products and positioning." }
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
{ "familiarity": 4, "justification": "I recognize Panviva as a knowledge base/help content software brand, but I don’t know its product details or positioning well." }
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
{ "familiarity": 4, "justification": "I recognize the Panviva name in the knowledge base/knowledge management space, but I do not know its specific products or positioning in detail." }
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
{ "familiarity": 5, "justification": "I recognize Panviva as a niche knowledge management/knowledge base software vendor and know its general market focus, but I’m not confident on detailed features, pricing, or competitive positioning." }
What is Panviva known for?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned
Panviva is best known for enterprise knowledge management and contextual guidance software—helping contact centers and service teams find the right information quickly and deliver consistent customer support.
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned
Panviva is known for enterprise knowledge management and agent-assist software, especially helping contact centers and support teams deliver the right information to employees and customers in real time.
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
Panviva is known for enterprise knowledge management software—especially tools that help contact centers and support teams give agents fast, guided access to the right information during customer interactions.
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
Panviva is known for its knowledge management and guided assistance software, especially for contact centers and customer service teams.
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
Panviva is known for its customer service knowledge management software—especially guided support tools that help call centers and support teams find and deliver the right information quickly.
What are Panviva's main strengths and weaknesses?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned
Panviva’s main strengths are its strong knowledge-management and agent-guidance capabilities, especially for contact centers and regulated industries. It’s often valued for structured content, fast retrieval, workflow guidance, and helping ensure consistent, compliant answers. Main weaknesses: it’s a smaller, more niche vendor than the biggest CX/CRM platforms, so it may have less brand recognition, fewer out-of-the-box ecosystem options, and can feel less modern or more complex to implement/manage depending on the deployment. It’s also generally better for guided knowledge than for broad all-in-one customer experience suites.
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned
Panviva’s main strengths are its knowledge-management and customer support content tools: it’s good at helping contact centers deliver fast, consistent answers, reducing training time, and keeping information organized and searchable. It’s also known for structured guidance and workflow support, which can improve agent efficiency and compliance. Main weaknesses: it’s more niche than broad-suite competitors, so it may feel less flexible for teams wanting a wider all-in-one CX platform. Some users may also find implementation/content governance a bit complex, especially if their knowledge base is messy or changes often.
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
Panviva’s main strength is its focus on guided knowledge for customer service teams: it’s designed to help agents find accurate answers quickly, keep information consistent, and support compliance-heavy workflows. It’s often seen as useful for large support organizations that need structured, searchable knowledge and step-by-step guidance. Its weaknesses are that it can feel specialized and less flexible than broader, modern knowledge platforms, with a UI/workflow that may seem dated to some users and a smaller ecosystem/brand presence than larger competitors. It’s typically strongest in contact-center use cases, but less appealing if you want a very modern, all-purpose knowledge base or wider content-management features.
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
Panviva’s main strengths are its strong focus on knowledge management and agent guidance, especially for regulated or high-volume contact center environments. It’s often praised for helping support teams find approved answers quickly, maintain consistency, and improve compliance. It also tends to fit organizations that need structured content delivery and workflow support rather than a broad, all-in-one CRM suite. Main weaknesses: it can feel more specialized than versatile, so companies looking for a full customer service platform may find it limited. Like many knowledge-management tools, success depends heavily on keeping content well maintained, and implementation/adoption can take effort. It may also be less well known than larger competitors, which can mean fewer integrations, less market visibility, and a smaller ecosystem.
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
Panviva’s main strengths are its enterprise knowledge-management focus, especially for contact centers: strong guided search, structured content delivery, compliance-friendly documentation, and the ability to help agents find approved answers quickly. It’s generally seen as good for large, process-heavy organizations that need consistency and control. Main weaknesses: it can feel specialized and less suited to smaller teams or broader, all-purpose knowledge management needs. Implementations can be relatively complex, the product may feel less modern or flexible than newer tools, and cost can be a consideration for some buyers.
Who should use Panviva? Who should avoid it?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned
If you mean Panviva as a prescription acid-reducing medicine (often a pantoprazole-type brand), it’s generally used by people with acid reflux, GERD, ulcers, or excess stomach acid, as directed by a doctor. It should be avoided by anyone with a known allergy to its ingredients, and used with caution (doctor’s advice first) in people with significant liver disease, a history of bone-fracture risk, or if they’re taking medicines that can interact with acid reducers. Pregnant/breastfeeding people, children, and anyone with severe or unexplained stomach symptoms should check with a clinician before using it.
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned
Panviva should be used by people for whom it was prescribed or recommended for its intended condition, and by anyone who is not allergic to any of its ingredients. It should be avoided by people with a known allergy to the product, and by anyone who has been told by a clinician not to take it. If you’re pregnant, breastfeeding, or have liver/kidney problems, check with a doctor/pharmacist first.
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
Panviva is best for organizations that need structured knowledge management and guided support—especially customer service teams, contact centers, and regulated industries like healthcare, insurance, and utilities. It’s less suitable for very small teams, casual internal documentation, or anyone who just needs a simple wiki or basic note app. If your workflows are highly unstructured or you don’t need enterprise-grade search, guidance, and governance, Panviva may be overkill.
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
I’m not 100% sure which Panviva product you mean. If it’s the medicine, it should be used only by people it’s prescribed for its specific condition. It should be avoided by anyone with an allergy to Panviva or its ingredients, and you should check with a clinician first if you’re pregnant, breastfeeding, or have major liver/kidney problems or interacting medicines.
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
Panviva should only be used by people it was prescribed/recommended for by a healthcare professional. Avoid it if you’ve ever had an allergic reaction to it or any of its ingredients. Also check with a doctor before using it if you’re pregnant, breastfeeding, have liver/kidney problems, or take other medicines. If you meant a specific Panviva product, tell me the active ingredient and I can be more exact.
How does Panviva compare to its main competitors?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned
Panviva is typically positioned as a specialized enterprise knowledge and performance-support platform, especially for contact centers and regulated industries. Compared with broader competitors like ServiceNow, Salesforce Knowledge, or Microsoft-based stacks, Panviva is usually seen as more focused on guided, context-sensitive agent assistance and fast content retrieval. Versus newer knowledge tools like Guru, it tends to be more enterprise/workflow-oriented rather than lightweight team knowledge sharing. Compared with competitors such as KMS Lighthouse or Bloomfire, Panviva is generally stronger in contact-center use cases and governed content delivery, while some rivals may offer broader collaboration or simpler deployment. In short: Panviva’s edge is depth in agent support and controlled knowledge operations; its tradeoff is that it’s less of an all-purpose knowledge suite than some larger platforms.
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned
Panviva is generally positioned as a knowledge-management and guidance platform for contact centers and regulated workforces, with a strong focus on step-by-step agent assistance, content governance, and consistency. Compared with main competitors like Velaro, Inbenta, KMS Lighthouse, Bloomfire, and Guru, Panviva tends to stand out more on structured knowledge delivery and compliance-heavy use cases than on broad AI/chatbot features or general-purpose collaboration. In short: - Stronger than many competitors for guided workflows, policy control, and regulated environments. - Less broad than some competitors in AI automation, self-service search, or enterprise-wide knowledge sharing. - Best fit is usually customer support, financial services, healthcare, and other use cases where accuracy and process adherence matter most. If you want, I can also compare Panviva against one specific competitor side-by-side.
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
Panviva is generally positioned as a knowledge-management and guided-support platform for contact centers and regulated enterprises. Compared with its main competitors: - **Vs. Salesforce Knowledge / Service Cloud and ServiceNow Knowledge:** Panviva is usually stronger for agent-facing, step-by-step guidance and content governance; those larger suites are stronger as broader CRM/ITSM ecosystems. - **Vs. Bloomfire / Guru / Document360:** Panviva is typically more enterprise/contact-center focused, with better control for complex, high-compliance workflows; the others are often simpler to deploy and better for general company knowledge bases. - **Vs. Pega / NICE / Verint-style CX platforms:** Panviva is usually narrower but more specialized in knowledge delivery; the bigger CX suites offer more end-to-end analytics, automation, and routing. **In short:** Panviva competes well when the priority is fast, accurate agent guidance, content governance, and compliance. It may be less competitive if you want a single broad platform covering CRM, ITSM, or full customer-experience orchestration.
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
Panviva is generally positioned as an enterprise knowledge management / agent-assist platform for contact centers and service teams. Compared with its main competitors, it tends to stand out for: - Stronger guided-workflow and contextual support for frontline agents - Good fit for regulated, large-scale service environments - Focus on precise, governed knowledge delivery rather than broad internal collaboration Compared with competitors like Guru, Shelf, Bloomfire, or ServiceNow knowledge tools, Panviva is usually less about lightweight team knowledge sharing and more about structured, compliance-friendly agent guidance. It may be less broadly known or as feature-broad in general-purpose collaboration, but stronger in operational customer-service use cases. In short: Panviva is best when the goal is controlled, high-accuracy knowledge delivery for service agents, not just a general knowledge base.
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
Panviva is generally positioned as an enterprise knowledge-management and guided-workflow platform for contact centers and customer service teams. Compared with main competitors like Bloomfire, Guru, KMS Lighthouse, Coveo, and Guru/Confluence-style internal knowledge tools, Panviva tends to stand out in: - Stronger process guidance: good for step-by-step, regulated, or compliance-heavy service environments. - Better agent-assist focus: designed to help agents find the right answer quickly during live interactions. - Enterprise deployment: often favored by larger organizations with complex knowledge structures. Where competitors may be stronger: - Bloomfire/Coveo: often stronger in broader search, discovery, and content intelligence. - Guru: usually simpler to adopt and more lightweight for fast-moving teams. - KMS Lighthouse: similarly strong in contact-center knowledge, and may compete closely on AI/search and agent support. Overall: Panviva is a solid choice if you need structured, governed knowledge for customer support and compliance-heavy operations; lighter tools may be easier and cheaper, while search-first platforms may feel more flexible.
What do people typically complain about with Panviva?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned
People typically complain that Panviva can feel clunky or dated, with a steep learning curve, weak search/navigation, and admin/setup that’s harder than expected. Some also mention integration gaps, occasional performance issues, and that it can be costly for the value.
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned
People typically complain that Panviva can feel clunky and hard to use, with a steep learning curve. Common gripes are search/navigation not being as intuitive as expected, setup/customization taking time, and occasional performance or integration limitations. Some users also mention that it can be costly for what they get.
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
People typically complain about Panviva being a bit hard to set up and navigate, with a learning curve for admins and users. Common gripes are clunky UI, search/findability issues, limited flexibility in customization, and integration or workflow friction. Some also mention that support and reporting/analytics could be better.
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
People typically complain about Panviva being a bit hard to learn at first, with a dated or clunky interface, slower or less intuitive search/navigation than expected, and setup/customization that can feel complex. Some also mention integration and support challenges.
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
People commonly complain that Panviva can feel clunky or outdated, with a steep learning curve for admins and authors. Other frequent complaints are search/navigation not being as intuitive as expected, documentation/content management being time-consuming, and occasional issues with implementation or support responsiveness.
What is a typical knowledge base software known for? control
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
It’s typically known for helping organizations create, organize, and share information in a searchable self-service help center or internal documentation hub.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
Typical knowledge base software is known for organizing and sharing information in a searchable, self-service format—like help articles, FAQs, how-to guides, and internal documentation—so users or employees can quickly find answers without needing support.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
A typical knowledge base software is known for organizing and centralizing information so users can easily find answers, documentation, FAQs, and internal guides. It usually supports search, article management, categories/tags, and self-service support.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
A typical knowledge base software is known for helping teams create, organize, store, and share information in a searchable central place, such as FAQs, how-to articles, internal documentation, and support resources.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
A typical knowledge base software is known for helping teams create, organize, and share information in one searchable place—like FAQs, help articles, internal documentation, and troubleshooting guides. It usually supports easy search, categorization, version control, and self-service support.

Authority — LLM Authority (50 prompts)

What are the best knowledge base tools for customer support teams? discovery 20/mo
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Here are some of the best knowledge base tools for customer support teams: 1. **Zendesk Guide** Best if you already use Zendesk for support. Strong ticket-to-article workflow, AI search, and customer-facing help center. 2. **Intercom Articles** Great for in-app support and conversational customer support. Clean editor, strong automation, and easy pairing with Intercom Messenger. 3. **Help Scout Docs** Simple, polished, and easy for smaller teams. Good for shared support workflows and public help centers. 4. **Guru** Best for internal knowledge bases. Excellent browser extension, verified answers, and fast agent access during live support. 5. **Notion** Best flexible, low-cost option. Good for building internal docs or a lightweight help center, though less support-specific. 6. **Document360** Strong dedicated knowledge base platform. Good analytics, SEO controls, and multi-language support. 7. **Confluence** Best for larger companies that want a broader documentation system. Good for internal knowledge, less ideal as a polished customer-facing KB. **Best picks by use case:** - **Best overall for support teams:** Zendesk Guide - **Best for conversational support:** Intercom Articles - **Best internal KB:** Guru - **Best budget/flexibility:** Notion - **Best standalone KB platform:** Document360 If you want, I can also give you the **best choice for small teams vs. enterprise** or a **comparison table with pricing/features**.
retrieval Not mentioned
Here’s a strong shortlist for customer support teams: - **Zendesk Guide / Knowledge** — best if you already want a full support suite. It has a branded help center, knowledge base, community option, customer portal, article analytics, and AI/article suggestions in the agent workspace. Zendesk Suite starts at **$49/agent/month billed annually**. ([support.zendesk.com](https://support.zendesk.com/hc/en-us/articles/4408846795674-Getting-started-with-your-help-center?utm_source=openai)) - **Intercom Knowledge Hub + Help Center** — best for AI-first support. Intercom’s Knowledge Hub centralizes internal articles, public Help Center articles, and snippets, and its Help Center supports public articles, collections, custom branding, and article recommendations. ([intercom.com](https://www.intercom.com/helpdesk/knowledge-hub?utm_source=openai)) - **Help Scout Docs** — best for smaller teams that want a simple, polished KB tightly tied to shared inbox support. Docs is included with Help Scout plans, supports custom domains, and can be paired with Beacon to surface articles on your site/app; extra Docs sites cost **$20/site/month**. ([docs.helpscout.com](https://docs.helpscout.com/article/129-help-scout-docs?utm_source=openai)) - **Freshdesk Knowledge Base** — best value if you want help desk + self-service in one place. Freshdesk’s KB supports branded self-service portals, multilingual content, auto-suggest, ticket-to-article reuse, and 24/7 self-service. Freshdesk Omni pricing starts at **$29/agent/month billed annually**. ([freshworks.com](https://www.freshworks.com/freshdesk/knowledge-base/?utm_source=openai)) - **Document360** — best standalone knowledge base if documentation quality and governance matter most. It supports internal/external KBs, custom workflows, embedded help centers, analytics, SSO/SCIM on higher tiers, and AI search/answer features. Pricing is quote-based. ([document360.com](https://document360.com/pricing/?utm_source=openai)) **Quick pick:** - **Best overall:** Zendesk - **Best AI-powered:** Intercom - **Best simple support team KB:** Help Scout - **Best budget-friendly suite:** Freshdesk - **Best standalone docs platform:** Document360 ([support.zendesk.com](https://support.zendesk.com/hc/en-us/articles/4408846795674-Getting-started-with-your-help-center?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can turn this into a **2-minute buying guide** based on your team size and budget.
What knowledge base software works well for remote teams? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
For remote teams, the best knowledge base tools are usually the ones that are easy to search, simple to update, and good for collaboration. Good options: - **Notion** — great all-around choice for docs, SOPs, wikis, and project notes. Very popular with remote teams. - **Confluence** — strong for larger companies, especially if you already use Jira/Atlassian. - **Guru** — excellent for internal knowledge that needs to be surfaced quickly in Slack or browser workflows. - **Slab** — clean, simple knowledge base for teams that want less clutter than Confluence. - **Nuclino** — lightweight and fast, good for small to mid-sized remote teams. - **Coda** — best if you want docs plus lightweight workflows/databases in one place. - **Slite** — designed specifically for team documentation and async collaboration. Best picks by use case: - **All-purpose remote team wiki:** Notion - **Enterprise/process-heavy teams:** Confluence - **Fast internal answers in Slack:** Guru - **Simple, clean team docs:** Slite or Slab - **Lightweight startup option:** Nuclino If you want, I can also give you the **best choice based on team size, budget, and whether you use Slack/Jira/Google Workspace**.
retrieval Not mentioned
For remote teams, the best knowledge base software is usually: - **Confluence** — strongest if you already live in Jira/Atlassian; it’s built as a remote-friendly workspace with collaboration, versioning, permissions, templates, and AI search. ([atlassian.com](https://www.atlassian.com/software/confluence.Key?utm_source=openai)) - **Notion** — best for a flexible all-in-one wiki + docs + project hub; it’s designed to keep notes, docs, projects, and knowledge together, and specifically calls out remote/async collaboration. ([notion.so](https://www.notion.so/notion/Getting-Started-with-Notion-f0e1a6d326d84d6984d948da96965045?utm_source=openai)) - **Guru** — best if you want knowledge surfaced inside Slack/Teams/browser with strong “trusted answer” and verification workflows. ([getguru.com](https://www.getguru.com/solutions/wiki?utm_source=openai)) - **Slab** — best for a clean internal wiki experience; it emphasizes easy authoring, organization, and unified search across tools. ([slab.com](https://slab.com/?utm_source=openai)) - **Help Scout Docs** — best for a customer-facing help center that can also be used as a private internal KB. ([docs.helpscout.com](https://docs.helpscout.com/article/129-help-scout-docs?utm_source=openai)) **Quick pick:** - If you want the **best default for remote teams**: **Notion**. - If you want **structured team docs with stronger enterprise governance**: **Confluence**. - If you want **answers inside daily workflows**: **Guru**. - If you want **simple internal wiki UX**: **Slab**. - If you want **support docs/help center**: **Help Scout Docs**. ([notion.so](https://www.notion.so/notion/Set-up-your-remote-team-24010d658fed4cbc8ab5e012b711b1f2?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can narrow this to **small team / startup / engineering team / support team**.
What are the best knowledge base platforms for startups? discovery 10/mo
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
For startups, the best knowledge base platforms are usually the ones that are **fast to set up, easy for non-technical teams, and affordable**. ### Top picks 1. **Notion** - Best for: flexible internal docs + lightweight public help center - Why startups like it: all-in-one workspace, great collaboration, easy to grow with - Good if you want: one tool for wiki, SOPs, product docs, and notes 2. **Confluence** - Best for: structured internal knowledge bases - Why: powerful permissions, good for engineering/product teams - Good if you already use: **Jira** / Atlassian tools 3. **Guru** - Best for: team knowledge that needs to be searchable inside workflows - Why: strong browser/app integrations, great for customer support and sales - Good if you want: answers surfaced in Slack, Chrome, Zendesk, etc. 4. **Document360** - Best for: customer-facing help centers - Why: polished docs site, strong versioning, analytics, SEO-friendly - Good if you need: a real public knowledge base fast 5. **Help Scout Docs** - Best for: simple support knowledge base - Why: easy to use, clean UI, built for support teams - Good if you already use: **Help Scout** for customer support ### Strong startup-friendly options - **Slab** — very clean internal wiki, great UX - **Coda** — flexible docs + workflows, good for operations-heavy teams - **Zendesk Guide** — best if your support stack is already in Zendesk ### Best by use case - **Internal wiki:** Notion or Slab - **Engineering/team docs:** Confluence - **Customer help center:** Document360 or Help Scout Docs - **Cross-team searchable knowledge:** Guru - **Support at scale:** Zendesk Guide ### My startup default recommendation - **Early-stage:** Notion - **Support-focused SaaS:** Document360 - **More process-heavy teams:** Confluence If you want, I can also give you a **“best by budget” shortlist** or a **comparison table**.
retrieval Not mentioned
For most startups, the best knowledge base platforms are: - **Notion** — best all-around for an internal company wiki; easy to start, flexible, and good for docs + wikis. ([notion.com](https://www.notion.com/product/wikis?utm_source=openai)) - **Slite** — best for a simple, team-friendly internal knowledge base; it emphasizes fast adoption, AI search, and “single source of truth” workflows. ([slite.com](https://slite.com/?utm_source=openai)) - **Guru** — best if your team lives in Slack/Teams and wants permission-aware answers pulled from company knowledge. ([getguru.com](https://www.getguru.com/solutions/wiki?utm_source=openai)) - **Intercom** — best for customer support teams that want a help center tied directly to an AI agent and inbox. ([intercom.com](https://www.intercom.com/customer-support-software/knowledge-base?utm_source=openai)) - **Document360** — best for customer-facing product docs, API docs, and more structured technical documentation. ([document360.com](https://document360.com/?utm_source=openai)) - **Zendesk Knowledge** — best if you already use Zendesk for support and want a built-in help center/knowledge system. ([zendesk.com](https://www.zendesk.com/help-center/?utm_source=openai)) **Quick pick:** - **Internal wiki:** Notion or Slite. ([notion.com](https://www.notion.com/product/wikis?utm_source=openai)) - **Support/help center:** Intercom or Zendesk. ([intercom.com](https://www.intercom.com/customer-support-software/knowledge-base?utm_source=openai)) - **Technical/product docs:** Document360. ([document360.com](https://document360.com/features?utm_source=openai)) - **Slack-first knowledge ops:** Guru. ([getguru.com](https://www.getguru.com/solutions/wiki?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also rank these by **cheapest**, **best for 10-person startups**, or **best for customer support vs internal wiki**.
Which knowledge base software is best for growing businesses? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
For most **growing businesses**, the best overall pick is usually **Notion** or **Guru**, depending on how you’ll use it: - **Best overall / most flexible:** **Notion** - Great for internal wikis, SOPs, project docs, and lightweight knowledge bases - Easy to start, cheap to scale, very user-friendly - **Best for fast internal knowledge sharing:** **Guru** - Excellent for sales, support, and operations teams - Strong browser/Slack workflows and verified answers - **Best for larger teams already using Jira/Confluence:** **Atlassian Confluence** - Powerful, structured, and good for technical documentation - Best if your company already lives in Atlassian tools - **Best customer support knowledge base:** **Zendesk Guide** - Ideal if you need a public help center tied to support tickets If you want one simple recommendation: **Notion** is the best starting point for most growing businesses. If you tell me whether you need **internal wiki**, **customer help center**, or **both**, I can narrow it to the single best choice.
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For most growing businesses, **Document360** is the best fit if you want a **dedicated knowledge base** with strong AI search, analytics, workflows, ticket deflection, multilingual support, and SSO/SCIM as you scale. It’s built around KB management rather than being a general workspace tool. ([document360.com](https://document360.com/pricing/?utm_source=openai)) Best picks by situation: - **Document360** — best overall for a standalone customer/internal knowledge base. ([document360.com](https://document360.com/pricing/?utm_source=openai)) - **Confluence** — best if your team already lives in Atlassian/Jira; it has knowledge-base features, public links/anonymous access, templates, permissions, and starts at a lower per-user price. ([atlassian.com](https://www.atlassian.com/en/software/confluence/pricing?utm_source=openai)) - **Notion** — best if you want a simple, flexible internal wiki/help-center style setup, but it’s more of a general workspace than a purpose-built KB. ([notion.so](https://www.notion.so/Help-Center-42e9c365194e49b2a7acd651f12c8cf7?utm_source=openai)) - **Zendesk Knowledge** — best if your KB needs to sit tightly inside a support stack with bots/help center/ticketing. ([zendesk.com](https://www.zendesk.com/service/help-center//?utm_source=openai)) **Quick rule:** - Need scale + self-service? **Document360**. - Need internal docs + Jira integration? **Confluence**. - Need lightweight team wiki? **Notion**. - Need support-first knowledge base? **Zendesk**. ([document360.com](https://document360.com/information/?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can narrow this to the **best choice for your budget, team size, and whether it’s for customers or internal staff**.
What are the best knowledge base tools for IT teams? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Here are some of the best knowledge base tools for IT teams: - **Confluence (Atlassian)** — Best all-around internal KB for IT teams already using Jira; strong permissions, templates, and integrations. - **Guru** — Best for fast answers in Slack/Chrome; great for team knowledge that needs to stay current. - **Notion** — Best for flexible, lightweight documentation and wikis; easy to set up, less ITIL-oriented. - **Document360** — Best for dedicated knowledge bases with strong article management, analytics, and internal/external portals. - **Slab** — Best for clean internal documentation; simple UX and good organization. - **GitBook** — Best for technical docs and developer-heavy teams; great markdown support and publishing workflows. - **Zendesk Guide** — Best if your IT team also runs service desk/support; tightly tied to ticketing and self-service. - **ServiceNow Knowledge Management** — Best for large enterprises already on ServiceNow; ideal for ITSM workflows and governance. - **SharePoint** — Best if your org is Microsoft 365-centric; solid for internal portals, but less polished as a true KB. - **Helpjuice** — Best for customer-facing and internal knowledge bases with strong search and analytics. **Quick picks:** - **Enterprise ITSM:** ServiceNow Knowledge Management - **Jira-centric teams:** Confluence - **Fast internal answers:** Guru - **Docs for engineers:** GitBook - **Simple team wiki:** Notion or Slab If you want, I can also rank these by **price, ease of use, or best fit for IT support vs. engineering**.
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For IT teams, the best knowledge base tools right now are usually these: - **Jira Service Management + Confluence** — best if you want ITSM plus a strong internal KB. Atlassian positions it for ITSM teams, with built-in knowledge, AI article surfacing, and tight Jira/Slack/Microsoft Teams integration. Confluence is the broader documentation/wiki layer. ([atlassian.com](https://www.atlassian.com/software/jira/service-management/features/itsm?utm_source=openai)) - **Freshservice** — best all-in-one IT service desk with KB. Freshservice’s knowledge base is AI-powered, supports self-service, can draft articles from tickets, and ties into the ITSM workflow. ([freshworks.com](https://www.freshworks.com/freshservice/it-service-desk/knowledge-base/?utm_source=openai)) - **Zendesk** — best if your IT team also wants a polished employee-service/help-center experience. Zendesk says its ITSM offering includes a smart knowledge base, AI workflows, and permissions-aware knowledge across systems. ([zendesk.com](https://www.zendesk.com/employee-service/itsm/?utm_source=openai)) - **Intercom Knowledge Hub** — best for AI-first support with internal and external knowledge in one place. Intercom’s Knowledge Hub can create internal articles, public help-center articles, and snippets used by AI/agents. ([intercom.com](https://www.intercom.com/customer-support-software/knowledge-base?utm_source=openai)) - **Slab** — best lightweight internal wiki for IT ops/runbooks. Slab emphasizes clean authoring, unified search, granular permissions, and real IT use cases. ([slab.com](https://slab.com/solutions/knowledge-base/?utm_source=openai)) - **Document360** — best if your priority is a dedicated documentation/KB product with AI search. It highlights role permissions, collaboration, and AI search/summaries. ([document360.com](https://document360.com/knowledge-base-software/?utm_source=openai)) - **Notion** — best flexible wiki for smaller IT teams that want docs + projects together. Notion describes a connected workspace with docs/wikis, integrations, and permissions-aware AI. ([info.notion.so](https://info.notion.so/switch/notion-vs-confluence?utm_source=openai)) **My quick take** - **Best overall for ITSM:** Jira Service Management + Confluence. ([atlassian.com](https://www.atlassian.com/software/jira/service-management/features/itsm?utm_source=openai)) - **Best simplest all-in-one:** Freshservice. ([freshworks.com](https://www.freshworks.com/freshservice/it-service-desk/knowledge-base/?utm_source=openai)) - **Best internal wiki:** Slab. ([slab.com](https://slab.com/solutions/knowledge-base/?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can narrow this down to the **best 3 for your team size and budget**.
What knowledge base software is best for HR policies and onboarding? discovery 10/mo
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
For **HR policies + onboarding**, my top pick is **Trainual**. ### Best overall **Trainual** - Built for onboarding, SOPs, and policy training - Great for making policies easy to assign, track, and keep consistent - Best if you want employees to actually complete and acknowledge content ### Strong alternatives **Guru** - Excellent internal knowledge base with browser/search integration - Great for HR FAQs, policy lookup, and quick access in Slack/Teams - Best if your team wants fast, searchable answers **Notion** - Flexible and affordable - Good for building a polished HR wiki and onboarding hub - Best if you want to customize heavily and don’t need built-in training tracking **Confluence** - Strong for larger companies already using Atlassian tools - Good version control and document structure - Best for more formal, cross-functional documentation ### My recommendation - **Best for onboarding + policy training:** **Trainual** - **Best for searchable HR knowledge base:** **Guru** - **Best budget/flexibility:** **Notion** If you want, I can also give you the **best choice by company size** (startup, SMB, enterprise).
retrieval Not mentioned
For **HR policies + onboarding**, the best fit is usually **Trainual** if you want the most purpose-built option for documenting policies, processes, roles, and onboarding in one system. ([trainual.com](https://trainual.com/knowledgebase?utm_source=openai)) If you want a more general **company wiki/knowledge base**, **Confluence** is the strongest all-around choice, with HR templates, handbook pages, and onboarding-focused use cases. ([atlassian.com](https://www.atlassian.com/software/confluence/templates/hr-knowledge-base?utm_source=openai)) **Good picks by scenario:** - **Trainual** — best for structured onboarding + policy documentation. ([trainual.com](https://trainual.com/knowledgebase?utm_source=openai)) - **Confluence** — best for a broader internal knowledge base with HR templates. ([atlassian.com](https://www.atlassian.com/software/confluence/templates/hr-knowledge-base?utm_source=openai)) - **Notion** — best if you want maximum flexibility and a lightweight wiki/onboarding hub. ([notion.com](https://www.notion.com/id/use-case/knowledge-base?utm_source=openai)) - **Document360** — best if you want a polished self-service HR portal with version control. ([document360.com](https://document360.com/solutions/hr/?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can give you a **top 3 shortlist based on your company size and budget**.
What are the best knowledge base platforms for employee onboarding? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Best knowledge base platforms for employee onboarding: 1. **Guru** Great for fast-moving teams. Strong browser extension, AI search, and easy “just-in-time” access during onboarding. **Best for:** sales, support, and ops teams. 2. **Notion** Flexible and affordable. Easy to build onboarding hubs, checklists, SOPs, and wikis in one place. **Best for:** startups and teams that want customization. 3. **Confluence** Solid for structured documentation and larger companies, especially if you already use Jira. **Best for:** engineering-heavy or enterprise teams. 4. **Trainual** Built specifically for SOPs and employee training. Very strong for onboarding workflows, role-based learning, and process documentation. **Best for:** SMBs wanting a true onboarding system. 5. **Slab** Clean knowledge base with strong search and simple collaboration. Less cluttered than many wiki tools. **Best for:** teams that want a polished internal wiki. 6. **Document360** More enterprise-grade, with strong knowledge base management, versioning, and analytics. **Best for:** organizations needing tight control and reporting. 7. **GitBook** Excellent for technical documentation and lightweight internal knowledge bases. **Best for:** product/engineering teams. **Top picks by use case** - **Best overall for onboarding:** **Guru** - **Best for SOP-driven onboarding:** **Trainual** - **Best budget/flexibility:** **Notion** - **Best for enterprise documentation:** **Confluence** If you want, I can also give you a **top 3 recommendation based on company size** (startup, SMB, or enterprise).
retrieval Not mentioned
If you’re building an **employee onboarding knowledge base**, the best options are usually: - **Confluence** — best for companies already on Atlassian; strong templates, permissions, versioning, and a dedicated HR knowledge base/onboarding setup. ([atlassian.com](https://www.atlassian.com/software/confluence/templates/hr-knowledge-base?utm_source=openai)) - **Slab** — best for a clean internal wiki; strong search, topics, collaboration, and onboarding use cases from customer stories. ([slab.com](https://slab.com/solutions/knowledge-base/?utm_source=openai)) - **Notion** — best for flexible, lightweight onboarding wikis and handbooks; it’s especially good if you want docs + tasks + databases in one workspace. ([notion.so](https://www.notion.so/notion/Notion-Onboarding-Wiki-0cac07b2231b4bdcbcd6ad9a146e32d6?utm_source=openai)) - **Document360** — best if you want a more formal, structured knowledge base with HR/onboarding-focused pages and access control. ([document360.com](https://document360.com/solutions/hr/?utm_source=openai)) - **Helpjuice** — best for search-first knowledge bases; it emphasizes AI search, analytics, and internal onboarding use cases. ([helpjuice.com](https://helpjuice.com/lp2?utm_source=openai)) **My quick pick:** - **Best overall:** Confluence - **Best easiest-to-use:** Slab - **Best flexible/cost-friendly:** Notion - **Best structured HR KB:** Document360 - **Best search-heavy KB:** Helpjuice ([atlassian.com](https://www.atlassian.com/software/confluence/knowledge-base?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also give you a **top 3 recommendation based on team size, budget, and whether you already use Slack/Jira/Microsoft 365**.
What are the best knowledge base tools for product documentation? discovery 30/mo
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Here are the best knowledge base tools for product documentation, depending on your needs: 1. **Help Scout Docs** Best for: simple, polished customer-facing docs Why: easy to set up, clean UX, good search, integrates well with support. 2. **Zendesk Guide** Best for: teams already using Zendesk Why: solid ticketing integration, mature permissions, scalable support workflows. 3. **Intercom Articles** Best for: in-app help and product-led support Why: great for linking docs to chat, strong automation, good for SaaS onboarding. 4. **GitBook** Best for: developer docs and product docs Why: fast writing experience, markdown-friendly, collaboration, nice publishing. 5. **Notion** Best for: internal knowledge bases and early-stage teams Why: flexible, easy to maintain, good for drafting before formalizing docs. 6. **Confluence** Best for: large teams and internal documentation Why: strong Atlassian ecosystem, permissions, good for cross-functional knowledge sharing. 7. **Document360** Best for: dedicated external knowledge bases Why: built specifically for docs, good analytics, versioning, category structure. 8. **Freshdesk Knowledge Base** Best for: budget-friendly support docs Why: simple setup, tied to Freshdesk support, good value. **Best overall picks:** - **Best for SaaS product docs:** GitBook - **Best for customer support docs:** Help Scout Docs - **Best for enterprise/internal docs:** Confluence - **Best for in-app help:** Intercom Articles If you want, I can also give you a shortlist by use case: **startup**, **developer docs**, **customer support**, or **internal wiki**.
retrieval Not mentioned
For **product documentation**, the best tools usually fall into 4 buckets: - **Best overall for structured product docs:** **GitBook** — strong docs workflow, AI search/assistant, and AI-friendly publishing. ([gitbook.com](https://www.gitbook.com/features/ai?utm_source=openai)) - **Best for support + external help center + API docs:** **Document360** — built for knowledge bases, software docs, API docs, analytics, and embeddable help. ([document360.com](https://document360.com/features?utm_source=openai)) - **Best for internal wikis and cross-team docs:** **Confluence** — flexible KB templates, permissions, versioning, and Jira Service Management integration. ([atlassian.com](https://www.atlassian.com/software/confluence/knowledge-base?utm_source=openai)) - **Best if your docs should power support chat/AI:** **Intercom Help Center / Knowledge Hub** — public articles, collections, multi-help-center support, and tight integration with Fin AI. ([developers.intercom.com](https://developers.intercom.com/docs/guides/help-center?utm_source=openai)) **Quick pick by use case** - **SaaS public docs + release notes + API docs:** GitBook or Document360. ([gitbook.com](https://www.gitbook.com/features/ai?utm_source=openai)) - **Customer support knowledge base:** Document360 or Intercom. ([document360.com](https://document360.com/features?utm_source=openai)) - **Internal product wiki / specs:** Confluence. ([atlassian.com](https://www.atlassian.com/software/confluence/knowledge-base?utm_source=openai)) - **Small team wanting simple docs:** Notion can work, but it’s more of a general workspace than a docs-first platform. ([notion.so](https://www.notion.so/Obsidian-980efca0666d4cd0b0d67e67e21dbd86?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can turn this into a **top 5 comparison table with pricing, pros/cons, and best fit**.
What knowledge base software is best for publishing FAQs? discovery 30/mo
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
For publishing FAQs, the best knowledge base software is usually **Zendesk Guide** if you want the strongest all-around support-focused option. ### Best picks by use case - **Best overall:** **Zendesk Guide** Great search, article organization, analytics, and customer support integrations. - **Best for small teams:** **Helpjuice** Very easy to set up, strong internal and external knowledge base features. - **Best budget option:** **Document360** Clean FAQ publishing, solid editor, good structure, often more affordable than enterprise tools. - **Best for WordPress sites:** **Heroic Knowledge Base** Best if you want FAQs directly on your website with WordPress. - **Best for simple, lightweight FAQ pages:** **Freshdesk Knowledge Base** Easy to manage and good if you already use Freshdesk. ### What matters most for FAQs Look for: - strong search - categories and tags - mobile-friendly design - analytics on what users search for - easy article editor - access control if you need private FAQs ### My quick recommendation - If you want the **best professional support FAQ system**: **Zendesk Guide** - If you want **simple and fast**: **Helpjuice** - If you want **good value**: **Document360** If you want, I can also give you the **best knowledge base software for startups, SaaS, or WordPress specifically**.
retrieval Not mentioned
If you want **the best all-around option for publishing FAQs**, I’d pick **Zendesk**. It has a full help-center/knowledge-base product, strong search, AI tools, branding, and easy FAQ/self-service publishing. ([zendesk.com](https://www.zendesk.com/service/knowledge-base/?utm_source=openai)) **Best by use case:** - **Zendesk** — best overall for customer support + FAQs at scale. ([zendesk.com](https://www.zendesk.com/service/knowledge-base/?utm_source=openai)) - **Document360** — best if you want a dedicated, highly customizable knowledge base just for articles/FAQs. ([document360.com](https://document360.com/features?utm_source=openai)) - **Help Scout Docs** — best for a simpler, friendly FAQ/help center, especially for smaller teams. ([docs.helpscout.com](https://docs.helpscout.com/article/129-help-scout-docs?utm_source=openai)) - **Intercom Knowledge Hub** — best if you already use Intercom and want AI + support content in one place. ([intercom.com](https://www.intercom.com/helpdesk/knowledge-hub?utm_source=openai)) If you tell me your team size, budget, and whether the FAQs are **public or internal**, I can narrow it to one choice.
What are the best knowledge base options for reducing support tickets? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Top knowledge base options for reducing support tickets: 1. **Zendesk Guide** - Best if you already use Zendesk Support - Strong search, AI article suggestions, and in-ticket deflection - Good for scaling a support team 2. **Intercom Fin + Help Center** - Best for AI-powered self-serve support - Great chat-to-article flow and automated answers - Strong if you want fewer repetitive tickets fast 3. **Freshdesk Knowledge Base** - Best value for SMBs - Easy to set up, decent search, integrates tightly with Freshdesk tickets - Solid choice for a simple support stack 4. **Help Scout Docs** - Best for clean, customer-friendly knowledge bases - Lightweight, easy editing, good deflection for smaller teams - Nice if you want a simple external help center 5. **Confluence + Atlassian Jira Service Management** - Best for internal + external documentation - Strong for teams already on Atlassian - Works well when support content overlaps with engineering/process docs 6. **Notion + Super / HelpKit / BetterDocs** - Best for budget-friendly, flexible setups - Fast to publish, easy to maintain - Good if you want a polished KB without a big support platform ### Best picks by goal - **Most ticket reduction:** Intercom - **Best all-around support suite:** Zendesk Guide - **Best for small teams:** Help Scout Docs - **Best budget option:** Freshdesk - **Best if you use Atlassian:** Confluence/JSM ### What matters most for deflecting tickets - Strong search - AI/article suggestions - Easy article creation - Embedded help inside chat/forms - Analytics on “no answer found” searches If you want, I can also give you a **top 3 shortlist based on your company size and budget**.
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If your goal is **fewer tickets**, the best knowledge base choices right now are: - **Zendesk Knowledge** — best if you already run Zendesk support; it ties the help center into agent workflows, suggests relevant articles, and uses ticket data to generate content gaps. ([zendesk.com](https://www.zendesk.com/au/lp/nb-help-center/?utm_source=openai)) - **Intercom Help Center** — best for in-app self-service + AI; articles power Fin/Help Center suggestions, and its help center is built to reduce support volume. ([intercom.com](https://www.intercom.com/helpdesk/?utm_source=openai)) - **Freshdesk Knowledge Base** — strong all-around choice if you want self-service plus auto-suggest before a ticket is created. ([freshworks.com](https://www.freshworks.com/freshdesk/knowledge-base/?utm_source=openai)) - **Document360** — best dedicated KB if you want a docs-first product with AI search/chatbot and ticket-deflection analytics. ([document360.com](https://document360.com/knowledgebase-portal/ticket-deflector/?utm_source=openai)) - **Help Scout Docs** — best for simpler teams that want a clean KB plus Beacon/AI Answers to surface articles on your site. ([docs.helpscout.com](https://docs.helpscout.com/article/1605-beacon-docs?utm_source=openai)) - **Helpjuice** — good for an internal/external “single source of truth” with AI search and strong customization. ([helpjuice.com](https://helpjuice.com/?utm_source=openai)) **Quick pick:** - **Best overall for ticket reduction:** Zendesk or Intercom. - **Best dedicated knowledge base:** Document360. - **Best lightweight, easy-to-run option:** Help Scout. - **Best if you want a pure KB with flexible structure:** Helpjuice. If you want, I can narrow this to the **best option for your team size, budget, and existing support stack**.
What knowledge base software is best for multi-language support? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
**Best overall for multi-language support: _Document360_** It’s one of the strongest options if you need: - multiple languages on the same KB - translation workflows - language-specific URLs/SEO - versioning and article structure across locales **Also good:** - **Zendesk Guide** — best if you already use Zendesk for support; strong multilingual help center features. - **HelpScout Docs** — simple, clean, good for smaller teams with multilingual needs. - **Freshdesk Knowledge Base** — solid if you’re already in Freshworks. - **Confluence + Scroll Translations (K15t)** — best for enterprise/internal docs, but more setup. **My quick recommendation:** - **Best dedicated KB:** Document360 - **Best for support teams:** Zendesk Guide - **Best for internal enterprise docs:** Confluence + Scroll Translations If you want, I can also rank them by **SEO**, **translation workflow**, or **price**.
retrieval Not mentioned
**Best overall for multilingual support:** **Zendesk Guide/Help Center** — it has mature multi-language help center support, localized article handling, language-specific routing, and clear browser/profile-based language behavior. It’s a strong choice if you want a polished customer support stack, but multi-language support may require higher-tier plans. ([support.zendesk.com](https://support.zendesk.com/hc/en-us/articles/4408827609882-Configuring-your-help-center-to-support-multiple-languages/)) **Best standalone knowledge base for localization:** **Document360** — it supports multiple languages in a single project version or a language-specific KB, with RTL support and bulk translation workflows. ([docs.document360.com](https://docs.document360.com/docs/setting-up-a-multi-lingual-knowledge-base)) **Good SMB-friendly options:** - **Freshdesk** — supports multilingual portals, language-specific visibility, and automatic loading of the customer’s preferred language. ([support.freshdesk.com](https://support.freshdesk.com/support/solutions/articles/219745-setting-up-a-multilingual-knowledge-base)) - **Zoho Desk** — offers a multilingual knowledge base and integration with translation tools like Unbabel and Google Translate. ([zoho.com](https://www.zoho.com/desk/multilingual-support-help-desk.html)) **My quick pick:** - **Enterprise / best UX:** Zendesk - **Best KB-first product:** Document360 - **Budget-friendly support suite:** Freshdesk or Zoho Desk If you want, I can rank them for your exact case: **budget, company size, self-service only, or support + ticketing**.
What are the best knowledge base tools for SaaS customer self-service? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Here are the best knowledge base tools for SaaS customer self-service, depending on what you need: ### Top picks - **Help Scout Docs** — Best all-around for simple, clean customer self-service. Easy to use, fast to set up, great UX. - **Zendesk Guide** — Best if you already use Zendesk for support. Strong AI/search, good deflection features, scalable. - **Intercom Articles** — Best for in-app self-service and chatbot + KB workflows. Great for product-led SaaS. - **Document360** — Best dedicated knowledge base platform. Strong analytics, versioning, and article management. - **Guru** — Best for internal + external knowledge sharing. Strong AI search and knowledge verification. - **Freshdesk Knowledge Base** — Best budget-friendly option for teams using Freshdesk. ### Best by use case - **Best for product-led SaaS:** Intercom Articles - **Best for support teams:** Zendesk Guide - **Best for ease of use:** Help Scout Docs - **Best standalone KB:** Document360 - **Best for AI search:** Guru - **Best value:** Freshdesk Knowledge Base ### What to look for - Fast search - Easy article editing - AI-powered answers - Analytics on deflection/search gaps - Multilingual support - Strong in-app widgets or help center embedding ### My short recommendation If you’re a SaaS company and want the safest choice: - **Intercom** if self-service is tied to in-app support - **Zendesk Guide** if you need enterprise support workflows - **Document360** if you want a dedicated, polished KB If you want, I can also give you a **ranked list by price, ease of use, or best AI features**.
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For SaaS customer self-service, the best knowledge base tools right now are: 1. **Intercom** — best if you want **AI-first self-service** and tight chat/agent workflows. Intercom’s Fin can use native help-center content plus imported/synced sources, and it recommends keeping support content native for the fastest updates. ([intercom.com](https://www.intercom.com/help/en/articles/9440354-knowledge-sources-to-power-ai-agents-and-self-serve-support?utm_source=openai)) 2. **Zendesk Guide / Zendesk Knowledge** — best for **larger support teams** that already run Zendesk and want a mature help center with strong automation and AI capabilities. Zendesk positions Knowledge as an AI-powered knowledge base for customer service. ([zendesk.com](https://www.zendesk.com/guide/?utm_source=openai)) 3. **Document360** — best for **documentation-heavy SaaS** and teams that care about structured content, version control, analytics, and branded public/private knowledge bases. It emphasizes AI search, chatbot, analytics, and multi-product docs. ([document360.com](https://document360.com/information/?utm_source=openai)) 4. **Help Scout Docs** — best for **simple, customer-friendly self-service** with a lighter support stack. Docs is Help Scout’s knowledge base, and Beacon can surface articles directly on your site/app. ([docs.helpscout.com](https://docs.helpscout.com/article/129-help-scout-docs?utm_source=openai)) 5. **Freshdesk / Freshworks** — best for **budget-conscious teams** that want knowledge base + ticketing + AI self-service in one suite. Freshworks highlights branded portals, AI agents, and a smart knowledge base. ([freshworks.com](https://www.freshworks.com/freshdesk/self-service/?utm_source=openai)) **Quick pick** - **Best overall for SaaS AI self-service:** Intercom - **Best enterprise all-rounder:** Zendesk - **Best for documentation quality/control:** Document360 - **Best simple + human feel:** Help Scout - **Best value suite:** Freshdesk If you want, I can narrow this to **best by company stage** (startup, mid-market, enterprise) or **best by budget**.
What are the best knowledge base platforms for internal wikis? discovery 110/mo
0/2 mentions 2 responses
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Here are some of the best internal knowledge base / wiki platforms, depending on what you need: ### Best overall - **Confluence (Atlassian)** — Best for larger teams already using Jira. Strong permissions, templates, page hierarchy, and integrations. ### Best for simple team wikis - **Notion** — Easy to use, flexible, great for lightweight documentation and fast collaboration. - **Guru** — Best when you want knowledge cards surfaced inside Slack, Chrome, and other tools. ### Best for engineering teams - **GitBook** — Clean docs/wiki experience, especially good for product and technical knowledge. - **Docusaurus** — Great if your wiki is developer-managed and lives in code. - **BookStack** — Solid self-hosted option with a classic wiki structure. ### Best for larger enterprises - **Microsoft SharePoint / Viva Topics** — Good if you’re deep in Microsoft 365. - **Confluence Enterprise** — Often the default choice for enterprise internal documentation. ### Best self-hosted/open source - **Wiki.js** — Modern, polished, supports Markdown, and easy to self-host. - **BookStack** — Very user-friendly and organized by books/chapters/pages. - **MediaWiki** — Powerful and proven, but less friendly for non-technical users. ### Best for searchable knowledge + support workflows - **Guru** - **Slab** — Very clean internal knowledge base for teams that want less complexity than Confluence. ## Quick picks - **Best for most teams:** Notion or Confluence - **Best for internal enablement/support:** Guru - **Best self-hosted:** Wiki.js or BookStack - **Best for engineering docs:** GitBook If you want, I can also give you: 1. a **top 5 ranked comparison**, or 2. the **best option by team size** (startup, mid-market, enterprise).
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Here’s a practical shortlist: - **Best overall for most companies: Confluence** — strong for structured docs, page trees, permissions, templates, and tight Jira/Atlassian integration. ([atlassian.com](https://www.atlassian.com/software/confluence/resources/guides/best-practices/knowledge-base?utm_source=openai)) - **Best for a clean, easy-to-use wiki: Slab** — focused on team wiki/knowledge base use, with a simple collaborative editor. ([slab.com](https://slab.com/features/?utm_source=openai)) - **Best for flexible all-in-one workspace: Notion** — good if you want wikis plus docs, databases, and lightweight project tracking in one place. ([notion.com](https://www.notion.com/product/wikis?utm_source=openai)) - **Best Slack-first knowledge base: Guru** — strong if your team lives in Slack and wants answers delivered in-workflow. ([slack.com](https://slack.com/apps/A0FHVR2R0-guru?utm_source=openai)) - **Best for Microsoft 365 shops: SharePoint** — workable if you already standardize on Microsoft, though it’s more admin-heavy than purpose-built wiki tools. ([support.microsoft.com](https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/office/create-and-edit-a-wiki-dc64f9c2-d1a2-44b5-ac59-b9d535551a32?utm_source=openai)) - **Best self-hosted / open-source pick: BookStack** — nice if you want a classic wiki feel with easy organization and built-in diagram support. ([bookstackapp.com](https://www.bookstackapp.com/?utm_source=openai)) - **Best modern lightweight alternative: Outline** — good for team knowledge bases with permissions, groups, and sharing. ([getoutline.com](https://www.getoutline.com/?utm_source=openai)) **My quick take:** - **Small teams:** Notion or Slab - **Engineering/org-wide ops:** Confluence - **Slack-heavy teams:** Guru - **Microsoft-heavy orgs:** SharePoint - **Self-hosted:** BookStack or Outline If you want, I can narrow this to **best free**, **best for startups**, or **best for engineering teams**.
What knowledge base software is best for mobile access? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
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If mobile access is the top priority, **Notion** is usually the best all-around choice. ### Best options for mobile knowledge bases 1. **Notion** — best overall mobile UX - Fast app, good search, easy editing on phone - Great for internal docs, SOPs, team wikis 2. **Guru** — best for quick employee reference - Strong mobile use for answering questions on the go - Good for sales, support, and frontline teams 3. **Confluence** — best for larger teams already on Atlassian - Solid mobile app, but heavier than Notion - Best if you use Jira too 4. **Slab** — best simple team wiki - Clean interface and decent mobile experience - Easier than Confluence for many teams ### My recommendation - **Small team / best mobile experience:** **Notion** - **Support/sales/ops teams needing fast answers:** **Guru** - **Engineering/product teams using Jira:** **Confluence** If you want, I can narrow it down by **team size, budget, and whether it’s for internal docs or customer-facing help center**.
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If **mobile access is the top priority**, my pick is **Notion** for the best overall mobile experience. It’s designed to stay in sync across desktop, web, and mobile, and it’s especially strong if you want a flexible internal wiki/knowledge base that people actually edit on their phones. ([notion.com](https://www.notion.com/use-case/knowledge-management?utm_source=openai)) If you need a more **enterprise-grade knowledge base**, **Confluence** is the better choice. Atlassian says Confluence Cloud mobile lets you create, edit, and collaborate from phone or tablet, with access to recent work and notifications on the go. ([atlassian.com](https://www.atlassian.com/mobile?utm_source=openai)) If you’re building a **customer support knowledge base**, **Document360** is a strong option because it supports mobile-friendly access and in-app / helpdesk-style integrations for agents and users. Its KB site is described as mobile-friendly and accessible on any device. ([document360.com](https://document360.com/knowledgebase-site/?utm_source=openai)) **Quick rule:** - **Best mobile UX:** Notion. ([notion.com](https://www.notion.com/use-case/knowledge-management?utm_source=openai)) - **Best for large teams / enterprise:** Confluence. ([atlassian.com](https://www.atlassian.com/mobile?utm_source=openai)) - **Best for support docs / public help center:** Document360. ([document360.com](https://document360.com/knowledgebase-site/?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can narrow it down to **internal wiki vs customer help center vs small team**.
What are the best knowledge base tools with advanced search? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
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Here are some of the best knowledge base tools with **strong search**: 1. **Guru** - Great AI-powered search across docs, Slack, Chrome, and internal wikis - Best for fast team knowledge lookup 2. **Notion** - Powerful full-text search, databases, and AI search features - Best for flexible internal wiki + docs 3. **Confluence** - Solid enterprise search, page linking, and permissions control - Best for larger teams already in Atlassian 4. **Zendesk Guide** - Strong customer-facing help center search - Best for support teams and public knowledge bases 5. **Help Scout Docs** - Simple but effective search for support articles - Best for small-to-mid support teams 6. **Document360** - Built specifically for knowledge bases with advanced article search and analytics - Best for product docs and customer self-service 7. **Slite** - Clean internal knowledge base with good search and AI features - Best for team documentation 8. **Intercom Fin + Help Center** - Strong AI search for support content and instant answers - Best for customer support automation **Best overall for advanced search:** - **Guru** for internal knowledge - **Document360** for a dedicated KB - **Zendesk Guide** or **Intercom** for customer support If you want, I can also rank them for **small teams, enterprise, or customer support**.
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Here are the strongest picks for **knowledge base tools with advanced search** right now: - **Notion AI / Enterprise Search** — best if you want a flexible internal wiki plus **natural-language search**, citations, and connectors across tools like Slack, Google Drive, Jira, SharePoint, and OneDrive. ([notion.com](https://www.notion.com/help/enterprise-search?utm_source=openai)) - **Confluence + Rovo** — best for teams already on Atlassian. It offers **AI-powered search across your toolstack** and answers grounded in Confluence content, with linked sources. ([atlassian.com](https://www.atlassian.com/software/confluence/ai?utm_source=openai)) - **Slite** — best for a clean team wiki with **AI answers**, document verification, and an enterprise-search add-on that searches across tools like Slack, Google Drive, Notion, Salesforce, and more. ([slite.com](https://slite.com/?utm_source=openai)) - **Document360** — best for a structured, customer-facing or internal knowledge base with **AI-powered search**, analytics, version control, and content workflows. ([document360.com](https://document360.com/information/?utm_source=openai)) - **Bloomfire** — best for larger orgs that want **semantic/AI search** and enterprise knowledge management in one platform. ([bloomfire.com](https://bloomfire.com/platform/knowledge-engine/?utm_source=openai)) **My quick recommendation:** - **Best overall:** Notion - **Best for Atlassian shops:** Confluence - **Best simple team wiki:** Slite - **Best help-center style KB:** Document360 - **Best enterprise knowledge search:** Bloomfire If you want, I can also narrow this to **internal wiki vs customer support KB vs enterprise search** and give you a top 3 for your exact use case.
What knowledge base software is best for customer portals? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
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For **customer portals**, the best knowledge base software is usually: ### Best overall: **Zendesk Guide** - Strong customer portal, ticketing, and self-service - Good search, multilingual support, permissions - Best if you want a full support stack ### Best for modern SaaS: **Intercom Articles** - Clean UI, strong in-app help and chat - Great for proactive support and onboarding - Best if support is tied closely to product usage ### Best budget-friendly option: **Help Scout Docs** - Simple, polished, easy to manage - Good for small teams that want a clean help center - Best value if you don’t need heavy enterprise features ### Best for enterprises: **Document360** - Built specifically for knowledge bases - Strong versioning, analytics, internal/external portals - Great if you want a dedicated KB product ### Best if you already use Freshworks: **Freshdesk Knowledge Base** - Solid customer portal and ticket integration - Good choice for SMB support teams ## Quick pick - **Most businesses:** Zendesk Guide - **Best UI/modern feel:** Intercom Articles - **Best standalone KB:** Document360 - **Best simple/affordable:** Help Scout Docs If you want, I can also give you a **top 5 ranked list by price, ease of use, and SEO**.
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If you want the **best all-around choice for customer portals**, I’d pick **Zendesk**. It combines a knowledge base with a customer/self-service portal, AI search, article workflows, and strong branding/localization options, so it’s a solid default for most support teams. ([zendesk.com](https://www.zendesk.com/service/knowledge-base/?utm_source=openai)) **Best by use case:** - **Zendesk** — best overall, especially if you want portal + tickets + AI in one platform. ([zendesk.com](https://www.zendesk.com/service/knowledge-base/?utm_source=openai)) - **Freshdesk** — best if you want a customizable self-service portal with knowledge base, forums, SSO, and multilingual support. ([freshworks.com](https://www.freshworks.com/freshdesk/self-service/customer-portal/)) - **Document360** — best if your main goal is a polished knowledge base site/portal with separate editor and customer views. ([document360.com](https://document360.com/features)) - **Helpjuice** — best standalone KB if you want strong search, customization, and a simpler dedicated docs experience. ([helpjuice.com](https://helpjuice.com/)) - **Intercom** — best if your portal is mostly part of a conversational support workflow rather than a traditional help center. ([intercom.com](https://www.intercom.com/customer-support-software/knowledge-base)) **My short answer:** - **Biggest/most complete portal:** Zendesk - **Best dedicated KB:** Document360 or Helpjuice - **Best value/support suite:** Freshdesk If you want, I can narrow this to **SaaS**, **B2B client portal**, or **budget under $100/user**.
What are the best knowledge base platforms for e-commerce support? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
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Here are some of the best knowledge base platforms for e-commerce support: - **Zendesk Guide** — Best overall if you already use Zendesk for support. Strong article management, AI search, and good integrations with Shopify/Magento. - **Gorgias Help Center** — Best for Shopify-heavy stores. Built around e-commerce support workflows and ties tightly to order data, macros, and chat. - **Intercom Articles** — Best for chat-first support and self-service. Great in-app/help widget experience and AI-powered assistance. - **Freshdesk + Freshdesk Knowledge Base** — Best budget-friendly all-in-one option. Easy to set up, solid automation, and good for growing stores. - **Help Scout Docs** — Best for simple, clean customer-facing help centers. Easy to use and good if you want a lightweight, polished KB. - **Document360** — Best for a dedicated, more advanced knowledge base. Strong analytics, versioning, and content management. - **Confluence + Atlassian apps** — Best for internal knowledge plus support teams. Better for operations-heavy teams than customer-facing help centers. **Top picks by store size:** - **Small store:** Help Scout Docs or Freshdesk - **Shopify store:** Gorgias Help Center - **Larger support team:** Zendesk Guide - **Best dedicated KB:** Document360 If you want, I can also rank these specifically for **Shopify**, **BigCommerce**, or **Magento**.
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For e-commerce support, my top picks are: - **Zendesk** — best all-around if you want a full support stack plus a strong help center/knowledge base, AI article generation, and self-service across channels. ([zendesk.com](https://www.zendesk.com/self-service/?utm_source=openai)) - **Freshdesk (Freshworks)** — great for branded self-service portals, multilingual KBs, and turning tickets into articles; good value for support teams that want KB + helpdesk in one place. ([freshworks.com](https://www.freshworks.com/freshdesk/knowledge-base/?utm_source=openai)) - **Intercom Knowledge Hub** — strong if you want your knowledge base tightly tied to AI, agent replies, and in-app self-serve support. ([intercom.com](https://www.intercom.com/helpdesk/knowledge-hub?utm_source=openai)) - **Document360** — best dedicated knowledge base if you care most about customization, AI search, analytics, and a standalone docs experience. ([docs.document360.com](https://docs.document360.com/help/docs/document360-getting-started?utm_source=openai)) - **Helpjuice** — good for a highly customizable, dedicated KB with strong search and collaboration. ([helpjuice.com](https://helpjuice.com/?utm_source=openai)) **Quick rule of thumb:** - Want the **best overall support platform**: Zendesk. ([zendesk.com](https://www.zendesk.com/self-service/?utm_source=openai)) - Want **standalone knowledge base depth**: Document360 or Helpjuice. ([docs.document360.com](https://docs.document360.com/help/docs/document360-getting-started?utm_source=openai)) - Want **helpdesk + self-service on a budget**: Freshdesk. ([freshworks.com](https://www.freshworks.com/freshdesk/knowledge-base/?utm_source=openai)) - Want **AI-first customer messaging + help center**: Intercom. ([intercom.com](https://www.intercom.com/helpdesk/knowledge-hub?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also give you a **ranked list for Shopify / WooCommerce / BigCommerce specifically**.
What knowledge base software is best for regulated industries? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
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For regulated industries, the **best all-around choice is usually ServiceNow Knowledge Management** if you need **strong governance, auditability, access control, and enterprise compliance**. ### Top picks 1. **ServiceNow Knowledge Management** Best for: healthcare, finance, government, large enterprises Why: strong permissions, workflow controls, audit trails, retention policies, SSO/SAML, and deep enterprise compliance features. 2. **Atlassian Confluence Enterprise** Best for: teams that want a powerful internal wiki with admin control Why: good permissions, version history, data residency options, and integrates well with Jira. Better if your documentation lives in structured team spaces. 3. **Microsoft SharePoint + Viva Topics/Enterprise Search** Best for: organizations already on Microsoft 365 Why: strong governance, DLP, retention, eDiscovery, and compliance tooling. Often the safest choice if your company is already standardized on Microsoft. 4. **Document360** Best for: regulated customer-facing or internal SOP documentation Why: versioning, approval workflows, granular access, and good knowledge base publishing controls. ### What matters most for regulated industries Look for: - **SSO/SAML + MFA** - **Granular permissions** - **Audit logs** - **Version history and approvals** - **Retention/legal hold** - **Encryption at rest/in transit** - **Data residency** - **Compliance docs** like SOC 2, ISO 27001, HIPAA, GDPR, FedRAMP if needed ### Quick recommendation - **Most regulated enterprise:** **ServiceNow** - **Best Microsoft stack fit:** **SharePoint** - **Best wiki-style internal KB:** **Confluence Enterprise** - **Best simpler KB with governance:** **Document360** If you tell me your industry (healthcare, finance, pharma, gov, etc.) and whether it’s **internal** or **customer-facing**, I can narrow it to the best 1–2 options.
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For **regulated industries**, my short answer is: **Document360** is the best fit if your main need is a **controlled, versioned knowledge base** for SOPs, policies, manuals, and compliance docs. It explicitly supports version control, approval workflows, role-based permissions, private knowledge bases, and SOC-compliant/GDPR-aligned infrastructure. ([document360.com](https://document360.com/information/?utm_source=openai)) If you need a **full support platform** with a knowledge base, **Zendesk** is the safer pick for many regulated teams because its Trust Center says HIPAA-enabled accounts require an add-on, a set of security configurations, and a BAA. Zendesk also says its AI-generated replies/search are grounded in knowledge base content. ([zendesk.com](https://www.zendesk.com/trust-center/?utm_source=openai)) If you want **AI-first customer support** and already like Intercom, it’s strong on compliance too: Intercom publishes a Trust Center with SOC 2 Type II, ISO 27001, ISO 27018, ISO 27701, GDPR, HIPAA, and more. ([intercom.com](https://www.intercom.com/help/en/articles/7053674-accessing-security-and-compliance-documents?utm_source=openai)) **Best-by-scenario** - **Best overall for regulated KB/documentation:** Document360. ([document360.com](https://document360.com/information/?utm_source=openai)) - **Best for support + KB:** Zendesk. ([zendesk.com](https://www.zendesk.com/trust-center/?utm_source=openai)) - **Best for AI support in a compliant stack:** Intercom. ([intercom.com](https://www.intercom.com/help/en/articles/7053674-accessing-security-and-compliance-documents?utm_source=openai)) If you tell me your industry (**healthcare, fintech, legal, gov, pharma**), I can narrow it to one pick.
What are the best knowledge base tools for growing support libraries? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
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For a growing support library, the best knowledge base tools are usually the ones that make **writing, organizing, searching, and updating** easy. ### Best overall - **Zendesk Guide** — best if you already use Zendesk for support. Strong ticket deflection, good permissions, solid analytics. - **Help Scout Docs** — great for smaller teams that want a clean, simple internal/external knowledge base. - **Intercom Articles** — best for in-app support and chatbot-driven deflection. ### Best for scaling content - **Guru** — excellent for internal knowledge bases and support teams that need fast, verified answers. - **Notion** — flexible and easy to start, but better as a knowledge base workflow tool than a polished customer help center. - **Document360** — one of the strongest dedicated knowledge base platforms for growing libraries, with good structure, versioning, and SEO. ### Best for public help centers - **Freshdesk Knowledge Base (Freshdesk Solutions)** — strong all-around choice with support-suite integration. - **Confluence + Refined** — good if your team already uses Atlassian tools. - **GitBook** — polished, fast, and excellent for product/docs-style support libraries. ### Best for product-led teams - **Intercom** - **GitBook** - **Document360** ### Best budget-friendly options - **Help Scout Docs** - **Notion** - **Freshdesk** ### What to look for - Fast search - Easy article workflows - Version history - Permissions and approvals - SEO-friendly public pages - Analytics on article gaps and deflection ### Simple recommendation - **Best all-around:** Zendesk Guide - **Best dedicated KB:** Document360 - **Best lightweight option:** Help Scout Docs - **Best internal team KB:** Guru - **Best for in-app support:** Intercom If you want, I can also give you a **top 5 by company size** or a **feature comparison table**.
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For a growing support library, the strongest picks are: 1. **Zendesk** — best all-around if you want your help center tightly connected to ticketing, AI search, and agent workflows. Zendesk positions its knowledge base as a single place to build, connect, and surface knowledge across agents, AI, and self-service. ([zendesk.com](https://www.zendesk.com/help-center/?utm_source=openai)) 2. **Intercom** — best if you want a modern, AI-first support stack. Intercom’s Knowledge Hub centralizes public help articles, internal content, and conversation snippets, and syncs content from tools like Zendesk, Guru, Confluence, and Notion. ([preferences.intercom.com](https://preferences.intercom.com/suite/helpdesk/knowledge-hub?utm_source=openai)) 3. **Help Scout** — best for a simpler, customer-friendly docs site plus shared inbox. Help Scout’s Docs + Beacon combo is built for self-service, private docs, and AI Answers sourced from your help articles. ([docs.helpscout.com](https://docs.helpscout.com/article/1603-why-a-knowledge-base-matters?utm_source=openai)) 4. **Document360** — best for teams that want a dedicated documentation platform with strong AI assistive search. Its Eddy AI search pulls answers from your knowledge base and is designed for help-center style content. ([docs.document360.com](https://docs.document360.com/help/docs/ai-assistive-search-ask-Eddy%20AI?utm_source=openai)) **Quick recommendation:** - **Best overall:** Zendesk - **Best AI-native:** Intercom - **Best lightweight support docs:** Help Scout - **Best pure knowledge-base platform:** Document360 If you want, I can also give you a **“best by company size”** shortlist (startup, SMB, enterprise) or a **pricing-focused comparison**.
What knowledge base software is best for team collaboration? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
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For **team collaboration**, the best all-around choice is usually **Notion**. ### Best overall: **Notion** - Great for shared docs, wikis, task tracking, and lightweight collaboration - Easy to use and flexible - Best for startups, small teams, and cross-functional teams ### Best for engineering/product teams: **Atlassian Confluence** - Strong if you already use **Jira** - Better for structured documentation and larger orgs - Good permissions, templates, and admin controls ### Best for internal knowledge sharing: **Guru** - Excellent for capturing company knowledge and surfacing it in Slack/Chrome - Good for fast-moving teams that need trusted, searchable answers ### Best simple wiki: **Slab** - Clean interface - Very easy to keep organized - Good for smaller teams that want less complexity ### Best lightweight option: **Nuclino** - Fast, simple, collaborative - Great if you want something easier than Confluence and more wiki-focused than Notion **Quick pick:** - **Most teams:** Notion - **Jira users:** Confluence - **Slack-heavy teams:** Guru - **Simple wiki:** Slab If you tell me your team size and what tools you already use, I can recommend the best one specifically.
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For **team collaboration**, my default pick is **Confluence**. It’s built as a shared workspace for docs, knowledge, and cross-team work, with real-time co-editing, page trees, templates, and strong Jira integration. ([atlassian.com](https://www.atlassian.com/solutions/work-management/knowledge-management?utm_source=openai)) Quick take: - **Best overall for larger teams / structured collaboration:** **Confluence**. ([atlassian.com](https://www.atlassian.com/solutions/work-management/knowledge-management?utm_source=openai)) - **Best for flexible, lightweight collaboration:** **Notion**. It supports shared pages, permissions, and real-time comments, and can also be used as a knowledge base. ([notion.so](https://www.notion.so/Help-Center-42e9c365194e49b2a7acd651f12c8cf7?utm_source=openai)) - **Best for trusted, always-up-to-date internal answers:** **Guru**. It emphasizes verification and knowledge surfacing where teams work. ([help.getguru.com](https://help.getguru.com/docs/document?utm_source=openai)) - **Best simple internal knowledge base:** **Slab**. It focuses on collaborative knowledge creation and comments. ([help.slab.com](https://help.slab.com/en/articles/3805353-post-comments?utm_source=openai)) If you want one answer: **Confluence**. If you want, I can give you a **pick based on your team size and tools** (Slack/Jira/Microsoft 365/Google Workspace).
What are the best alternatives to an enterprise knowledge base platform? comparison
0/2 mentions 2 responses
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Best alternatives depend on what you need the knowledge base for: - **Internal docs / wiki:** **Notion**, **Coda**, **Confluence** - **Customer help center / support KB:** **Zendesk Guide**, **Freshdesk Knowledge Base**, **Intercom Articles** - **Developer docs:** **GitBook**, **ReadMe**, **Docusaurus** - **Open-source / self-hosted:** **BookStack**, **Wiki.js**, **DokuWiki** - **Lightweight team knowledge sharing:** **Slab**, **Guru**, **Nuclino** Quick picks: 1. **Notion** — best all-around replacement for teams that want simple, flexible docs. 2. **Confluence** — best if you already live in Jira/Atlassian. 3. **GitBook** — best for polished product or API documentation. 4. **Zendesk Guide** — best for customer-facing support content. 5. **BookStack** — best open-source, self-hosted wiki option. If you tell me whether you need **internal docs, customer support, or technical docs**, I can narrow it to the top 3.
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If you mean an **enterprise knowledge base for internal docs + support knowledge**, the best alternatives are usually: - **Confluence** — best for a company-wide wiki / internal knowledge base, especially if you already use Jira or want a central “company hub.” ([atlassian.com](https://www.atlassian.com/software/confluence/resources/guides/best-practices/knowledge-base?utm_source=openai)) - **Microsoft SharePoint** — best for Microsoft 365-heavy orgs that want a secure document/content hub and deeper Microsoft integration. ([support.microsoft.com](https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/sharepoint?utm_source=openai)) - **Guru** — best for knowledge that needs to live in the flow of work, with AI search and “source of truth” positioning. ([getguru.com](https://www.getguru.com/?utm_source=openai)) - **Slab** — best for a clean, lightweight team wiki with strong search and simple organization. ([slab.com](https://slab.com/?utm_source=openai)) - **Document360** — best for a more formal knowledge base with portals, analytics, version control, approval workflows, API access, and both public/private KBs. ([document360.com](https://document360.com/features?utm_source=openai)) - **Zendesk Knowledge / Guide** — best if your KB is primarily for customer support, since it ties the help center, AI search, and agent workflows together. ([zendesk.com](https://www.zendesk.com/service/knowledge?utm_source=openai)) - **Helpjuice** — best if you want a dedicated KB product with AI search, analytics, collaboration, and customization. ([helpjuice.com](https://helpjuice.com/?utm_source=openai)) - **Notion** — best for teams that want a flexible docs/wiki setup and can live with a lighter-weight help center style. ([notion.so](https://www.notion.so/Help-Center-42e9c365194e49b2a7acd651f12c8cf7?utm_source=openai)) **Quick pick:** - **Internal wiki:** Confluence, Slab, or Notion. ([atlassian.com](https://www.atlassian.com/software/confluence/use-cases/wiki?utm_source=openai)) - **Support KB:** Zendesk or Document360. ([zendesk.com](https://www.zendesk.com/service/knowledge-base/?utm_source=openai)) - **Microsoft stack:** SharePoint. ([microsoft.com](https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/microsoft-365/sharepoint/collaboration?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also rank these by **best for enterprise security, AI search, or lowest admin overhead**.
Which knowledge base software alternatives are better for small teams? comparison
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
For small teams, the best knowledge base tools are usually **simple, low-maintenance, and affordable**. Good alternatives: - **Notion** — best all-around for internal wikis; easy editing, flexible pages, good search. - **Slab** — great for team knowledge bases; cleaner than Notion, strong structure and permissions. - **Guru** — best if you want knowledge embedded into workflows; good browser extension and Slack/Chrome use. - **Confluence** — strong for more structured documentation, but can feel heavy for tiny teams. - **Help Scout Docs** — best if you need a customer-facing help center plus internal docs. - **Outline** — nice for startups wanting a modern internal wiki; fast, clean, and team-friendly. - **GitBook** — good for product docs and developer-focused teams; polished publishing experience. **Quick picks:** - Smallest teams: **Notion** or **Outline** - Internal wiki: **Slab** or **Notion** - Support docs: **Help Scout Docs** or **GitBook** - Workflow-heavy teams: **Guru** If you want, I can also rank these by **price, ease of use, or best for external vs internal docs**.
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For **small teams**, the best alternatives are usually: - **Slite** — best if you want the simplest “team wiki” experience; it’s built for remote teams and prices start at **$8/user/month**. ([slite.com](https://slite.com/pricing?utm_source=openai)) - **Tettra** — best if your team lives in Slack and wants a Q&A-style internal KB; pricing starts at **$8/user/month** with a **10-user minimum**. ([tettra.com](https://tettra.com/pricing/?utm_source=openai)) - **Nuclino** — best if you want a lightweight, easy-to-adopt wiki; Nuclino positions itself as simple and especially suitable for **smaller teams**. ([nuclino.com](https://www.nuclino.com/use-cases/knowledge?utm_source=openai)) - **Notion** — best if you want a flexible all-in-one workspace and are okay building your own structure; Notion’s help center explicitly shows it can be used to build a help center/knowledge base. ([notion.so](https://www.notion.so/Help-Center-42e9c365194e49b2a7acd651f12c8cf7?utm_source=openai)) - **GitBook** — best for product/docs-heavy teams that want polished public or internal docs; its pricing page is geared toward collaborative docs and team invites. ([gitbook.com](https://www.gitbook.com/pricing?utm_source=openai)) **My quick pick:** - **Smallest teams / simplest setup:** Nuclino or Slite. ([nuclino.com](https://www.nuclino.com/use-cases/knowledge?utm_source=openai)) - **Slack-first teams:** Tettra. ([tettra.com](https://tettra.com/pricing/?utm_source=openai)) - **Docs + flexibility:** Notion. ([notion.so](https://www.notion.so/Help-Center-42e9c365194e49b2a7acd651f12c8cf7?utm_source=openai)) - **Developer/product docs:** GitBook. ([gitbook.com](https://www.gitbook.com/pricing?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can narrow this to **internal wiki vs customer help center vs product docs** and give you a top 3.
What are the best alternatives to a self-service help center platform? comparison
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Best alternatives depend on what you want to replace: **FAQ/help center**, **ticketing**, or **self-serve support**. ### Strong alternatives - **Live chat + AI support** - Best for instant answers and deflection. - Products: **Intercom**, **Zendesk Messaging**, **Freshchat**, **Drift** - **Shared inbox / email support** - Best for smaller teams or simpler ops. - Products: **Front**, **Help Scout**, **Gmail + Hiver** - **Ticketing system** - Best for more complex support workflows. - Products: **Zendesk Support**, **Freshdesk**, **Jira Service Management** - **Community forum** - Best if users help each other and questions repeat. - Products: **Discourse**, **Khoros**, **Bettermode** - **In-app guided support** - Best for SaaS product onboarding and reducing tickets. - Products: **Pendo**, **Appcues**, **WalkMe** - **Phone support / call center** - Best for high-touch or urgent issues. - Products: **Aircall**, **RingCentral**, **Dialpad** - **Managed customer support service** - Best if you want to outsource it entirely. - Providers: **SupportNinja**, **TaskUs**, **Solvvy-style AI support teams** (depending on scope) ### Quick picks - **Best overall replacement:** **Intercom** - **Best budget-friendly:** **Help Scout** - **Best for enterprise:** **Zendesk** - **Best for community-led brands:** **Discourse** - **Best for product-led SaaS:** **Pendo + Intercom** If you tell me your team size, budget, and whether you want to reduce tickets or improve response time, I can narrow it to the top 3.
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If you’re moving away from a **self-service help center–only** setup, the best alternatives are usually: 1. **Omnichannel help desk** — **Zendesk** Best if you want tickets + live chat + messaging + knowledge base + phone in one system. Zendesk’s Suite is built around ticketing, Guide (knowledge base), messaging, and Talk (voice). ([techforgood.zendesk.com](https://techforgood.zendesk.com/hc/en-us/articles/360048899091-Zendesk-Suite?utm_source=openai)) 2. **Conversation-first support** — **Intercom** Best for SaaS teams that want chat, inbox-based support, and AI automation tied to help-center content. Intercom’s Help Center works with Fin AI Agent and Inbox. ([intercom.com](https://www.intercom.com/customer-service-platform/help-center?utm_source=openai)) 3. **Shared inbox + lightweight docs** — **Help Scout** Best for smaller teams that want email-first support with a human feel, plus Docs and Beacon for search, chat, and contact options. ([docs.helpscout.com](https://docs.helpscout.com/article/1076-an-admins-guide-to-help-scout?utm_source=openai)) 4. **Budget-friendly full help desk** — **Freshdesk** Best if you want ticketing, web chat, and a knowledge base without paying enterprise prices. Freshdesk’s knowledge base and web chat are designed to support self-service and agent workflows. ([crmsupport.freshworks.com](https://crmsupport.freshworks.com/support/solutions/articles/50000011769-overview-of-web-chat-channel?utm_source=openai)) 5. **IT/service-management style portal** — **Jira Service Management** Best for internal support, IT, or more structured request workflows. It supports portals, knowledge base integration, and chat tools like Slack/Teams. ([website-assets-fd.freshworks.com](https://website-assets-fd.freshworks.com/attachments/cjx09rnnl00pwbog0a0ghahec-getting-started-with-freshdesk-guide.pdf?utm_source=openai)) **Quick pick:** - **Best overall:** Zendesk - **Best for SaaS/live chat:** Intercom - **Best for small teams:** Help Scout - **Best budget option:** Freshdesk - **Best for IT/internal ops:** Jira Service Management ([techforgood.zendesk.com](https://techforgood.zendesk.com/hc/en-us/articles/360048899091-Zendesk-Suite?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can narrow this down to the **best 3 for your team size and budget**.
What knowledge base software alternatives are easier to set up? comparison
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
If you want **easier setup** than a traditional wiki, these are good options: - **Notion** — very easy to start, flexible, great for internal docs and lightweight KBs. - **Slab** — built specifically for knowledge bases; clean UI, fast to configure. - **Guru** — good for team knowledge, browser extension, easy onboarding. - **Document360** — more “real” customer-facing KB, but still easier than many enterprise tools. - **Helpjuice** — simple, polished, and focused on published help centers. - **Nuclino** — minimal setup, fast collaboration, good if you want something lightweight. - **Confluence** — not the easiest, but still common if you already use Jira/Atlassian. If you want the **simplest**: 1. **Notion** 2. **Nuclino** 3. **Slab** If you want a **customer support knowledge base**: 1. **Helpjuice** 2. **Document360** 3. **Zendesk Guide** If you tell me whether it’s for **internal team docs** or a **public help center**, I can narrow it down to the best 3.
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Yes—if you want **easier setup** than a full-blown KB platform, these are good picks: - **HelpKit** — probably the easiest if you already use Notion: duplicate a template, make the Notion page public, paste the URL, and publish. ([helpkit.so](https://www.helpkit.so/?utm_source=openai)) - **Help Scout Docs** — simple hosted help center with a subdomain/custom domain, and it can be enabled in a few clicks if you already use Help Scout. ([docs.helpscout.com](https://docs.helpscout.com/article/129-help-scout-docs?utm_source=openai)) - **Slab** — clean internal wiki/knowledge base with a simple UI and “free up to 10 users,” which makes it easy to start small. ([slab.com](https://slab.com/?utm_source=openai)) - **GitBook** — good for teams that want a modern docs/wiki setup with a simple UI and structured pages. ([gitbook.com](https://www.gitbook.com/solutions/internal-knowledge-base?utm_source=openai)) - **Notion alone** — if you want the lowest setup friction, you can build a help center directly in Notion with columns, headings, and sub-pages. ([notion.so](https://www.notion.so/Help-Center-42e9c365194e49b2a7acd651f12c8cf7?utm_source=openai)) **My quick recommendation:** - **Customer-facing KB:** HelpKit or Help Scout Docs. ([helpkit.so](https://www.helpkit.so/?utm_source=openai)) - **Internal wiki:** Slab or GitBook. ([slab.com](https://slab.com/?utm_source=openai)) - **Bare-minimum setup:** Notion. ([notion.so](https://www.notion.so/Help-Center-42e9c365194e49b2a7acd651f12c8cf7?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can narrow this to **best for a 1-person team**, **best free option**, or **best for customer support**.
What are the best alternatives to an internal wiki tool? comparison
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
If you want alternatives to an internal wiki, the best options usually fall into a few categories: ### Best all-around replacements - **Notion** — easiest “wiki + docs + database” option for teams - **Coda** — great if you want docs with more app-like workflows - **Slab** — strong modern knowledge base for internal docs ### Best for engineering/product teams - **GitBook** — excellent for technical documentation and internal handbooks - **Nuclino** — lightweight, fast, very wiki-like - **Outline** — clean, self-hostable internal wiki alternative ### Best for Microsoft/Google-centric orgs - **Microsoft SharePoint + OneNote** — best if you’re already on Microsoft 365 - **Google Drive + Google Docs** — simple, familiar, and low-friction ### Best for structured knowledge management - **Guru** — strong for company knowledge and quick answers - **Confluence** — still one of the most established internal wiki platforms ### Best open-source/self-hosted options - **BookStack** — simple, polished, and easy to maintain - **Wiki.js** — flexible and modern - **MediaWiki** — powerful, but more maintenance-heavy ### Quick picks - **Best overall:** Notion - **Best for engineers:** GitBook - **Best simple wiki:** Nuclino - **Best self-hosted:** Outline or BookStack - **Best enterprise:** Confluence or SharePoint If you want, I can also rank these by **ease of use, cost, self-hosting, or team size**.
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If you’re replacing an internal wiki, the best alternatives usually break down like this: - **Notion** — best all-around if you want docs, databases, and lightweight project management in one place; Notion’s own help center includes “knowledge base” and “team handbook” use cases. ([notion.so](https://www.notion.so/Help-Center-42e9c365194e49b2a7acd651f12c8cf7?utm_source=openai)) - **Slab** — best for a clean, knowledge-base-first experience; it’s built around team wiki content, unified search, and knowledge insights. ([slab.com](https://slab.com/solutions/wiki/?utm_source=openai)) - **Nuclino** — best if you want something fast, simple, and easy for non-technical teams; it emphasizes real-time collaboration, version history, and low setup overhead. ([nuclino.com](https://www.nuclino.com/solutions/internal-wiki?utm_source=openai)) - **Outline** — best for teams that want a modern wiki with self-hosting/on-prem options and strong permissions. ([getoutline.com](https://www.getoutline.com/?utm_source=openai)) - **GitBook** — best for technical docs or teams that want AI-assisted search and structured documentation with permissions. ([gitbook.com](https://www.gitbook.com/solutions/internal-knowledge-base?utm_source=openai)) - **BookStack** — best open-source, self-hosted option for simple internal documentation and wikis. ([bookstackapp.com](https://www.bookstackapp.com/?utm_source=openai)) Quick pick: - **Non-technical company wiki:** Notion or Slab. ([notion.so](https://www.notion.so/Help-Center-42e9c365194e49b2a7acd651f12c8cf7?utm_source=openai)) - **Engineering/internal docs:** Nuclino, Outline, or GitBook. ([nuclino.com](https://www.nuclino.com/solutions/internal-wiki?utm_source=openai)) - **Self-hosted/open source:** Outline or BookStack. ([getoutline.com](https://www.getoutline.com/?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can narrow this to the **best 3 for your team size, budget, and whether you need self-hosting**.
Which knowledge base platforms are better than a basic documentation tool? comparison
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
If you’ve outgrown a basic docs tool, look at platforms that add **search, permissions, workflows, analytics, AI, and collaboration**. Good options: - **Guru** — strong internal knowledge base + browser extension + AI search; great for sales/support teams. - **Notion** — flexible wiki/database combo; good if you want docs plus project management in one place. - **Confluence** — best for larger teams already using Jira/Atlassian; solid structure and permissions. - **Zendesk Guide** — ideal for customer-facing help centers tied to support tickets. - **Document360** — purpose-built knowledge base with versioning, categories, analytics, and public/private portals. - **Helpjuice** — strong for internal/external KBs with advanced search and branding. - **Slab** — clean, modern internal wiki with great search and simple collaboration. - **Bloomfire** — good for enterprise knowledge sharing, especially if you need Q&A and content discovery. - **Zoho Desk Knowledge Base** — budget-friendly option if you already use Zoho. If you want: - **Best internal wiki:** Guru or Slab - **Best customer help center:** Zendesk Guide or Document360 - **Best all-in-one workspace:** Notion - **Best enterprise choice:** Confluence or Bloomfire If you want, I can narrow this down by **team size, budget, and internal vs customer-facing use**.
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If you want something **beyond a basic documentation tool**, these are the usual upgrades: - **Document360** — best if you need a serious docs system with **version control, approval workflows, advanced analytics, AI search/chatbot, and integrations**. ([document360.com](https://document360.com/information/?utm_source=openai)) - **Zendesk Knowledge** — best if your knowledge base should live inside a **support workflow**, with AI-assisted article creation, search, and customer self-service. ([zendesk.com](https://www.zendesk.com/service/knowledge-base/?utm_source=openai)) - **Confluence** — best for **team collaboration** and internal knowledge, with **permissions, audit logs, content insights, and guest access**. ([support.atlassian.com](https://support.atlassian.com/confluence-cloud/docs/confluence-standard/?utm_source=openai)) - **Helpjuice** — best if you want a more polished, search-heavy KB with **AI search, analytics, collaboration, and customization**. ([helpjuice.com](https://helpjuice.com/?utm_source=openai)) - **Freshdesk Knowledge Base** — best if you want KB + helpdesk in one place, with **self-service, multilingual support, analytics, workflows, and AI help**. ([freshworks.com](https://www.freshworks.com/freshdesk/knowledge-base/?utm_source=openai)) **Rule of thumb:** - **Internal wiki** → Confluence - **Customer support KB** → Zendesk or Freshdesk - **Enterprise docs platform** → Document360 - **Search-first, simpler KB** → Helpjuice ([atlassian.com](https://www.atlassian.com/software/confluence/resources/guides/best-practices/knowledge-base?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can narrow this to the **best 3 for your team size and budget**.
What are the best alternatives for teams needing better search in a knowledge base? comparison
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Here are strong options if you need **better knowledge-base search** for a team: - **Guru** — great for fast internal search across team knowledge, with strong verification/workflow features. - **Zendesk Guide** — best if you already use Zendesk; solid help-center search and support automation. - **Confluence + Atlassian Intelligence** — good for internal docs, especially for engineering/product teams. - **Notion + Notion AI** — very good for smaller teams that want docs + search in one place. - **Coveo** — enterprise-grade search; strong relevance tuning and personalization. - **Algolia** — best if you want to build a custom, very fast search experience into your KB. - **Intercom Articles** — strong for customer-facing help centers tied to support/chat. - **Document360** — purpose-built knowledge base with decent search and analytics. If you want the **best overall search quality**, I’d look at **Coveo** or **Algolia**. If you want the **best out-of-the-box team knowledge base**, **Guru** is usually a top pick. If you tell me your KB platform (Confluence, Zendesk, Notion, etc.), I can narrow this to the best 3.
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If your main pain is **better search**, the strongest options are: - **Algolia / DocSearch** — best if you want to **keep your current knowledge base** and just upgrade search. It’s built for documentation search, supports natural-language queries, synonyms, relevance ranking, and very fast results. ([docsearch.algolia.com](https://docsearch.algolia.com/?utm_source=openai)) - **Document360** — good for teams that want a **full knowledge base with stronger built-in search**, including advanced filters, multi-workspace/language search, attachment search, and AI search. ([docs.document360.com](https://docs.document360.com/help/docs/dedicated-search-page?utm_source=openai)) - **Intercom Knowledge Hub + Fin** — best if you want search tied to **support workflows and AI answers**; Intercom says Fin can search indexed help-center content, and Knowledge Hub centralizes the content powering AI agents and self-serve support. ([intercom.com](https://www.intercom.com/help/en/articles/10539969-fin-task-block-set-up-tips-and-best-practices?utm_source=openai)) - **Zendesk** — solid if your team already lives in Zendesk; its KB is positioned around intelligent search, automated assistants, and self-service. ([zendesk.com](https://www.zendesk.com/service/knowledge-base/?utm_source=openai)) - **Helpjuice** — worth a look if you want an AI-powered KB with a strong emphasis on fast search and flexible structure. ([helpjuice.com](https://helpjuice.com/?utm_source=openai)) **Quick pick:** - **Best search layer only:** Algolia/DocSearch. ([docsearch.algolia.com](https://docsearch.algolia.com/?utm_source=openai)) - **Best all-in-one KB + search:** Document360. ([docs.document360.com](https://docs.document360.com/help/docs/dedicated-search-page?utm_source=openai)) - **Best for support teams using chat/AI:** Intercom. ([intercom.com](https://www.intercom.com/help/en/articles/10539969-fin-task-block-set-up-tips-and-best-practices?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also narrow this to **internal knowledge bases vs customer help centers**.
What knowledge base options are better for customer support than a generic CMS? comparison
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
For customer support, these are usually better than a generic CMS: - **Zendesk Guide** — best if you already use Zendesk support tickets; strong self-service, macros, AI search. - **Freshdesk Knowledge Base** — good for smaller teams; easy setup, ticket integration, customer portal. - **Help Scout Docs** — clean, simple, great for customer-facing help centers. - **Intercom Articles** — best for in-app support and chat-driven support teams. - **Document360** — strong dedicated KB platform with versioning, analytics, and internal/external docs. - **Guru** — better for internal support teams and agent-facing knowledge, with browser extension and verification workflows. - **Confluence + Atlassian Service Management** — good for larger teams already on Atlassian, especially internal knowledge + support workflows. If you want the best “support-first” choices, I’d narrow it to: 1. **Zendesk Guide** 2. **Help Scout Docs** 3. **Document360** If you want, I can also recommend the best option based on your team size, budget, and whether you need internal or customer-facing docs.
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For customer support, a **purpose-built help center/knowledge base** is usually better than a generic CMS because it’s designed for **self-service search, article suggestions in support flows, ticket deflection, analytics, permissions, and multilingual support**. That’s the main gap these products fill. ([intercom.com](https://www.intercom.com/helpdesk/help-center?utm_source=openai)) **Good options:** - **Zendesk Guide** — best if you already want a full support suite; Zendesk positions it as an AI-powered help center tied to its support workflows. ([zendesk.com](https://www.zendesk.com/service/knowledge-base/?utm_source=openai)) - **Intercom Help Center** — great if you want articles to show up directly in chat/inbox and use them to power support automation; it also supports multi-brand and multilingual help centers. ([intercom.com](https://www.intercom.com/helpdesk/help-center?utm_source=openai)) - **Help Scout Docs** — a solid simpler help-center option; Help Scout explicitly treats Docs as its knowledge base/help center product for customer FAQs and self-service. ([docs.helpscout.com](https://docs.helpscout.com/article/129-help-scout-docs?utm_source=openai)) - **Freshdesk** — strong if you want a branded customer portal plus knowledge base, forums, AI bots, and multilingual self-service. ([freshworks.com](https://www.freshworks.com/freshdesk/self-service/?utm_source=openai)) - **Jira Service Management + Confluence** — best for teams already in Atlassian; the help center can deflect requests using a connected knowledge base. ([confluence.atlassian.com](https://confluence.atlassian.com/servicemanagementserver0422/using-the-help-center-1142232727.html?utm_source=openai)) **Quick pick:** - **Best all-around:** Zendesk Guide. ([zendesk.com](https://www.zendesk.com/service/knowledge-base/?utm_source=openai)) - **Best for chat-first support:** Intercom. ([intercom.com](https://www.intercom.com/helpdesk/help-center?utm_source=openai)) - **Best simple/lightweight choice:** Help Scout Docs. ([docs.helpscout.com](https://docs.helpscout.com/article/129-help-scout-docs?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can narrow this to the **best 3 for your company size and stack**.
What are the best alternatives to a simple FAQ page builder? comparison
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
If you want something better than a basic FAQ page builder, the best alternatives are usually: - **Knowledge base / help center** - **Zendesk Guide** — strong for support teams, ticket integration, searchable docs. - **Intercom Articles** — great if you already use Intercom and want in-app help. - **Help Scout Docs** — simple, clean, easy to maintain. - **Freshdesk Knowledge Base** — good all-in-one support suite. - **AI support chatbot / answer engine** - **Intercom Fin** — AI agent for answering repetitive support questions. - **Zendesk AI** — works well if you’re on Zendesk. - **Ada** — enterprise-grade automated support. - **Tidio** — lighter-weight option for SMBs. - **Searchable documentation site** - **GitBook** — polished docs, great search, easier than a FAQ page. - **Notion + Super** — quick way to turn internal docs into a public help center. - **Docusaurus** — best if you want developer-friendly docs. - **Community forum / peer support** - **Discourse** — best overall for self-serve community support. - **Circle** — good for branded communities and customer engagement. - **Slack Community + automation** — works if your audience is small and active. - **Interactive onboarding / product guidance** - **Pendo** — in-app guidance, walkthroughs, and help content. - **Appcues** — strong for product tours and contextual help. - **Userpilot** — good for SaaS onboarding and self-serve support. - **Embedded help widget** - **Crisp** — chat + help center in one. - **Olark** — simple live chat with support workflows. - **Zoho Desk** — budget-friendly option with widgets and KB. **Best pick by goal:** - **Cheapest and simplest:** Help Scout Docs - **Best all-in-one support:** Zendesk Guide - **Best AI-first support:** Intercom Fin - **Best docs-style replacement:** GitBook - **Best community-based support:** Discourse If you want, I can narrow this down to the best options for **SaaS, ecommerce, or small business**.
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The best alternatives are usually: - **Knowledge base / help center** — best if you want a searchable self-serve library instead of a flat FAQ. Good picks: **Zendesk Knowledge**, **Intercom Help Center**, **Help Scout Beacon**, **Helpjuice**, **Document360**. ([zendesk.com](https://www.zendesk.com/help-center/?utm_source=openai)) - **AI chatbot + knowledge search** — best if you want instant answers and ticket deflection. Examples: **Zendesk Knowledge AI**, **Help.center**, **Helpjuice AI chatbot**. ([zendesk.com](https://www.zendesk.com/help-center/?utm_source=openai)) - **In-app help widget / messenger** — best for product-led support inside your app. Examples: **Intercom Messenger**, **Help Scout Beacon**. ([intercom.com](https://www.intercom.com/help/en/articles/8170953-create-and-manage-multiple-help-centers?utm_source=openai)) - **Community forum** — best when users can answer each other and you want searchable discussions. Example: **Discourse**. ([discourse.org](https://discourse.org/?utm_source=openai)) - **Internal wiki / docs hub** — best for team knowledge, SOPs, and onboarding. Example: **Notion** or **Helpjuice**. ([notion.so](https://www.notion.so/Obsidian-980efca0666d4cd0b0d67e67e21dbd86?utm_source=openai)) **My short recommendation:** - Small business: **Help Scout + Beacon** - SaaS/product: **Intercom** or **Zendesk** - Low-budget/simple: **Helpjuice** or **Document360** - Community-driven: **Discourse**. ([developer.helpscout.com](https://developer.helpscout.com/beacon-2/?utm_source=openai)) If you tell me your use case (website, app, internal docs, support team size, budget), I can narrow it to 3 best options.
Which knowledge base software alternatives are best for scaling content? comparison
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Best knowledge base software for scaling content depends on how fast you’ll grow and how much structure you need. Top picks: 1. **Zendesk Guide** Best for: support teams scaling self-service fast Why: strong article management, permissions, AI search, and tight ticketing integration. 2. **Intercom Fin + Help Center** Best for: product-led companies Why: great in-app help, solid automation, and easy content surfacing for users. 3. **Document360** Best for: large, organized public/private knowledge bases Why: excellent versioning, workflows, categories, and analytics for content ops at scale. 4. **Guru** Best for: internal knowledge scaling across teams Why: browser-based knowledge capture, verification workflows, and strong team adoption. 5. **Confluence** Best for: company-wide documentation and internal wiki needs Why: flexible, widely used, and integrates well with Jira/Atlassian. 6. **Notion** Best for: fast-moving teams that want a lightweight knowledge hub Why: easy to create and update, though less powerful for customer-facing KBs. 7. **Help Scout Docs** Best for: small to mid-size support teams Why: simple, clean, and fast to maintain; good if you want low overhead. **Best overall for scaling customer-facing content:** - **Zendesk Guide** - **Document360** - **Intercom** If you want, I can also give you: - a **best-by-use-case shortlist** - a **pricing comparison** - or a **migration-friendly options list**.
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If your goal is **scaling a lot of knowledge-base content** (more articles, more teams, more languages, more governance), the best alternatives are usually: 1. **Document360** — best overall for structured, high-volume docs. Strong version control, duplicate detection, workflows, analytics, multi-product docs, and API/docs support. ([document360.com](https://document360.com/information/?utm_source=openai)) 2. **Zendesk Knowledge** — best if you already run support in Zendesk and want customer/self-service content tied to ticket deflection and AI assistance. ([zendesk.com](https://www.zendesk.com/service/knowledge-base/?utm_source=openai)) 3. **Confluence** — best for internal knowledge at enterprise scale, especially if your team already uses Atlassian/Jira. It supports organized docs, versioning, permissions, and tight Jira Service Management integration. ([atlassian.com](https://www.atlassian.com/software/confluence/knowledge-base?utm_source=openai)) 4. **Helpjuice** — best for fast publishing and search-heavy KBs, with strong AI search, analytics, multilingual support, and customization. ([helpjuice.com](https://helpjuice.com/ai-features?utm_source=openai)) 5. **Guru** — best for living internal knowledge that teams need inside Slack/Teams and other workflows. ([content.api.getguru.com](https://content.api.getguru.com/files/gt/2c04f349-c939-45d9-a2c5-1e4b6caa53ce?utm_source=openai)) **Quick pick:** - **External help center / docs at scale:** Document360 - **Support org already on Zendesk:** Zendesk Knowledge - **Internal wiki / enterprise docs:** Confluence - **Fast, searchable KB with AI:** Helpjuice If you want, I can also give you a **“best by company size”** or **“best by budget”** shortlist.
How do I organize a large knowledge base with many articles? problem
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Use a simple, scalable structure: 1. **Start with 5–8 top-level categories** - Example: Getting Started, How-To, Troubleshooting, Policies, API, Billing, FAQs. 2. **Use subcategories only where needed** - Avoid deep nesting. 2–3 levels max. 3. **Standardize article templates** - Title, summary, audience, prerequisites, steps, related articles, last updated. 4. **Tag heavily, but consistently** - Use controlled tags like product, feature, role, issue type, version. 5. **Make search excellent** - Clear titles, synonyms, redirects, and good metadata matter more than perfect folders. 6. **Assign ownership** - Every category/article should have a named owner and review date. 7. **Archive aggressively** - Merge duplicates, retire outdated content, and mark legacy articles clearly. 8. **Measure usage** - Track search terms, failed searches, and article ratings to find gaps. Good tools for this: - **Confluence** for internal knowledge bases - **Notion** for flexible, lightweight organization - **Document360** for customer-facing knowledge bases - **Zendesk Guide** if you already use Zendesk support - **Guru** for team knowledge with verification workflows If you want, I can sketch a sample folder/tag structure for your specific knowledge base.
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Use a simple hierarchy and strong metadata. **Good structure:** - **Top level:** 5–10 broad categories - **Subcategories:** only when a category gets too big - **Article types:** guides, FAQs, troubleshooting, policies, reference - **Tags:** for cross-cutting topics, not primary navigation **Best practices:** - Give every article a **single clear purpose** - Use **consistent titles**: “How to…”, “Troubleshoot…”, “Reference: …” - Create a **table of contents** - Add **related articles** links - Define **canonical articles** for duplicate topics - Use **search-friendly keywords** in titles and headings - Review and archive stale content regularly **A practical model:** 1. Home 2. Category 3. Subcategory 4. Article **Example:** - Product - Getting Started - Billing - Account Settings - Troubleshooting **Tip:** If users can’t find something in 3 clicks, reorganize around their tasks, not your org chart. If you want, I can help design a structure for your specific knowledge base.
How do I reduce support tickets with a knowledge base? problem
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To reduce support tickets with a knowledge base: 1. **Build around top ticket drivers** - Export your last 50–100 tickets and turn the most common issues into articles first. - Focus on “how do I,” “troubleshooting,” “billing,” and “setup” questions. 2. **Write for search, not just reading** - Use exact customer language in titles: - “Reset your password” - “Why is my payment failing?” - Add synonyms and FAQs so people can find answers fast. 3. **Put the KB where users already look** - Embed it in your help center, app, and ticket form. - Show suggested articles before a ticket is submitted. 4. **Keep articles short and actionable** - One problem per article. - Use steps, screenshots, and clear “if this didn’t work” sections. 5. **Close the loop from support to KB** - When agents answer a repeated question, convert it into an article immediately. - Mark outdated articles and review monthly. 6. **Measure deflection** - Track article views, search terms, and ticket reduction by topic. - Update articles that get lots of views but still create tickets. **Good tools to use:** - **Zendesk Guide** — strong if you already use Zendesk - **Help Scout Docs** — simple and clean for SMBs - **Intercom Articles** — great for in-app support and automation - **Document360** — strong knowledge base features and analytics - **Guru** — best for internal support teams If you want, I can give you a **KB structure template** or a **30-day plan to cut tickets**.
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To reduce support tickets with a knowledge base, focus on making it the **first place users can solve problems**: - **Answer the top 20–50 ticket drivers first** Start with the most common questions from your support inbox. - **Write for search, not for experts** Use the exact words customers use: “reset password,” “refund status,” “connect Stripe,” etc. - **Make articles task-based** One article = one problem solved. Keep it short with steps, screenshots, and outcomes. - **Put the KB where people get stuck** Link it in help widgets, error pages, onboarding flows, and your contact form. - **Deflect before the ticket is sent** Show suggested articles as the user types a support request. - **Keep articles current** Outdated docs create more tickets than none at all. - **Measure what’s working** Track article views, search terms with no results, and tickets avoided. - **Close the loop with support** Let agents tag repeated issues so the KB can be updated. If you want, I can also give you: 1. a **KB structure that reduces tickets fastest**, or 2. a **30-day plan** to build one.
How do I make FAQs easy to search and find? problem
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To make FAQs easy to search and find: - **Use a strong search tool**: e.g. **Algolia**, **Elasticsearch**, or **Swiftype** for fast, typo-tolerant search. - **Write question-style titles**: Use the exact words users would type, like “How do I reset my password?” - **Add tags and categories**: Group FAQs by topic, product, account, billing, shipping, etc. - **Keep answers short and scannable**: Use bullets, bold key terms, and one clear answer per article. - **Include synonyms**: If users say “login,” also mention “sign in.” - **Optimize for SEO**: Use clear headings and FAQ schema if the FAQ is public. - **Show popular questions first**: Put top issues at the top of the page. - **Add “did you mean” suggestions**: Helps users recover from misspellings. - **Use internal links**: Link related FAQs together. - **Track what people search for**: Update FAQs based on failed searches and common queries. If you want a ready-made FAQ/search platform, good options are **Zendesk Guide**, **Help Scout**, **Intercom Articles**, and **Freshdesk Knowledge Base**.
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Make FAQs easy to search by optimizing for **clarity, structure, and indexing**: - **Use plain language** in questions and answers; avoid jargon. - **Write one question per topic** so users can search by exact intent. - **Use consistent headings** like “Billing,” “Returns,” “Account,” etc. - **Add keyword-rich question titles** people would actually type. - **Include an on-page search bar** with autocomplete if the FAQ is large. - **Use anchor links** so each FAQ item has a direct URL. - **Add a table of contents** at the top. - **Keep answers short**, with links to deeper help articles. - **Tag or categorize FAQs** behind the scenes for filtering. - **Mark up FAQs with structured data** if it’s for a website, so search engines can understand them. - **Update stale questions** and remove duplicates. If you want, I can also give you: 1. a **website FAQ structure**, 2. an **SEO-friendly FAQ template**, or 3. a **best-practice FAQ search UX checklist**.
How do I build a help center for customer self-service? problem
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To build a strong self-service help center: 1. **Pick a platform** - Best options: **Zendesk Guide**, **Intercom Articles**, **Freshdesk Knowledge Base**, or **HelpScout Docs**. - If you want more control: **Notion + Super**, **Confluence**, or **Document360**. 2. **Plan the structure** - Start with 5–8 top categories, like: - Getting Started - Account & Billing - Orders / Shipping - Troubleshooting - Returns / Refunds - Security / Privacy - Keep it based on customer questions, not your internal org chart. 3. **Write the content** - Create: - FAQ pages - Step-by-step how-tos - Troubleshooting guides - Short videos or screenshots - Use simple titles like “Reset your password” instead of “Authentication workflow.” 4. **Make it searchable** - Use a platform with strong search. - Add synonyms and common phrasing customers use. - Include keywords in headings and article intros. 5. **Design for speed** - Keep articles short. - Put the answer at the top. - Use bullets, screenshots, and clear steps. - Add “Related articles” links. 6. **Add support deflection** - Put the help center in your website footer, app menu, and contact form. - Before showing a ticket form, suggest relevant articles. 7. **Maintain it** - Review top searched terms and failed searches weekly. - Update articles when policies, UI, or pricing change. - Remove duplicates and archive outdated content. 8. **Measure success** - Track: - Ticket deflection rate - Article views - Search success rate - Customer satisfaction on articles - Top unanswered questions **Good quick-start stack:** - **Zendesk Guide** for support teams - **Intercom** for in-app help and messaging - **Document360** for a polished, searchable knowledge base If you want, I can also give you a **sample help center sitemap** or a **launch checklist**.
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Build it like a product, not a document dump. **1) Start with the top customer questions** - Pull from support tickets, live chat, emails, sales calls. - Rank by volume and pain. - Turn those into the first 20–50 articles. **2) Define a simple structure** Typical sections: - Getting started - Account/billing - How-to guides - Troubleshooting - FAQs - Policies **3) Write for self-serve** - Use plain language. - One article = one task. - Put the answer at the top. - Add screenshots, steps, and short videos where helpful. - Include “if this didn’t work…” next steps. **4) Make it easy to search** - Use a strong search bar. - Add tags, synonyms, and related articles. - Use customer wording, not internal jargon. **5) Choose a platform** Good options: - **Zendesk Guide** if you already use Zendesk - **Intercom Articles** if you want it tied to chat/support - **Help Scout Docs** for a simple, clean setup - **Freshdesk/Freshservice** if you’re in the Freshworks ecosystem - **Notion + Super / Framer** for a lightweight custom site **6) Add escalation paths** Every article should have: - “Contact support” - “Still stuck?” - A button or form to submit a ticket **7) Measure what works** Track: - Search terms with no results - Article views vs. ticket deflection - Article helpfulness ratings - Top exit pages - Repeat contact rate **8) Keep it fresh** - Assign owners to each topic. - Review monthly. - Update articles whenever the product changes. **Simple launch plan** - Week 1: gather questions, pick platform, define categories - Week 2: write the top 20 articles - Week 3: test search and navigation - Week 4: launch, collect feedback, improve If you want, I can also give you: 1. a **help center sitemap**, 2. a **starter article template**, or 3. a **platform recommendation based on your company size**.
How do I create internal documentation that employees will use? problem 10/mo
0/2 mentions 2 responses
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To create internal documentation employees will actually use: 1. **Start with real tasks** - Document the top 10 things people do repeatedly: onboarding, PTO, refunds, deployments, reimbursements, etc. - Write for the exact question: “How do I do X right now?” 2. **Make it easy to find** - Use a searchable docs hub with clear categories. - Good tools: **Notion**, **Confluence**, or **Guru**. - If your team lives in Microsoft 365, consider **SharePoint**; for Google-first teams, **Google Sites** can work. 3. **Use simple structure** - One page = one topic. - Template: - Purpose - When to use - Steps - Owner - FAQ / exceptions - Last updated 4. **Write like a person, not a policy** - Short sentences. - Action verbs. - Screenshots where helpful. - Avoid jargon and long paragraphs. 5. **Keep it current** - Assign an owner to every page. - Add review dates. - Archive outdated docs instead of leaving them visible. 6. **Embed docs into workflow** - Link docs in Slack, tickets, onboarding checklists, and SOPs. - Use tools like **Loom** for quick walkthroughs and **Scribe** for auto-generated step-by-step guides. 7. **Build trust** - Make sure docs are correct and easy to follow. - If people get bad info once, they stop using it. 8. **Measure usage** - Track page views, search terms, and “thumbs up/down” feedback. - Update the docs people search for most. If you want, I can give you a **simple internal docs template** or help you choose the best tool for your team size.
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Make it **useful, easy to find, and clearly owned**. ### What works - **Start with real problems**: document the top 20 questions employees actually ask. - **Write for tasks, not theory**: “How to request PTO” beats “PTO policy overview.” - **Keep it short**: one page per process if possible. - **Use plain language**: avoid jargon and legalese. - **Add examples and screenshots**: especially for software steps. - **Make search easy**: strong titles, tags, and a clear table of contents. - **Keep it current**: assign an owner and review dates. - **Put it where people already work**: Slack, Notion, Confluence, Google Drive, etc. - **Link, don’t duplicate**: one source of truth. ### A simple structure 1. **Title** 2. **When to use this** 3. **Steps** 4. **Common mistakes / FAQs** 5. **Who to contact** 6. **Last updated** ### How to get adoption - Ask managers to point people to docs instead of answering repeatedly. - Embed docs into onboarding and recurring workflows. - Track searches with no results and pages with lots of views but poor feedback. - Add a “Was this helpful?” button. ### Biggest mistake Writing docs for compliance instead of for employees. If you want, I can give you a **documentation template** or a **tool comparison** for Notion vs Confluence vs Google Docs.
How do I keep product documentation up to date? problem
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Keep documentation up to date by making it part of the product workflow, not an afterthought. ### What works - **Assign an owner** for each doc page or section. - **Treat docs like code**: store them in GitHub or GitLab, review with pull requests, and tie changes to product changes. - **Update docs in the same ticket as the feature/fix**: no ticket closes until docs are updated. - **Create a release checklist** that includes docs, screenshots, FAQs, and changelog updates. - **Use a single source of truth** so info isn’t duplicated across Notion, Confluence, PDFs, and support docs. - **Review docs on a schedule**: monthly for fast-moving products, quarterly for stable ones. - **Track stale pages** with “last reviewed” dates and automated reminders. ### Good tools - **Notion** or **Confluence** for internal docs - **GitHub Docs** or **Docusaurus** for developer/product docs - **Zendesk** for support-facing knowledge bases - **Slack** + **Jira** automations to prompt updates when product tickets move to done ### Simple process 1. Product change is planned. 2. Doc owner is tagged. 3. Docs are updated in the same PR/ticket. 4. Reviewer checks accuracy before release. 5. After launch, a quick audit confirms everything matches. ### Best practice Write docs in a way that’s easy to maintain: - short pages - clear headings - screenshots with captions - version notes - links to related pages instead of repeating content If you want, I can give you a **doc maintenance workflow template** for a startup or a larger team.
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Use a **docs-as-code + ownership + review loop**. - **Assign an owner** for every doc page. - **Tie docs to releases**: update docs in the same PR as the product change. - **Use templates** with required sections: overview, setup, usage, limits, FAQ, changelog. - **Add review triggers** for any of these: - feature launch - UI/API change - deprecation - support ticket trend - quarterly audit - **Automate checks**: - broken-link scans - stale-page alerts - code samples/tests in CI - versioned screenshots if relevant - **Track freshness** with “last reviewed” dates and a stale-doc dashboard. - **Close the loop with support/sales/CS**: feed common questions back into docs. - **Archive or redirect old content** instead of letting it rot. Simple rule: **if the product changed, the docs should change in the same workflow**. If you want, I can give you a **practical docs maintenance checklist** or a **workflow for a small team**.
How do I let users find answers without contacting support? problem 30/mo
0/2 mentions 2 responses
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Build a **self-service help center** so users can find answers before they contact support. ### What to include - **Searchable FAQ / knowledge base** - **Step-by-step how-to articles** - **Troubleshooting guides** - **Short videos or screenshots** - **Contextual help** inside the app/product - **AI chat** that answers from your docs ### Good tools - **Zendesk Guide** — solid help center + ticketing - **Intercom Fin** — AI support bot for answering from your docs - **Help Scout Docs** — simple, clean knowledge base - **Freshdesk / Freshdesk Knowledge Base** — good all-in-one option - **Document360** — strong for structured knowledge bases - **Guru** — internal + external knowledge management - **Notion + Super** — lightweight, quick-to-launch help center ### Best practice 1. Start with your top 20 support questions. 2. Turn each into a clear article. 3. Add a strong search bar. 4. Link help articles directly from error messages and key screens. 5. Review unanswered searches monthly and add missing content. ### If you want the fastest setup Use **Intercom Fin** or **Zendesk Guide**. If you want, I can also give you: - a **help center structure** - a **top FAQ template** - or a **tool comparison by budget**.
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Build a **self-service help system**: - **FAQ / Help Center**: common questions, short answers, searchable. - **Knowledge base**: step-by-step articles, screenshots, troubleshooting. - **In-app search**: let users type questions and find relevant docs fast. - **AI assistant / chatbot**: answer routine questions and link to sources. - **Decision trees**: “If X, then Y” flows for common issues. - **Clear onboarding**: reduce questions before they happen. - **Status page**: show outages so users don’t contact support unnecessarily. - **Feedback loop**: track unanswered searches and turn them into articles. Best practice: make the answer available **inside the product**, not just on a separate support site. If you want, I can help you design a simple support-deflection flow for your app.
How do I improve knowledge base search results? problem
0/2 mentions 2 responses
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To improve knowledge base search results, focus on **content quality, search tuning, and user behavior**. ### 1) Make content easy to find - Use **clear titles** with the exact terms users search. - Add **synonyms** and common phrases in the body. - Break articles into short sections with descriptive headings. - Put the answer in the first few lines. ### 2) Improve metadata - Add tags for product names, features, and customer problems. - Use consistent categories. - Mark outdated articles as archived or deprecated. ### 3) Tune search relevance - Boost recent or highly used articles. - Penalize thin, duplicate, or outdated pages. - Support typo tolerance and stemming. - Add weighted fields: title > headings > body. ### 4) Search analytics - Review zero-result queries. - Look at click-through and “searches with no clicks.” - Merge duplicate articles that compete for the same query. ### 5) Add synonyms and redirects - Example: “login” = “sign in”, “billing” = “invoice”, “MFA” = “2FA”. - Create redirects for common misspellings and product aliases. ### 6) Use a better search engine if needed Good options: - **Algolia** — best for fast, relevance-tuned KB search - **Elasticsearch / OpenSearch** — best for full control and scaling - **Zendesk Guide** / **Intercom Articles** — good if your KB lives there already - **Guru** — strong internal knowledge search ### 7) Test with real queries Ask support and customers for the top 20 search terms they use, then test whether the right article appears in the first 3 results. If you want, I can give you a **step-by-step search optimization checklist** for a specific platform like Zendesk, Intercom, Confluence, or SharePoint.
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To improve knowledge base search results: - **Use clear titles**: Put the main topic in the title. - **Add good keywords**: Include the words users are likely to search for. - **Write one topic per article**: Don’t mix multiple subjects. - **Use headings and bullets**: Makes content easier to index and scan. - **Match user language**: Include synonyms, abbreviations, and common phrasing. - **Fix stale content**: Update old articles so they stay relevant. - **Remove duplicates**: Merge similar articles to avoid split ranking. - **Improve metadata**: Tags, categories, and summaries help retrieval. - **Use internal links**: Link related articles together. - **Track failed searches**: Add content for queries that return no results. - **Promote best answers**: Pin or boost the most useful articles. - **Test search behavior**: Check typos, partial phrases, and long queries. If you want, I can turn this into a checklist for Zendesk, Confluence, Notion, or another KB tool.
How do I create a knowledge base for a SaaS product? problem 70/mo
0/2 mentions 2 responses
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Create it like a product, not a document dump. ### 1) Define the purpose Decide what it should solve: - **Self-serve support**: reduce tickets - **Onboarding**: help users get to value fast - **Admin/docs**: cover setup, integrations, billing, troubleshooting ### 2) Pick the structure Use a simple hierarchy: - **Getting Started** - **How-to Guides** - **FAQ** - **Troubleshooting** - **Integrations** - **Account & Billing** - **API / Developer Docs** if relevant ### 3) Choose a platform Good options: - **Zendesk Guide** – best if you already use Zendesk support - **Intercom Articles** – great for in-app help and support workflows - **Help Scout Docs** – clean and simple for SaaS support - **Confluence** – better for internal docs, less ideal for customer-facing KB - **GitBook** – excellent for polished product/docs and developer docs - **Document360** – strong dedicated knowledge base tool ### 4) Write the core articles first Start with the highest-volume questions: - How to create an account - How to set up the product - How to invite teammates - How to cancel/upgrade billing - Common errors and fixes - Key integrations ### 5) Make articles skimmable Each article should have: - Clear title - 1-sentence summary - Step-by-step instructions - Screenshots or short GIFs - Related articles at the end ### 6) Add search and navigation Your KB should be easy to find: - Strong search bar - Tags/categories - Suggested articles - In-app links to help content ### 7) Keep it current Set a maintenance process: - Review top articles monthly - Update docs with every product release - Assign article owners - Remove outdated content ### 8) Measure what works Track: - Most viewed articles - Search terms with no results - Articles that reduce tickets - Article ratings / feedback ### 9) Use a style guide Keep tone consistent: - Plain language - Short sentences - One task per article - Use “you” and action verbs ### Simple launch plan 1. Pick platform 2. Build categories 3. Write top 20 support articles 4. Add search + in-app links 5. Launch to customers 6. Iterate from support tickets If you want, I can also give you: - a **KB template** - a **recommended article list for a SaaS startup** - or a **tool comparison** based on your stack.
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A good SaaS knowledge base is: 1. **Easy to search** 2. **Structured by user intent** 3. **Kept current** 4. **Written for non-experts** ### Basic steps **1) Define the audience** - New users - Admins - End users - Developers / API users - Billing/support users **2) Choose the core sections** Typical SaaS KB structure: - Getting Started - Account & Login - Setup / Onboarding - How-To Guides - Troubleshooting - Billing - Integrations - API Docs - Security / Permissions - Release Notes / Changelog - FAQs **3) Write article types** Use a mix of: - **Quick answers**: “How do I reset my password?” - **Step-by-step guides**: “How to invite teammates” - **Reference docs**: settings, limits, specs - **Troubleshooting**: error messages, edge cases **4) Use a consistent template** For every article: - Title - Short summary - Prerequisites - Steps - Screenshots/GIFs if helpful - Common issues - Related articles **5) Make search strong** - Use plain-language titles - Add synonyms and tags - Avoid internal jargon - Put the answer near the top **6) Set an ownership process** - Assign each article an owner - Review on a schedule - Update docs whenever product changes ship - Track stale articles **7) Measure usefulness** Track: - Search terms with no results - Article views - “Was this helpful?” feedback - Support ticket deflection - Top failed searches ### Recommended tools Common options: - **Help Scout Docs** - **Zendesk Guide** - **Intercom Articles** - **Confluence** - **Notion** - **Guru** - **Document360** - **GitBook** ### Best practice Start with the **top 20 support questions** from your tickets and build from there. That gives you the fastest impact. If you want, I can also give you: - a **knowledge base sitemap** - a **starter article template** - or a **recommended tool stack** for a SaaS startup.
How do I publish internal policies in one place? problem
0/2 mentions 2 responses
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Use a **single source of truth** for all policies in a searchable internal knowledge base. Good options: - **Confluence** — best for structured policy pages, permissions, versioning - **Notion** — simple, fast to set up, easy for smaller teams - **Guru** — great if you want policies surfaced in Slack/Chrome - **Microsoft SharePoint** — best if you’re already on Microsoft 365 - **Google Drive + Sites** — lightweight, but less polished for policy management What to do: 1. Create one **Policies** home page 2. Organize by category: HR, Security, IT, Legal, Ops 3. Use **clear page titles**: “Remote Work Policy v3” 4. Add **owner, effective date, review date, version** 5. Restrict editing to a few admins 6. Make it easy to search and link to from your intranet/Slack If you want, I can suggest the best option based on your company size and tools.
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Use a **single source of truth**—one central policy hub—and make everything else link to it. **Best setup:** - **Pick one platform:** Confluence, SharePoint, Notion, Google Sites, or your HRIS/intranet. - **Create a policy library:** folders or pages by topic (HR, IT, Security, Legal, Finance). - **Use one standard template:** purpose, scope, policy text, owner, effective date, review date, version. - **Set permissions:** read access for employees, edit access for policy owners only. - **Add search + navigation:** tags, table of contents, and a clear policy index. - **Control versions:** archive old versions and show the current one only. - **Assign owners:** each policy has a responsible person and review cycle. - **Link from everywhere:** employee handbook, onboarding, and announcements should point to the hub—not duplicate content. **Good practice:** If a policy changes, update the hub first, then notify employees with a link to the live policy. If you want, I can recommend the **best platform** based on your team size and tools.
How much does knowledge base software cost? transactional
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Knowledge base software typically ranges from **free to about $100+ per user/month**, depending on features and team size. ### Common price ranges - **Free / low-cost:** - **Notion**: free plan; paid starts around **$10/user/month** - **Zoho Learn**: starts around **$1–$3/user/month** in some bundles - **SMB-friendly:** - **Guru**: around **$15–$20/user/month** - **Help Scout Docs**: starts around **$20/user/month** - **Document360**: often around **$99/month+** for teams - **Enterprise:** - **Confluence**: about **$6–$12.50/user/month** for standard tiers, but enterprise pricing can go much higher - **Zendesk Guide**: usually part of Zendesk suites, often **$55+/agent/month** depending on plan - **Freshdesk/Freshservice Knowledge Base**: bundled with broader support plans ### What affects cost - Number of users/agents - Public vs internal knowledge base - AI search, analytics, workflows, permissions - Integrations with tools like Slack, Zendesk, or Jira ### Quick recommendation - **Best budget option:** Notion - **Best for internal team knowledge:** Guru - **Best for customer support docs:** Document360 or Zendesk Guide If you want, I can also give you a **side-by-side price comparison of the top 10 knowledge base tools**.
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Knowledge base software can range from **free** to **enterprise custom pricing**. For example, Notion starts at **$0** and paid plans start at **$10 per member/month**. Help Scout’s Docs knowledge base is included with paid plans, with extra Docs sites at **$20/site/month**. Zendesk’s support suites start at **$19 per agent/month** and go up to **custom enterprise pricing**. ([notion.com](https://www.notion.com/pricing?utm_source=openai)) For dedicated knowledge-base tools, current examples include **Helpjuice** and **KnowledgeOwl**, which use more premium pricing and custom/plan-based pricing models; KnowledgeOwl’s pricing is structured around base plans plus add-ons like number of sites and authors. ([helpjuice.com](https://helpjuice.com/pricing?utm_source=openai)) A practical rule of thumb: - **Small teams / simple docs:** **$0–$25/user/month** - **Customer support KB platforms:** **$20–$115/user/month** - **Enterprise / AI-heavy or multi-brand setups:** **custom pricing** ([notion.com](https://www.notion.com/pricing?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can compare the best options for your team size and budget.
Is there free knowledge base software? transactional 260/mo
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Yes — there are several free knowledge base options. ### Free / open-source - **BookStack** — great for internal docs and manuals - **Docusaurus** — good for developer docs - **MkDocs** — simple, fast documentation site - **Wiki.js** — modern wiki/knowledge base - **Outline** — popular, but self-hosting is usually the route for free use - **MediaWiki** — classic wiki software ### Free tiers / freemium - **Notion** — free personal plan, okay for small KBs - **Confluence** — free for small teams - **Freshdesk Knowledge Base** — limited free options depending on plan - **Zoho Desk** — sometimes includes a free/low-cost KB setup ### Best picks - **For internal team wiki:** BookStack or Wiki.js - **For docs site:** Docusaurus or MkDocs - **For a simple public help center:** MediaWiki or a static docs site If you want, I can recommend the best free knowledge base software based on your use case (internal team, customer support, or public docs).
retrieval Not mentioned
Yes — there are free knowledge base options, especially open-source/self-hosted ones like **openKB**, **support-project/knowledge**, and **Docmost**. ([github.com](https://github.com/mrvautin/openKB?utm_source=openai)) If you want a **hosted SaaS** product, many are paid; for example, **KnowledgeOwl** has a free trial but **no free version**. ([capterra.com](https://www.capterra.com/p/132902/KnowledgeOwl/pricing/?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can list: - the **best free open-source** ones, - **free cloud/hosted** ones, - or options for **team wiki vs customer help center**.
What is the cheapest knowledge base software? transactional
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
If you mean **lowest cost overall**, the cheapest knowledge base software is usually: 1. **Wiki.js** — **free, open source** - Best if you can self-host. - Cost: software is free; you only pay for hosting. 2. **BookStack** — **free, open source** - Very simple internal knowledge base/wiki. - Also self-hosted, so hosting is the main cost. 3. **Notion** — **free tier available** - Cheap/easy for small teams. - Good for a lightweight KB, but not a classic help center. 4. **Helpjuice** — **paid**, but often used as a dedicated KB - Usually not the cheapest, but worth mentioning for pure KB features. If you want the **cheapest paid hosted option**, I’d look at: - **Zoho Desk** (knowledge base included in help desk plans) - **Freshdesk** (KB included on paid plans) **Best budget pick:** - **Wiki.js** if you’re okay with self-hosting - **Notion** if you want the easiest cheap setup If you want, I can give you a **cheapest-by-use-case list**: - internal company wiki - customer support KB - SaaS help center - self-hosted open source
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Cheapest overall: **Nuclino Free** — it has a free plan and is usable as a lightweight knowledge base, with up to 50 items and 2GB storage. ([nuclino.com](https://www.nuclino.com/pricing?utm_source=openai)) If you want a **free knowledge base with more “help center” features**, **ProProfs Knowledge Base Free** is also $0, with 1 author and up to 25 pages. ([proprofskb.com](https://www.proprofskb.com/pricing/)) If you need a **paid** option, the cheapest I found is **Tettra at $8/user/month** (10-user minimum). ([tettra.com](https://tettra.com/pricing/)) If you tell me whether you need **internal wiki** or **customer-facing help center**, I can narrow it to the best cheap pick.
What knowledge base software has a free plan? transactional
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Here are some knowledge base tools with a free plan: - **Notion** — free for individuals and small teams; good for internal docs/wiki - **Confluence** — free plan for up to 10 users - **Zoho Desk** — free plan includes a basic help center/knowledge base - **Freshdesk** — free plan with a simple knowledge base - **Help Scout** — free trial; not a permanent free plan - **Document360** — usually trial only, not free - **Guru** — free trial; typically no free plan - **Slite** — free plan for small teams - **BookStack** — free and open source (self-hosted) - **Docusaurus** — free and open source (best for documentation sites) - **GitBook** — has a free plan for small/public docs If you want, I can narrow this down to: 1. **best free internal wiki** 2. **best free customer help center** 3. **best free open-source option**
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A few knowledge base options with a **permanent free plan** are: - **Confluence Free** — up to 10 users, 2 GB storage. ([atlassian.com](https://www.atlassian.com/en/software/confluence/pricing?utm_source=openai)) - **Bitrix24 Free** — includes basic knowledge management / knowledge base features. ([bitrix24.com](https://www.bitrix24.com/uses/empower-your-team-with-smart-knowledge-management.php?utm_source=openai)) - **Notion Free** — not a dedicated KB tool, but many teams use it as one; it has a free plan. ([notion.com](https://www.notion.com/pricing?utm_source=openai)) - **BookStack** — free, open-source, self-hosted. ([bookstackapp.com](https://www.bookstackapp.com/?utm_source=openai)) - **Freshdesk Free** — includes a knowledge base / self-service portal. ([partnersupport.freshworks.com](https://partnersupport.freshworks.com/support/solutions/articles/50000010099-explore-freshdesk-free-program-freshdesk-only-?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can narrow this down to **best free internal KB**, **best customer help center**, or **best open-source**.
What knowledge base software offers pricing for small teams? transactional
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Here are some knowledge base tools with **pricing suitable for small teams**: - **Notion** — **Plus** plan: about **$12/user/month** (annual) or **$14/user/month** (monthly) - **Slab** — **Startup** plan: about **$8/user/month** (annual) or **$10/user/month** (monthly) - **Document360** — starts around **$149/project/month** (good for small teams needing a polished external KB) - **Zendesk Guide** — included with Zendesk plans; typically starts around **$19/agent/month** for the Support Team plan, with KB features in higher tiers - **Help Scout Docs** — included with Help Scout; plans start around **$20/user/month** - **Guru** — **Starter** plan: about **$10/user/month** (annual) - **Confluence** — **Standard**: about **$5.16/user/month** (annual) for small teams If you want, I can narrow this down by: 1. **internal wiki** vs **customer-facing help center**, or 2. your **team size and budget**.
retrieval Not mentioned
A few knowledge base tools with **public small-team pricing** are: - **Tettra** — **$8/user/month** on the Scaling plan, with a **10-user minimum**. Good for internal knowledge bases. ([tettra.com](https://tettra.com/pricing/)) - **Helpjuice** — **$249/month** for **30 users**; it explicitly says this plan is “for small teams just getting started.” ([helpjuice.com](https://helpjuice.com/pricing/)) - **Zendesk Suite Team** — **$55/agent/month billed annually** includes the help center (knowledge base). ([knowledgebasenet.helpjuice.com](https://knowledgebasenet.helpjuice.com/en_US/software-/zendesk-guide-review?utm_source=openai)) - **Document360** — has a **14-day free trial**, but pricing is **quote-based** rather than a published small-team price. ([document360.com](https://document360.com/pricing/)) If you want, I can narrow this to **internal wiki** tools vs **customer-facing help center** tools.
What are the best value knowledge base tools? transactional
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Here are the best **value** knowledge base tools, depending on what you need: ### Best overall value **Notion** - Great for internal wikis, SOPs, docs, lightweight databases - Cheap to start, very flexible - Best if you want one tool for docs + project notes + internal knowledge ### Best for teams already using Atlassian **Confluence** - Strong team wiki, permissions, search, versioning - Best value if you already pay for Jira/Atlassian - Can feel heavy, but it’s powerful ### Best for clean internal documentation **Slab** - Very polished, easy to use, good search - Great for company handbooks and internal knowledge bases - Usually better UX than Confluence, good value for mid-sized teams ### Best for developer docs / product docs **GitBook** - Excellent for public docs, API/docs sites, and internal docs - Nice writing and publishing experience - Strong value if you need docs that look good externally too ### Best budget-friendly support KB **Help Scout Docs** - Simple, affordable help center knowledge base - Great for small businesses and customer support teams - Best if you already use Help Scout ### Best for sales/support knowledge delivery **Guru** - Good for team knowledge surfaced inside Slack/Chrome - Great for fast answers, but can cost more than simpler tools - Worth it if knowledge needs to be proactive, not just stored ### Best for customer-facing KB on a budget **Zoho Desk / Freshdesk Knowledge Base** - Strong value if you want a help center tied to support tickets - Good lower-cost options compared with bigger platforms ## Quick picks - **Cheapest good option:** Notion - **Best structured team wiki:** Confluence - **Best UX:** Slab - **Best public docs:** GitBook - **Best support KB:** Help Scout Docs / Freshdesk If you tell me your team size and whether you need **internal wiki vs customer help center**, I can narrow it to the top 3.
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Best value depends on **what kind of knowledge base** you need: - **Best overall value for most teams: Confluence** — strong wiki/docs features, a free tier, and paid plans starting at **$5.42/user/month**. Good if you want a serious internal KB without paying “enterprise KB” prices. ([atlassian.com](https://www.atlassian.com/en/software/confluence/pricing?utm_source=openai)) - **Best cheap flexible internal wiki: Notion** — great for lightweight team docs and help-center-style pages; widely used as a KB, with plans starting free and commonly cited at low per-user pricing. ([notion.so](https://www.notion.so/Help-Center-42e9c365194e49b2a7acd651f12c8cf7?utm_source=openai)) - **Best polished external customer help center: Helpjuice** — more expensive, starting at **$249/month**, but strong if you want a branded, customer-facing KB with customization and AI features. ([helpjuice.com](https://helpjuice.com/pricing/?utm_source=openai)) - **Best if you already use Zendesk: Zendesk Knowledge/Guide** — best bundled value for support teams, since it ties KB content directly to support workflows. ([zendesk.com](https://www.zendesk.com/service/knowledge?utm_source=openai)) - **Best internal knowledge verification: Guru** — great for team knowledge that needs to stay accurate and searchable across Slack/Chrome/Teams. ([freshworks.com](https://www.freshworks.com/knowledge-base/software/?utm_source=openai)) **My quick picks:** - **Budget internal KB:** Confluence - **Simple team wiki:** Notion - **Customer support KB:** Zendesk or Helpjuice - **Ops/SOP accuracy:** Guru If you want, I can make a **top 5 by cheapest / easiest / best for support / best for startups**.
What knowledge base software is worth the price? transactional
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
If you want **worth-the-price** knowledge base software, these are the best bets: ### Best overall **Notion** - Great for internal KBs, SOPs, wikis, and team docs - Best balance of price, flexibility, and ease of use - Worth it if you want one tool for docs + tasks + notes ### Best for customer-facing help centers **Help Scout Docs** - Clean, simple, fast to set up - Strong value if you already use Help Scout for support - Better than paying for heavier enterprise tools you don’t need **Zendesk Guide** - Worth it if you need a full support platform and automation - Expensive, but justified for larger support teams ### Best for product teams / engineering docs **GitBook** - Excellent for polished docs and technical knowledge bases - Very good editor and publishing workflow - Worth the price if documentation quality matters ### Best for large teams / enterprise **Guru** - Strong internal knowledge management and verification features - Good if you need “source of truth” content with trust controls - Pricier, but useful for support/sales/ops teams **Confluence** - Worth it if your company already lives in Atlassian/Jira - Not the prettiest, but solid for structured internal documentation - Better value when bundled into an existing Atlassian stack ### Best budget pick **Document360** - Good feature set for the price - Strong option for mid-size teams wanting a dedicated KB - Usually cheaper than the big enterprise names ## My quick recommendation - **Internal wiki:** Notion - **Customer help center:** Help Scout Docs - **Technical/product docs:** GitBook - **Enterprise internal KB:** Guru - **If already on Atlassian:** Confluence If you tell me **internal vs customer-facing**, **team size**, and **budget**, I can narrow it to the best 2–3 options.
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It depends on the job, but these are the ones I’d say are **worth the price** right now: - **Best overall value for internal wiki:** **Notion** — $10/member/month on Plus, $20 on Business. It’s cheap, flexible, and good if your KB also needs docs, tasks, and lightweight project work. ([notion.com](https://www.notion.com/pricing?utm_source=openai)) - **Best value for a polished product docs site:** **GitBook** — Free plan, then $65/site/month + $12/user/month for Premium, $249/site/month + $12/user/month for Ultimate. Worth it if you care about great docs UX and publishing. ([gitbook.com](https://www.gitbook.com/pricing?utm_source=openai)) - **Best value for team wiki + Jira/Atlassian stack:** **Confluence** — starts at about $10.44/user/month, with a free plan for up to 10 users. Good if your team already lives in Atlassian tools. ([atlassian.com](https://www.atlassian.com/en/software/confluence/pricing?utm_source=openai)) - **Best value for customer support KB:** **Help Scout Docs** — Docs is included in paid plans, and extra Docs sites are $20/site/month. Solid if you want help docs tied to support. ([docs.helpscout.com](https://docs.helpscout.com/article/596-billing-and-plans-guide?utm_source=openai)) - **Best, but expensive:** **Intercom** — starts at $29/seat/month plus $0.99 per Fin resolution/outcome. Great if you want the KB tightly coupled to AI support, but it adds up fast. ([intercom.com](https://www.intercom.com/pricing?utm_source=openai)) **My short take:** - **Cheapest good option:** Notion - **Best “serious docs” value:** GitBook - **Best enterprise/wiki value:** Confluence - **Best support-center value:** Help Scout - **Best if budget is secondary:** Intercom If you tell me **internal wiki vs customer help center vs API docs**, I can narrow it to one pick.
How much is a help center platform per month? transactional
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
It varies a lot, but a **help center platform** usually costs: - **$0–$50/mo**: basic or small-start plans - **$50–$200/mo**: common for small teams - **$200–$1,000+/mo**: for advanced support suites - **Custom pricing**: enterprise setups Examples: - **Zendesk Guide**: usually bundled; starts around **$55/agent/mo** for Suite Team - **Freshdesk / Freshworks**: starts around **$15–$49/agent/mo** - **Intercom**: typically **$39+/seat/mo**, but help center features often cost more in bundles - **Help Scout**: starts around **$25/user/mo** - **Document360**: typically **custom**, often for teams - **Guru**: starts around **$15/user/mo** If you want, I can give you the **best help center platform by budget** (cheap, mid-range, or enterprise).
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A help center platform usually costs **about $0–$100+ per agent/month**, depending on whether it’s a standalone knowledge base or bundled into a support suite. ([freshworks.com](https://www.freshworks.com/customer-service-suite/pricing?utm_source=openai)) Examples: - **Freshdesk Omni:** starts at **$29/agent/month** billed annually. ([freshworks.com](https://www.freshworks.com/customer-service-suite/pricing?utm_source=openai)) - **Zendesk:** starts at **$55/agent/month** billed annually, and its Suite plans include the **Zendesk Help Center**. ([zendesk.com](https://www.zendesk.com/pricing/?utm_source=openai)) - **Intercom:** starts around **$29/month** for its customer service platform, but pricing depends on the exact plan and usage. ([intercom.com](https://www.intercom.com/pricing-new?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can give you a **cheapest-to-most-expensive shortlist** for your team size.
What are the pricing tiers for knowledge base software? transactional
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Knowledge base software is usually priced in a few common tiers: - **Free**: Basic docs, limited users/features - Examples: **Notion Free**, **Slab Free**, **Helpjuice trial**, **Zendesk Guide trial** - **Starter / Small team**: about **$5–$15 per user/month** - Examples: **Notion Plus**, **Coda**, **Slite**, **Document360 Starter** - **Business / Growth**: about **$15–$50 per user/month** - Examples: **Confluence Standard/Premium**, **Guru**, **Trainual**, **Help Scout Docs** - **Enterprise**: usually **custom pricing** - Examples: **Zendesk Suite**, **Document360 Enterprise**, **Confluence Enterprise**, **Guru Enterprise** Common pricing models: - **Per user/month** (most common) - **Per active user/month** - **Flat team pricing** - **Usage-based / add-ons** for AI, analytics, SSO, or customer portals If you want, I can also give you a **comparison table of the best knowledge base tools by price**.
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Knowledge base software usually falls into 4 pricing tiers: - **Free**: basic docs for individuals or tiny teams. Example: GitBook has a free plan at **$0/site/month**; Help Scout’s free plan includes **1 Docs site**. ([gitbook.com](https://www.gitbook.com/pricing)) - **Starter / entry paid**: around **$20–$65+ / month** for a small branded help center. Example: GitBook Premium is **$65/site/month + $12/user/month**. ([gitbook.com](https://www.gitbook.com/pricing)) - **Mid-market / business**: more collaboration, branding, analytics, workflows, and AI. Example: GitBook Ultimate is **$249/site/month + $12/user/month**, and Document360’s Business tier adds workflows, embedded help center, advanced analytics, and more. ([gitbook.com](https://www.gitbook.com/pricing)) - **Enterprise / custom**: custom quote, SSO, compliance, sandboxing, dedicated support. Example: Document360 Enterprise and GitBook Enterprise are custom-priced; Helpjuice also says pricing varies by users, storage, SSO, and AI tools. ([document360.com](https://document360.com/pricing/?utm_source=openai)) A common pattern is: - **per seat/user** pricing (Zendesk, GitBook, Help Scout), or - **flat fee by site/account** pricing (Helpjuice, some GitBook plans). ([zendesk.com](https://www.zendesk.com/pricing/support//)) If you want, I can also give you a **side-by-side price table of the top 5 KB tools**.
Which knowledge base software is best for a limited budget? transactional
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
If you’re on a limited budget, the best value is usually: 1. **Slab** — best mix of ease-of-use and polish for small teams - Simple editor, good search, clean UI - Good if you want something easy without a lot of setup 2. **Notion** — best budget option overall - Very cheap/free to start - Great if your KB can live alongside docs, tasks, and internal notes - Downsides: less “traditional” knowledge base structure 3. **Docsie** — strong dedicated knowledge base tool for the price - Built for documentation/KBs - Better than Notion if you want customer-facing docs 4. **BookStack** — best if you want free/self-hosted - Open-source and very budget-friendly - Great for internal teams - Requires hosting/admin work **My quick pick:** - **Lowest cost:** BookStack - **Best overall cheap option:** Notion - **Best dedicated KB SaaS on a budget:** Docsie or Slab If you tell me **internal vs customer-facing** and **how many users**, I can narrow it to one best choice.
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For a **limited budget**, the best pick is usually **Notion** if you want an **internal wiki / team knowledge base**: it has a **Free** plan at **$0 per seat/month** and paid plans start at **$10 per seat/month**. ([notion.com](https://www.notion.com/pricing?utm_source=openai)) If you need a **customer-facing help center**, **Confluence Free** is the cheapest mainstream option I found, with **up to 10 users** and **2 GB storage**; its paid Standard plan starts at **$10.44 per user/month**. ([atlassian.com](https://www.atlassian.com/en/software/confluence/pricing?utm_source=openai)) I’d avoid **Helpjuice** on a tight budget: its pricing starts at **$249/month** for 30 users. ([helpjuice.com](https://helpjuice.com/pricing/?utm_source=openai)) **Quick rule:** - **Internal docs/wiki:** Notion - **Public support KB:** Confluence Free - **Need built-in support/ticketing:** Freshworks/Freshdesk, but it’s usually more than the bare-minimum budget option. ([freshworks.com](https://www.freshworks.com/freshdesk/knowledge-base-software/?utm_source=openai)) If you tell me **internal vs customer-facing** and your **team size**, I can narrow it to one best choice.

TOM — Top of Mind (15 prompts)

What are the best knowledge base software options for a company? 320/mo
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best knowledge base software options for a company, depending on your needs: ### Best overall - **Zendesk Guide** — Great if you already use Zendesk for support. Strong help center, self-service, and analytics. ### Best for internal knowledge base - **Guru** — Excellent for team knowledge with browser extension, Slack integration, and fast search. - **Notion** — Flexible and easy to use for internal docs, SOPs, and wikis. ### Best for customer support - **Confluence + Jira Service Management** — Solid if your team is already in the Atlassian ecosystem. - **Help Scout Docs** — Simple, polished, and good for customer-facing FAQs. ### Best for enterprise - **ServiceNow Knowledge Management** — Powerful for large organizations with complex workflows. - **Salesforce Knowledge** — Best if your company is built around Salesforce CRM. ### Best lightweight option - **Document360** — Strong standalone knowledge base platform with good structure and search. - **Freshdesk Knowledge Base** — Good value and easy setup for smaller teams. ### Best open-source - **BookStack** — Clean, self-hosted wiki-style KB. - **DokuWiki** — Simple, reliable, and easy to host. ### Quick picks - **Customer support KB:** Zendesk Guide or Document360 - **Internal team wiki:** Guru or Notion - **Large enterprise:** ServiceNow or Salesforce Knowledge - **Budget-friendly:** Freshdesk or BookStack If you want, I can also give you a **top 5 comparison table by price, ease of use, and best use case**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are the best knowledge base software options for a company, depending on what you need: ### Best overall - **Guru** — Great for internal knowledge bases, fast search, browser-based workflows, and keeping answers up to date. - **Notion** — Best all-around for docs + wiki + lightweight knowledge base, especially for startups and internal teams. - **Confluence by Atlassian** — Strong choice for larger companies already using Jira/Atlassian. ### Best for customer support knowledge bases - **Zendesk Guide** — Best if you already use Zendesk for support tickets. - **Intercom Articles** — Excellent for customer-facing help centers tied to chat/support. - **Help Scout Docs** — Simple, clean, and very good for small to mid-sized support teams. ### Best for internal company wiki - **Slite** — Very good for internal documentation and team collaboration. - **Nuclino** — Fast, lightweight, and easy to use. - **Document360** — Strong internal/external knowledge base with good structure and analytics. ### Best enterprise options - **Confluence** — Most common enterprise wiki/knowledge base platform. - **Bloomfire** — Strong enterprise knowledge management with AI search. - **Shelf** — Good for AI-powered knowledge access in support and operations. ### Best for open-source / self-hosted - **BookStack** — Simple and popular open-source wiki. - **Outline** — Modern and polished, great for internal docs. - **MediaWiki** — Powerful, but more technical and less user-friendly. ### Quick recommendations - **Small company/startup:** Notion or Slite - **Support team:** Zendesk Guide or Help Scout Docs - **Engineering/product org:** Confluence or Guru - **Enterprise knowledge management:** Bloomfire or Shelf - **Self-hosted:** Outline or BookStack If you want, I can also give you a **top 5 comparison table** based on **price, ease of use, search, permissions, and AI features**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best knowledge base software options for a company, depending on your needs: ### Best overall - **Guru** — Great for internal knowledge bases, fast search, AI-assisted answers, and Slack/Chrome integration. ### Best for customer support - **Zendesk Guide** — Best if you already use Zendesk for support; strong self-service help center tools. ### Best for flexible internal docs - **Notion** — Excellent for team wikis and lightweight knowledge bases; easy to set up and very popular. ### Best for scaling enterprises - **Confluence by Atlassian** — Strong for larger teams, documentation, and deep Jira integration. ### Best for simple public help centers - **Help Scout Docs** — Clean, easy to use, and good for customer-facing knowledge bases. ### Best AI-first option - **Document360** — Strong knowledge base platform with AI search, analytics, and good content management. ### Best for all-in-one collaboration - **Slab** — Simple, polished internal knowledge base with good structure and search. ### Best for Microsoft-heavy companies - **Microsoft SharePoint / Viva Topics** — Good if your company is already on Microsoft 365. ## Quick picks - **Internal team wiki:** Notion or Guru - **Customer help center:** Zendesk Guide or Help Scout Docs - **Large company documentation:** Confluence or Document360 - **AI search and answers:** Guru or Document360 If you want, I can also give you: 1. a **top 5 ranked list**, or 2. a **recommendation based on your company size and use case**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best knowledge base software options for a company, depending on your needs: ### Top picks - **Guru** — Best for internal knowledge sharing and team workflows. Great browser extension, fast search, and strong Slack/Teams integration. - **Notion** — Best all-around flexible wiki/knowledge base for smaller to mid-size teams. Easy to build docs, SOPs, and wikis in one place. - **Confluence** — Best for larger companies, especially if you use Jira/Atlassian. Strong for structured internal documentation and collaboration. - **Zendesk Guide** — Best for customer-facing help centers and support knowledge bases. Ideal if your support team already uses Zendesk. - **Help Scout Docs** — Best simple customer help center for smaller teams. Clean, easy to set up, and good for self-service support. - **Document360** — Best dedicated knowledge base platform for both internal and external KBs. Strong article management, analytics, and version control. - **Slab** — Best for polished internal documentation with a clean editor and good search. Good for fast-growing teams. - **Intercom Articles** — Best if you use Intercom for customer support and want knowledge base + chatbot workflows. ### Best by use case - **Internal wiki:** Guru, Notion, Confluence, Slab - **Customer help center:** Zendesk Guide, Help Scout Docs, Document360 - **Support + AI/chat integration:** Intercom Articles, Zendesk Guide - **Enterprise process documentation:** Confluence, Document360 ### Quick recommendation - **Startup / small team:** Notion or Slab - **Mid-size company:** Guru or Document360 - **Large enterprise:** Confluence - **Customer support center:** Zendesk Guide or Help Scout Docs If you want, I can also give you a **top 5 comparison table** with pricing, strengths, and best fit.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best knowledge base software options for companies: ### Best overall - **Zendesk Guide** — Best if you already use Zendesk for support. Strong customer help center, AI search, and good workflow integration. - **Notion** — Best for internal knowledge bases. Simple, flexible, and easy for teams to maintain. - **Confluence** — Best for larger teams and documentation-heavy companies. Great for internal collaboration and structured docs. ### Best customer-facing knowledge bases - **Zendesk Guide** - **Intercom Articles** — Excellent for in-app support and AI-powered help centers. - **Freshdesk Knowledge Base** — Good if you use Freshdesk; affordable and solid for customer support. ### Best for internal wikis - **Notion** - **Confluence** - **Guru** — Strong for team knowledge management with browser extension and verified answers. ### Best open-source / self-hosted - **BookStack** — Clean, easy to use, and great for internal documentation. - **Docusaurus** — Best for product docs and developer documentation. - **MediaWiki** — Powerful, but more technical to manage. ### Best for SaaS/product documentation - **GitBook** — Polished, modern, and great for public docs. - **Docusaurus** - **ReadMe** — Best for API documentation and developer portals. ### Best AI-powered options - **Guru** - **Intercom Articles** - **Zendesk Guide** ### Quick picks - **Small team:** Notion or GitBook - **Mid-size support team:** Zendesk Guide or Freshdesk KB - **Internal knowledge base:** Confluence or Guru - **Developer docs:** GitBook or Docusaurus - **Enterprise:** Confluence or Zendesk Guide If you want, I can also give you a **top 5 by price**, **by ease of use**, or **by company size**.
What are the top knowledge base software tools for teams?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best knowledge base software tools for teams: 1. **Notion** — Great all-in-one wiki + docs + project workspace. Best for fast-moving teams. 2. **Confluence** — Strong for larger teams already using Jira/Atlassian. Very robust internal documentation. 3. **Guru** — Built for team knowledge and quick answers inside Slack, Chrome, and other workflows. 4. **Slab** — Clean, modern team wiki with strong search and simple collaboration. 5. **Document360** — Best if you need a polished external or internal knowledge base with strong publishing controls. 6. **Helpjuice** — Powerful for dedicated company knowledge bases, especially support and ops teams. 7. **Nuclino** — Lightweight, easy-to-use shared knowledge base for smaller teams. 8. **ClickUp Docs** — Good if your team already uses ClickUp for tasks and wants docs in the same place. **Best picks by use case:** - **Best overall:** Notion - **Best for enterprise:** Confluence - **Best for internal team answers:** Guru - **Best for simplicity:** Slab - **Best for customer-facing KB:** Document360 If you want, I can also rank them by **price**, **ease of use**, or **best for startups vs enterprise**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
Top knowledge base tools for teams: 1. **Confluence (Atlassian)** — Best for larger teams already using Jira; strong collaboration and permissions. 2. **Notion** — Best all-in-one docs/wiki tool; flexible, easy to use, great for startups. 3. **Guru** — Best for AI-assisted team knowledge; works well for sales, support, and internal FAQs. 4. **Slab** — Clean, modern team wiki; simple structure and great writing experience. 5. **Document360** — Best for structured knowledge bases and help centers; strong analytics and versioning. 6. **Guru** — Best for quick knowledge retrieval inside Slack and browser workflows. 7. **Nuclino** — Lightweight and fast; good for smaller teams that want simplicity. 8. **Zendesk Guide** — Best if your knowledge base is customer support–focused and you already use Zendesk. 9. **Helpjuice** — Strong internal/external KB product with robust search and customization. 10. **Microsoft SharePoint** — Best for enterprises deep in Microsoft 365. **Best picks by use case:** - **Best overall:** Notion - **Best for enterprise/project teams:** Confluence - **Best for AI knowledge delivery:** Guru - **Best for support docs:** Document360 If you want, I can also give you a **“best for startups / SMBs / enterprise”** shortlist.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the top knowledge base tools for teams: 1. **Notion** — Best all-around for internal docs and team wikis Great for flexible pages, databases, and collaborative documentation. 2. **Confluence (Atlassian)** — Best for larger teams already using Jira Strong for structured documentation, permissions, and enterprise workflows. 3. **Guru** — Best for fast internal knowledge sharing Ideal for sales, support, and operations teams that need answers inside Slack/Chrome. 4. **Slab** — Best for clean, modern team wikis Simple UI, strong search, and easy organization. 5. **Document360** — Best for public or customer-facing knowledge bases Good versioning, categories, and help center features. 6. **Help Scout Docs** — Best for support teams Built for customer help centers and easy integration with support workflows. 7. **Zendesk Guide** — Best if you already use Zendesk Works well for self-service support and ticket deflection. 8. **Nuclino** — Best lightweight option for fast-moving teams Very easy to use, with fast collaboration and simple structure. **Quick picks:** - **Best overall:** Notion - **Best enterprise:** Confluence - **Best internal knowledge management:** Guru - **Best customer help center:** Document360 or Zendesk Guide If you want, I can also rank them by **pricing, ease of use, or best for remote teams**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best knowledge base tools for teams: 1. **Notion** - Best for: flexible internal docs, wikis, project knowledge - Why teams like it: easy editing, databases, strong collaboration 2. **Confluence (Atlassian)** - Best for: larger teams and enterprises - Why teams like it: deep integration with Jira, strong permissions, mature wiki structure 3. **Guru** - Best for: team knowledge that needs to live inside daily workflows - Why teams like it: browser extension, Slack integration, fast knowledge surfacing 4. **Slab** - Best for: clean, modern internal wiki - Why teams like it: simple UI, good search, easy onboarding for teams 5. **Document360** - Best for: customer-facing or internal knowledge bases - Why teams like it: strong article management, analytics, version control 6. **Helpjuice** - Best for: dedicated knowledge base publishing - Why teams like it: powerful search, customization, scalable structure 7. **Zendesk Guide** - Best for: support teams already using Zendesk - Why teams like it: tight ticketing integration, self-service help center **Quick picks:** - **Best overall for most teams:** Notion - **Best for enterprise:** Confluence - **Best for support knowledge:** Zendesk Guide - **Best for in-workflow answers:** Guru If you want, I can also rank them by **price, ease of use, or best for internal vs customer-facing KBs**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the top knowledge base tools for teams: 1. **Notion** — Great all-in-one docs/wiki tool for internal knowledge bases, SOPs, and team notes. 2. **Confluence** — Best for larger teams already using Jira/Atlassian; strong for structured internal documentation. 3. **Guru** — Excellent for team-facing knowledge bases with browser extension and lightweight knowledge capture. 4. **Slab** — Clean, modern internal wiki with strong search and easy organization. 5. **Document360** — Good for both internal and customer-facing knowledge bases; more robust publishing features. 6. **Help Scout Docs** — Best if you want a simple, customer support–focused knowledge base. 7. **Zendesk Guide** — Strong choice for support teams already on Zendesk. 8. **Coda** — Flexible docs/database hybrid; works well for process-heavy teams. 9. **Nuclino** — Fast, simple team wiki with a minimal interface. 10. **Tettra** — Designed specifically as an internal team knowledge base, especially for Slack-first teams. **Best picks by use case:** - **Best overall:** Notion - **Best for enterprise/project teams:** Confluence - **Best for internal knowledge sharing:** Guru - **Best for support/customer help center:** Document360 or Zendesk Guide If you want, I can also give you a **comparison table by price, ease of use, and integrations**.
What is the most recommended knowledge base software?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
If you want the **most recommended all-around knowledge base software**, I’d start with: **1. Notion** — best for most teams - Easy to use - Great for internal docs, wikis, SOPs - Flexible and popular Other top picks by use case: - **Confluence** — best for larger companies using Jira/Atlassian - **Guru** — best for internal team knowledge and fast search - **Help Scout Docs** — best for customer support knowledge bases - **Zendesk Guide** — best if you already use Zendesk - **Document360** — best dedicated KB platform for public + internal docs - **Slab** — clean, simple team wiki **Quick recommendation:** - **Internal company wiki:** Notion - **Enterprise + engineering teams:** Confluence - **Customer help center:** Document360 or Help Scout Docs If you want, I can give you the **best knowledge base software for startups, small businesses, or customer support**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
If you want **one most-recommended dedicated knowledge base tool**, it’s usually **Document360**. **Why people pick it:** - Strong search and article organization - Good analytics/versioning - Easy public/private knowledge bases - Built specifically for KBs, not just docs **Also highly recommended by use case:** - **Confluence** — best for internal team knowledge bases - **Zendesk Guide** — best if you already use Zendesk for support - **Notion** — best for simple, lightweight team docs - **Help Scout Docs** — great for customer self-service If you want, I can narrow it down to the **best free**, **best for startups**, or **best for customer support**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
There isn’t one universal best, but the **most commonly recommended knowledge base software** is: **1. Notion** — best overall for most teams - Easy to use - Great for internal knowledge bases - Flexible pages, databases, and docs Other top picks: - **Confluence** — best for larger companies using Jira/Atlassian - **Zendesk Guide** — best for customer support/help centers - **Guru** — best for fast internal knowledge sharing - **Document360** — best for a polished external knowledge base **If you want one recommendation:** - **Internal KB:** **Notion** - **Customer-facing help center:** **Zendesk Guide** or **Document360** If you want, I can also rank them by **price**, **ease of use**, or **best for small businesses**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
The most commonly recommended **all-around knowledge base software** is **Notion** for internal teams and **Confluence** for larger companies already using Atlassian tools. If you want the best by use case: - **Best overall for internal knowledge bases:** **Notion** - **Best for enterprise teams:** **Confluence** - **Best for customer support docs:** **Zendesk Guide** - **Best for simple, polished help centers:** **Help Scout Docs** - **Best dedicated KB software:** **Document360** - **Best for employee knowledge sharing:** **Guru** **My quick recommendation:** - Choose **Notion** if you want flexible, easy, and modern. - Choose **Confluence** if you need structure, permissions, and scalability. - Choose **Document360** if you want a purpose-built knowledge base. If you want, I can also give you the **best knowledge base software for small business / startup / enterprise**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
If you want the **most commonly recommended all-around knowledge base software**, it’s usually **Notion**. **Best overall:** - **Notion** — easiest to set up, flexible, great for internal and external KBs **Also highly recommended:** - **Guru** — best for team knowledge sharing inside companies - **Zendesk Guide** — best if you already use Zendesk for support - **Confluence** — best for larger teams already in Atlassian/Jira - **Document360** — best dedicated knowledge base platform for customer help centers **Quick pick:** - **Small team / simple KB:** Notion - **Support docs / public help center:** Document360 or Zendesk Guide - **Internal company wiki:** Guru or Confluence If you want, I can give you the **best choice for your exact use case** (internal wiki, customer support, SaaS docs, or IT knowledge base).
What are popular knowledge base software platforms?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
Popular knowledge base platforms include: - **Zendesk Guide** — strong for customer support centers and help docs - **Confluence** — popular for internal team wikis and documentation - **Guru** — good for searchable internal knowledge and team workflows - **Notion** — flexible for company wikis and lightweight KBs - **Document360** — purpose-built knowledge base software - **Help Scout Docs** — simple customer-facing help centers - **Freshdesk Knowledge Base** — part of Freshdesk support suite - **Intercom Articles** — best if you already use Intercom for support - **Salesforce Knowledge** — enterprise KB tied to Salesforce - **Slab** — modern internal knowledge base for teams - **Nuclino** — simple, fast collaborative wiki/KB - **Bloomfire** — strong for enterprise knowledge sharing and search If you want, I can also recommend the best one for: 1. **internal team wiki**, 2. **customer support help center**, or 3. **enterprise knowledge management**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
Popular knowledge base platforms include: - **Zendesk Guide** — strong for customer support knowledge bases - **Confluence** — popular for internal team documentation - **Notion** — flexible, easy-to-build internal KB/wiki - **Guru** — knowledge base for teams with browser/workflow search - **Helpjuice** — dedicated knowledge base software with good analytics - **Document360** — external and internal KBs, very KB-focused - **Freshdesk Knowledge Base** — good if you already use Freshdesk - **ProProfs Knowledge Base** — simple, affordable KB builder - **HubSpot Knowledge Base** — good for customer support in HubSpot - **Slite** — lightweight team wiki / internal knowledge base - **Nuclino** — fast collaborative wiki/KB tool - **Intercom Articles** — best if you use Intercom for support If you want, I can also narrow these down by **best for customer support**, **best for internal docs**, or **best budget option**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
Popular knowledge base platforms include: - **Zendesk Guide** — strong if you already use Zendesk for support. - **Confluence** — popular for internal documentation and team wikis. - **Notion** — flexible, lightweight, great for small teams and internal KBs. - **Guru** — knowledge base + AI search, good for sales/support teams. - **Help Scout Docs** — simple customer-facing help center. - **Freshdesk Knowledge Base** — good for support teams using Freshworks. - **Document360** — purpose-built KB software with strong publishing/versioning. - **Bloomfire** — good for enterprise knowledge sharing and search. - **Slab** — clean internal knowledge base for startups/teams. - **SharePoint** — common in Microsoft-heavy organizations. If you want, I can also rank these by **best for customer support, internal docs, or enterprise use**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
Popular knowledge base software platforms include: - **Zendesk Guide** — strong for customer support KBs - **Confluence** — popular for internal documentation and team wikis - **Notion** — flexible, easy to build internal knowledge bases - **Help Scout Docs** — simple, customer-facing help centers - **Freshdesk Knowledge Base** — part of Freshdesk support suite - **Guru** — AI-assisted internal knowledge base - **Document360** — dedicated KB platform for self-service docs - **Slite** — lightweight team knowledge base/wiki - **Nuclino** — fast collaborative wiki/knowledge base - **GitBook** — great for product docs and technical documentation If you want, I can also suggest the best ones by use case: **internal wiki, customer support, or product docs**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
Popular knowledge base software platforms include: - **Zendesk Guide** — strong for customer support knowledge bases - **Confluence** — popular for internal team documentation - **Guru** — good for searchable, team-shared knowledge - **Notion** — flexible for internal wikis and SOPs - **Help Scout Docs** — simple, customer-facing knowledge base - **Freshdesk Knowledge Base** — solid help center option - **Document360** — dedicated knowledge base platform - **Slab** — clean internal knowledge base/wiki - **Nuclino** — lightweight team wiki and docs - **Intercom Articles** — good if you already use Intercom for support If you want, I can also sort these by **best for internal use**, **customer support**, or **small business**.
Which knowledge base software is best for businesses?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
For most businesses, the **best overall knowledge base software** is usually **Zendesk Guide** if you want strong customer support integration, or **Confluence** if you need an internal team wiki. ### Best picks by use case - **Best overall for customer support:** **Zendesk Guide** - **Best for internal knowledge sharing:** **Atlassian Confluence** - **Best for small teams / ease of use:** **Notion** - **Best for support teams wanting a clean help center:** **Help Scout Docs** - **Best for AI-first support workflows:** **Intercom Articles + Fin** - **Best for dedicated KB publishing:** **Document360** ### Quick recommendation - **Choose Zendesk Guide** if your business already uses Zendesk or wants a scalable help center. - **Choose Confluence** if you need an internal knowledge base for operations, SOPs, and collaboration. - **Choose Notion** if you want something simple, flexible, and fast to set up. If you tell me your team size and whether the KB is **internal, customer-facing, or both**, I can recommend the best one more precisely.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
**Best overall for most businesses:** **Zendesk Guide** - Strong customer-facing help center - Great if you already use Zendesk for support - Solid search, permissions, and analytics **Best for internal team knowledge:** **Confluence** - Best for SOPs, project docs, and company wiki - Excellent with Jira/Atlassian stacks - Good permissions and collaboration **Best simple option for SMBs:** **Help Scout Docs** - Easy to set up and maintain - Clean public knowledge base - Good for small support teams **Best for AI-powered internal knowledge:** **Guru** - Great for fast lookup inside Slack/Chrome - Good for sales, support, and ops teams - Strong verification/workflow features **Best all-in-one flexible workspace:** **Notion** - Cheap and flexible - Good if you want docs + wiki + project work in one place - Less polished for large external help centers **Quick pick:** - **Customer support KB:** Zendesk Guide - **Internal wiki:** Confluence - **Small business:** Help Scout Docs - **AI search + team knowledge:** Guru If you want, I can also give you the **best 3 based on your business size and budget**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
There isn’t one universal “best,” but for most businesses the **best all-around knowledge base software** is: **Zendesk Guide** — best if you already need customer support/ticketing. It’s strong for public help centers, internal articles, search, and tight integration with support workflows. ### Best options by business type - **Zendesk Guide** — best overall for customer support teams - **Document360** — best for dedicated knowledge base management and versioning - **Guru** — best for internal team knowledge and AI-assisted answers - **Help Scout Docs** — best simple, clean KB for small teams - **Intercom Articles** — best if you use Intercom for customer messaging - **Confluence** — best for internal documentation in larger companies ### My quick recommendation - **Customer-facing support:** **Zendesk Guide** - **Internal knowledge base:** **Guru** or **Confluence** - **Simple SMB option:** **Help Scout Docs** - **More advanced KB workflow:** **Document360** If you want, I can give you a **top 3 ranked list based on your business size and budget**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
For most businesses, **Zendesk Guide** is the best all-around knowledge base software: it’s polished, easy to use, and works well if you already handle support in Zendesk. Good alternatives by use case: - **Best for internal company docs:** **Notion** - **Best for a public help center:** **Help Scout Docs** - **Best for larger teams / enterprise:** **Confluence** - **Best lightweight option:** **Document360** - **Best if you want everything in one support stack:** **Zendesk Guide** If you want the simplest recommendation: **Small/medium business → Help Scout Docs or Zendesk Guide** **Internal wiki → Notion** **Enterprise → Confluence** If you want, I can also give you the **best knowledge base software by budget, team size, or whether it’s for customers vs employees**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
For most businesses, the **best all-around knowledge base software** is **Zendesk Guide** if you need customer support + self-service in one system. ### Best picks by use case - **Best overall for support teams:** **Zendesk Guide** - **Best internal knowledge base:** **Guru** - **Best for docs-heavy teams / engineering:** **Confluence** - **Best simple, modern option for growing teams:** **Notion** - **Best customer-facing help center:** **Help Scout Docs** - **Best for polished external KBs:** **Document360** ### Quick recommendation - Choose **Zendesk Guide** if you already use Zendesk or want fewer support tickets. - Choose **Guru** if your team needs fast internal knowledge with Slack/Chrome access. - Choose **Notion** if you want flexibility and low cost. - Choose **Confluence** if your company lives in Jira/Atlassian. ### If you want the shortest answer **Zendesk Guide** is usually the best choice for businesses overall. If you tell me your team size, budget, and whether it’s **internal**, **customer-facing**, or **both**, I can narrow it to the best 1–2 options.
What are the best customer self-service knowledge base tools?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
Best customer self-service knowledge base tools: 1. **Zendesk Guide** - Best overall for support teams already using Zendesk - Strong help center, macros, AI search, multilingual support 2. **Intercom Articles** - Best for in-app self-service and conversational support - Great if you want KB + chatbot + messaging in one place 3. **Help Scout Docs** - Best simple, clean customer help center - Easy to set up, nice UX, good for SMBs 4. **Document360** - Best dedicated knowledge base platform - Strong versioning, analytics, permissions, and AI search 5. **Freshdesk + Freshservice Knowledge Base** - Best budget-friendly option - Good for teams wanting support ticketing plus a KB 6. **Helpjuice** - Best for advanced knowledge management - Strong customization, analytics, and internal collaboration 7. **Confluence + Simple product - Best if you need both internal and external docs** - Works well with Atlassian stacks, but customer-facing UX is less polished ### Quick picks - **Best overall:** Zendesk Guide - **Best for startups/SMBs:** Help Scout Docs - **Best dedicated KB:** Document360 - **Best for in-app support:** Intercom Articles - **Best budget option:** Freshdesk If you want, I can also give you a **top 5 comparison by price, ease of use, and AI features**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best customer self-service knowledge base tools: - **Zendesk Guide** — Best overall for teams already using Zendesk; strong AI search, ticket deflection, and multilingual support. - **Intercom Articles** — Great for in-app self-service and chat-first support; pairs well with Intercom’s AI agent. - **Help Scout Docs** — Best for smaller teams that want a clean, simple knowledge base with great UX. - **Document360** — Excellent if you want a dedicated, highly customizable knowledge base platform with strong analytics. - **Freshdesk Knowledge Base** — Solid all-in-one option for support teams using Freshworks. - **Guru** — Best if you want knowledge in multiple places, though it’s more internal-knowledge-focused than customer-facing. **Best picks by need:** - **Best overall:** Zendesk Guide - **Best for SaaS/in-app help:** Intercom Articles - **Best simple option:** Help Scout Docs - **Best dedicated KB platform:** Document360 If you want, I can also give you the **best low-cost options**, or a **comparison by features/pricing**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are the best customer self-service knowledge base tools, by overall strength: 1. **Zendesk Guide** Best for: teams already using Zendesk support Why: tight help desk integration, solid AI search, multilingual support, easy article workflows. 2. **Intercom Articles** Best for: product-led SaaS and in-app support Why: great for contextual help inside your app, clean UX, strong bot + deflection tools. 3. **Freshdesk Knowledge Base (Freshworks)** Best for: affordable all-in-one support Why: easy setup, good ticketing integration, decent self-service portal, strong value. 4. **Document360** Best for: dedicated public/internal knowledge bases Why: strong authoring tools, versioning, analytics, category structure, and SEO controls. 5. **Help Scout Docs** Best for: simple, polished customer-facing help centers Why: very easy to use, clean design, good for small/mid-size teams. 6. **Guru** Best for: internal knowledge + support team workflows Why: great for agent-facing knowledge, less ideal as a public customer help center. 7. **Confluence + Refined** Best for: teams wanting flexible docs/wiki infrastructure Why: powerful if your company already lives in Atlassian, but more setup. **Best overall picks:** - **Zendesk Guide** if you want the strongest support-platform fit - **Document360** if you want the best dedicated KB product - **Intercom Articles** if you need in-app self-service If you want, I can also give you the **best tools for SMBs, enterprise, or SaaS specifically**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best customer self-service knowledge base tools: - **Zendesk Guide** — best if you already use Zendesk; strong help center, AI search, and ticket deflection. - **Intercom Articles** — great for modern in-app support and conversational customer self-service. - **Document360** — one of the best pure knowledge base platforms; strong editing, versioning, and analytics. - **Helpjuice** — excellent for internal/external knowledge bases with powerful search and customization. - **Freshdesk Knowledge Base (Freshdesk/Freshservice)** — good all-around option for teams wanting support + KB in one suite. - **Zoho Desk Knowledge Base** — affordable and solid for SMBs, especially if you use Zoho. - **Guru** — best for team knowledge management and internal self-service, less ideal for public customer help centers. - **Confluence + Atlassian AI** — strong if your team already lives in Atlassian; better for internal docs than polished customer support portals. - **Notion** — easy and flexible for lightweight help centers, but less robust for scaling support. - **Help Scout Docs** — simple, clean, and very good for small-to-mid-size customer-facing help centers. **Best picks by use case:** - **Best overall:** Zendesk Guide - **Best standalone KB:** Document360 - **Best for in-app support:** Intercom Articles - **Best for small teams:** Help Scout Docs - **Best budget-friendly suite:** Zoho Desk If you want, I can also give you a **top 5 ranked list** based on your team size, budget, and whether you need AI search or multilingual support.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best customer self-service knowledge base tools: 1. **Zendesk Guide** Best if you already use Zendesk for support. Strong article management, AI search, and tight ticketing integration. 2. **Intercom Articles** Great for in-app self-service and conversational support. Clean UX and good automation. 3. **Freshdesk Knowledge Base (Freshdesk + Freshchat)** Solid all-in-one option for support teams. Easy to set up, good multilingual support. 4. **Document360** Excellent dedicated knowledge base platform. Strong authoring tools, version control, analytics, and public/private KB options. 5. **Helpjuice** Best for highly customizable knowledge bases. Powerful search and branding control. 6. **Guru** Best for internal + customer-facing knowledge management. Good if your team needs shared, verified content. 7. **Zoho Desk** Affordable and feature-rich. Good for SMBs wanting ticketing plus a self-service portal. 8. **Help Scout Docs** Simple, polished, and fast to deploy. Great for smaller teams that want a clean help center. **Best overall picks by use case:** - **Best enterprise support:** Zendesk Guide - **Best dedicated KB:** Document360 - **Best conversational self-service:** Intercom - **Best budget-friendly:** Zoho Desk or Freshdesk - **Best simple setup:** Help Scout Docs If you want, I can also rank these for **SEO, AI search, ease of use, or pricing**.
What are the best internal knowledge base software options? 210/mo
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best internal knowledge base tools, depending on what you need: - **Guru** — Best for fast, team-facing knowledge with verification workflows. Great if you want answers inside Slack/Chrome. - **Confluence** — Best for larger orgs already using Atlassian. Strong for documentation, team spaces, and permissions. - **Notion** — Best all-around for flexible internal wikis. Easy to set up, very popular for startups and ops teams. - **Slab** — Best simple, polished internal wiki. Clean UI and easy to keep organized. - **Document360** — Best for more structured knowledge bases and stronger admin controls. - **Nuclino** — Best lightweight option for fast collaboration and simple knowledge management. - **Helpjuice** — Best if you want a dedicated internal/external KB with strong search and customization. - **Zendesk Guide** — Best if your support team already uses Zendesk. **Quick picks:** - **Best overall:** Notion - **Best for enterprise/process-heavy teams:** Confluence - **Best for knowledge delivery in Slack:** Guru - **Best for clean, simple wiki:** Slab If you want, I can also give you a **top 5 by company size** or **compare Notion vs Confluence vs Guru**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are the strongest internal knowledge base options right now: - **Notion** — best overall for flexible internal docs/wiki, lightweight knowledge base, and team collaboration. - **Confluence** — best for larger companies, especially if you use Jira/Atlassian. - **Guru** — best for fast, searchable team knowledge with browser-based workflows and Slack integration. - **Slab** — best for clean, simple internal documentation that’s easy to maintain. - **Help Scout Docs** — best if you want an internal/external knowledge base with a polished publishing experience. - **Document360** — best for more structured, enterprise-style knowledge bases with strong versioning and analytics. - **Nuclino** — best for a minimalist, fast internal wiki. - **Google Sites / Drive** — best low-cost option, but less powerful as a true knowledge base. ### Best picks by use case - **Best overall:** Notion - **Best enterprise:** Confluence - **Best for team knowledge capture:** Guru - **Best simple wiki:** Slab or Nuclino - **Best if you need public docs too:** Document360 or Help Scout Docs ### My quick recommendation If you’re starting fresh: 1. **Notion** if you want flexibility and ease of use. 2. **Confluence** if you need scale and structure. 3. **Guru** if knowledge needs to live where people work, like Slack and the browser. If you want, I can also give you a **top 5 comparison table** with pricing, pros/cons, and best-fit team size.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are the best internal knowledge base options, depending on what you need: ### Best overall - **Guru** — Great for fast internal knowledge access, browser-based workflows, and verified answers. - **Notion** — Best all-around if you want a flexible wiki plus docs, databases, and lightweight project management. - **Confluence** — Strong choice for larger teams, especially if you already use Jira/Atlassian. ### Best for structured company wiki - **Confluence** — Mature, permission-rich, good for engineering/product teams. - **Notion** — Easier to use, more modern, less rigid. ### Best for employee-facing knowledge + AI search - **Guru** — Excellent search and knowledge validation. - **Slite** — Clean, simple internal docs with good AI-assisted search. - **Document360** — Strong knowledge-base organization and analytics. ### Best for support / help-center style internal docs - **Document360** — Very polished, with versioning and analytics. - **Zendesk Guide** — Best if your company already uses Zendesk. ### Best for engineering-heavy teams - **Confluence** — Deep Atlassian integration. - **GitBook** — Clean markdown workflows and great for technical documentation. - **Outline** — Simple, fast internal wiki with a strong developer-friendly feel. ### Best open-source / self-hosted - **BookStack** — Easy to use and popular for internal documentation. - **Outline** (self-hosted option available) — Modern wiki experience. - **Wiki.js** — Flexible and developer-friendly. ### Quick picks - **Best for most teams:** Notion - **Best for fast answers at work:** Guru - **Best enterprise option:** Confluence - **Best simple modern wiki:** Slite - **Best technical docs:** GitBook If you want, I can also give you a **top 5 by team size** or a **comparison table with pricing and pros/cons**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are the strongest internal knowledge base options right now: - **Guru** — Best for fast-moving teams that want verified, always-updated knowledge inside Slack/Chrome. - **Confluence** — Best for larger companies already using Jira/Atlassian; very powerful and widely adopted. - **Notion** — Best all-around for lightweight docs, wikis, SOPs, and flexible internal knowledge bases. - **Slab** — Best for clean, simple team wikis with great search and easy editing. - **Nuclino** — Best for ultra-fast, minimal knowledge bases and small teams. - **Document360** — Best if you want a more structured, enterprise-style knowledge base with strong versioning and analytics. - **Helpjuice** — Best for dedicated internal/external knowledge bases with strong customization and search. - **Microsoft SharePoint / Viva Topics** — Best for Microsoft 365 shops that need tight enterprise integration. ### Quick picks - **Best overall:** Notion - **Best for enterprise:** Confluence - **Best for knowledge verification:** Guru - **Best for simplicity:** Slab - **Best for Microsoft environments:** SharePoint If you want, I can also rank these by **price**, **ease of use**, or **best for remote teams**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are the strongest internal knowledge base options, by common use case: - **Guru** — Best for fast-moving teams; great browser extension, Slack/Teams integration, and “knowledge suggestions.” - **Notion** — Best all-in-one lightweight KB; flexible docs, databases, and easy team adoption. - **Confluence (Atlassian)** — Best for larger orgs already using Jira; strong permissions, structure, and enterprise admin. - **Slite** — Best for clean, simple team documentation; easier than Confluence, more KB-focused than Notion. - **Document360** — Best for dedicated knowledge bases; strong search, analytics, and publishing workflow. - **Nuclino** — Best for speed and simplicity; very easy internal wiki/KB setup. - **SharePoint + Microsoft Loop** — Best if you’re deep in Microsoft 365; powerful but heavier to manage. - **Helpjuice** — Best if you want a polished internal/external KB with strong customization and search. **Quick picks:** - **Best overall:** Guru - **Best for flexibility:** Notion - **Best for enterprise:** Confluence - **Best for simple team wiki:** Slite - **Best dedicated KB platform:** Document360 If you want, I can narrow this down to the best option for your team size, budget, and tools (Slack/Teams/Jira/Microsoft).
Which knowledge base software is easiest to use?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
If you want the **easiest knowledge base software to use**, the usual top picks are: 1. **Notion** — easiest for most teams; very intuitive, fast setup, flexible. 2. **Coda** — also easy, a bit more powerful for structured docs and workflows. 3. **Guru** — best if you want a true internal knowledge base with minimal friction. 4. **Slab** — very clean, simple, and made specifically for team knowledge bases. 5. **Confluence** — powerful, but less “easy” than the others. **Best overall for ease of use:** **Notion** **Best for internal company knowledge:** **Guru** **Best simple team wiki:** **Slab** If you want, I can also give you the **best choice for small business, customer support, or internal docs**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
If you want the **easiest knowledge base software overall**, my top pick is **Notion**. ### Easiest to use - **Notion** — simplest setup, very intuitive editor, great for internal or public docs - **Help Scout Docs** — super easy for customer support teams, clean and polished - **Document360** — easier than most “enterprise” tools, best if you want a more structured KB - **Freshdesk Knowledge Base** — good if you already use Freshdesk - **Zendesk Guide** — powerful, but not the easiest ### Best quick recommendation - **For teams and internal docs:** **Notion** - **For customer support/help center:** **Help Scout Docs** - **For a more serious standalone KB:** **Document360** If you want, I can also rank them by **ease of setup**, **design**, or **best value**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
If you want the **easiest-to-use knowledge base software**, my top picks are: 1. **Notion** — easiest overall for most teams - Very simple editor - Great for internal knowledge bases - Fast to set up, minimal training 2. **Help Scout Docs** — easiest for customer support knowledge bases - Clean interface - Built for help centers - Easy search and article organization 3. **Zendesk Guide** — easiest if you already use Zendesk - Works well with support tickets - Solid for customer-facing help centers - Slightly more setup than Help Scout **Best choice by use case:** - **Internal wiki:** Notion - **Customer help center:** Help Scout Docs - **Support team already on Zendesk:** Zendesk Guide If you want, I can also give you the **best easy KB software for small businesses, startups, or enterprise**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
If you want the **easiest knowledge base software to use**, my top picks are: 1. **Notion** — easiest overall for most teams - Very simple editor - Fast to set up - Great for internal docs and lightweight help centers 2. **Canny** — easiest for a public-facing help center + feedback - Clean interface - Easy publishing - Good if you want KB + feature requests in one tool 3. **HelpScout Docs** — easiest for customer support teams - Built specifically for help articles - Simple setup - Nice if you already use Help Scout for support 4. **Guru** — easiest for internal team knowledge - Good browser-based workflow - Easy to search and keep updated - Best for sales/support/internal teams **Best overall for pure ease of use:** **Notion** **Best for customer-facing help docs:** **HelpScout Docs** If you want, I can also rank the easiest ones by **internal wiki**, **customer support KB**, or **small business budget**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
For most teams, **Guru** is usually the easiest to use. **Why it’s simple:** - Clean, modern UI - Fast search - Easy card-based knowledge capture - Good browser/Slack integration - Low setup/admin overhead Other very easy options: - **Notion** — best if you want a flexible wiki/docs tool and already use it elsewhere - **Confluence** — easiest for larger teams already in the Atlassian ecosystem - **Help Scout Docs** — very easy for customer support knowledge bases - **Document360** — easier if you want a more traditional KB with strong publishing controls **Quick pick:** - **Internal team knowledge base:** Guru - **Flexible docs/wiki:** Notion - **Customer-facing help center:** Help Scout Docs If you tell me whether this is for **internal use or customer support**, I can recommend the single best option.
What are the best knowledge base platforms for support teams?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
Top knowledge base platforms for support teams: 1. **Zendesk Guide** - Best if you already use Zendesk Support. - Strong help center, article workflows, AI search, and self-service integration. 2. **Freshdesk Knowledge Base** - Good all-in-one option for growing support teams. - Easy to set up, decent automation, and tight ticketing integration. 3. **Intercom Articles** - Best for in-app support and product-led teams. - Great for customer-facing help content, chat, and AI support features. 4. **Confluence + Scroll / K15t** - Best for internal-heavy or technical documentation. - Very flexible, especially if your team already lives in Atlassian. 5. **Document360** - Strong standalone knowledge base platform. - Good analytics, versioning, and editorial workflow. 6. **Guru** - Best for internal team knowledge. - Great for support agents who need quick answer retrieval during tickets and chats. 7. **Help Scout Docs** - Simple, clean, and ideal for smaller support teams. - Easy to use and good for customer self-service. **Best overall picks:** - **Zendesk Guide** for enterprise support - **Intercom Articles** for SaaS/product support - **Document360** for dedicated KB management - **Guru** for internal agent knowledge If you want, I can also give you a **best-by-use-case shortlist** or a **pricing comparison**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are the best knowledge base platforms for support teams, depending on what you need: ### Top picks - **Zendesk Guide** — Best if your support team already uses Zendesk. Strong ticketing integration, good AI/help center tools, solid deflection features. - **Intercom Articles** — Best for modern in-app support and fast self-serve. Great if you use Intercom for chat/support. - **Document360** — Best standalone knowledge base platform. Strong authoring, versioning, analytics, and internal/external KB support. - **Guru** — Best for internal team knowledge. Great for support reps who need quick, verified answers in Slack, Chrome, and other workflows. - **Freshdesk / Freshdesk Knowledge Base** — Best budget-friendly option with good ticketing + KB combo. - **Help Scout Docs** — Best for smaller teams wanting a simple, clean, customer-friendly help center. ### Also worth considering - **Confluence + Atlassian Intelligence** — Best for internal documentation-heavy teams, less ideal for polished public help centers. - **Notion** — Great for lightweight internal docs, but weaker for customer-facing support KBs. - **Salesforce Knowledge** — Best for enterprises already on Salesforce. ### Best by use case - **Best overall for support teams:** Zendesk Guide - **Best standalone KB:** Document360 - **Best internal support knowledge:** Guru - **Best for chat-first support:** Intercom Articles - **Best simple option:** Help Scout Docs If you want, I can also give you a **top 5 ranked list by price, ease of use, or AI features**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best knowledge base platforms for support teams: 1. **Zendesk Guide** Best if you already use Zendesk for support. Strong ticket deflection, good AI search, and tight help desk integration. 2. **Intercom Articles** Great for in-app support and customer-facing self-serve help. Best for SaaS teams that want chat + KB in one place. 3. **Guru** Best for internal support teams and agent-facing knowledge. Excellent for surfacing answers inside workflows. 4. **Document360** Strong standalone knowledge base platform with versioning, analytics, and easy publishing. Good for both internal and external docs. 5. **Freshdesk Knowledge Base** Solid budget-friendly option if you use Freshdesk. Easy to set up and integrates well with support tickets. 6. **Help Scout Docs** Clean, simple, and customer-friendly. Great for smaller teams that want a lightweight KB. 7. **Confluence** Best for internal documentation and team knowledge, especially if your company already lives in Atlassian. 8. **Notion** Flexible and popular for internal support docs. Less polished as a public KB, but easy to maintain. **Best overall picks by use case:** - **Best for support teams on Zendesk:** Zendesk Guide - **Best for SaaS customer support:** Intercom Articles - **Best for internal agent knowledge:** Guru - **Best standalone KB:** Document360 - **Best simple option:** Help Scout Docs If you want, I can also rank these by **price, ease of use, or AI features**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best knowledge base platforms for support teams: 1. **Zendesk Guide** Best if you already use Zendesk for support. Strong ticket deflection, AI search, and tight help desk integration. 2. **Intercom Articles** Great for in-app support and customer self-service. Best for product-led teams that want a polished, modern help center. 3. **Freshdesk Knowledge Base / Freshservice KB** Good all-in-one option for support teams. Easy setup, solid workflow integration, and affordable. 4. **Help Scout Docs** Simple, clean, and ideal for smaller support teams. Easy for agents to maintain and customers to use. 5. **Notion** Best for internal knowledge bases and lightweight public docs. Flexible, but less specialized for customer support. 6. **Document360** Strong standalone knowledge base platform. Good analytics, versioning, and structured content management. 7. **Guru** Best for internal team knowledge and agent assistance. Great for keeping support reps updated in real time. 8. **Confluence** Solid for internal documentation, SOPs, and cross-team knowledge sharing. Better for internal KB than customer-facing support. **Best overall picks:** - **Zendesk Guide** for enterprise support teams - **Intercom Articles** for modern customer-facing support - **Help Scout Docs** for small-to-mid teams - **Document360** for dedicated KB needs If you want, I can also give you the **best choice by team size, budget, or use case**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best knowledge base platforms for support teams, depending on your needs: ### Best all-around - **Zendesk Guide** — Best if you already use Zendesk for support. Strong help center, AI search, macros, and tight ticket integration. - **Intercom Articles** — Great for in-app support and fast-moving SaaS teams. Excellent customer-facing docs plus chatbot integration. - **Freshdesk / Freshservice Knowledge Base** — Good value, easy to use, especially for smaller support teams. ### Best for internal + external docs - **Confluence** — Best for internal knowledge sharing and SOPs. Solid if your support team works closely with engineering/product. - **Notion** — Flexible and easy to maintain. Good for lightweight internal KBs and quick publishing, though less robust for public help centers. ### Best for polished public help centers - **Document360** — Strong dedicated knowledge base product with versioning, analytics, and clean public-facing docs. - **Guru** — Great for internal knowledge bases with verification workflows; ideal for keeping support answers accurate. ### Best for growing SaaS teams - **Help Scout Docs** — Simple, user-friendly, and tightly integrated with support workflows. - **Stonly** — Better for guided help and interactive knowledge than traditional article-based KBs. ### Best enterprise options - **Salesforce Knowledge** — Best if your support team runs on Salesforce. - **ServiceNow Knowledge Management** — Strong for large IT/service operations and enterprise workflows. ### Quick picks - **Already on Zendesk?** → Zendesk Guide - **Need internal KB + wiki?** → Confluence or Notion - **Want best dedicated KB product?** → Document360 - **Need simple, support-friendly docs?** → Help Scout Docs - **Want internal answer verification?** → Guru If you want, I can also give you: 1. a **top 5 by price**, 2. a **top 5 for SaaS support teams**, or 3. a **comparison table**.
What are the best knowledge base tools for SaaS companies?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
For SaaS companies, the best knowledge base tools usually fall into two buckets: **customer-facing help centers** and **internal docs/wiki**. ### Best customer-facing knowledge base tools - **Zendesk Guide** — best if you already use Zendesk for support; solid self-service + ticket deflection. - **Intercom Articles** — great for in-app help and fast support workflows; strong for product-led SaaS. - **Help Scout Docs** — simple, clean, and easy to manage for smaller teams. - **Freshdesk Knowledge Base** — good value if you’re on Freshworks. - **Document360** — one of the best dedicated KB platforms; strong analytics, versioning, and structure. - **GitBook** — excellent for developer-focused SaaS and public documentation. ### Best internal knowledge base tools - **Notion** — most popular for internal company knowledge; flexible and easy to adopt. - **Confluence** — strong for larger teams, especially if you use Jira. - **Slab** — cleaner than Confluence, great for internal docs and team knowledge. - **Guru** — best for searchable, in-workflow internal knowledge. - **Coda** — good if you want docs + workflows in one place. ### Best all-around picks by SaaS stage - **Startup / lean team:** Notion + Intercom Articles - **Scaling SaaS:** Document360 or Zendesk Guide - **Developer SaaS:** GitBook - **Internal-first knowledge:** Slab or Guru - **Enterprise:** Confluence + Zendesk/Document360 ### My short list If I had to pick the top 5: 1. **Document360** 2. **Intercom Articles** 3. **Zendesk Guide** 4. **Notion** 5. **GitBook** If you want, I can also give you: - the **best tool by company size** - the **best tool for PLG SaaS** - or a **comparison table with pricing and features**
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
For SaaS companies, the best knowledge base tools are usually: - **Intercom Articles** — best if you already use Intercom for support/chat. Great in-app help, fast setup. - **Zendesk Guide** — strong choice for support teams needing a full help center + ticketing ecosystem. - **Help Scout Docs** — simple, clean, and easy for smaller SaaS teams. - **Document360** — best for more robust internal/external knowledge bases with versioning and analytics. - **Guru** — best for internal knowledge bases and team wikis, especially for support/sales teams. - **Notion** — flexible and cheap, good for early-stage SaaS, but less polished as a customer-facing KB. - **Confluence** — strong for internal documentation, product and engineering teams. - **GitBook** — excellent for developer docs and API documentation. - **ReadMe** — best for API docs and developer portals. - **Helpjuice** — solid standalone customer knowledge base with strong search. ### Best picks by use case - **Best overall for customer support:** Intercom Articles - **Best for growing support teams:** Zendesk Guide - **Best for internal knowledge sharing:** Guru - **Best for developer docs:** ReadMe or GitBook - **Best budget-friendly option:** Notion - **Best standalone KB:** Document360 or Helpjuice If you want, I can also give you a **top 5 shortlist by SaaS stage** (startup, growth, enterprise) or compare them in a table.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
For most SaaS companies, the best knowledge base tools are: 1. **Intercom Fin + Help Center** Best if you already use Intercom for support. Great in-app help, AI search, and strong customer support workflows. 2. **Zendesk Help Center** Best for support-heavy teams that want a mature, scalable ticketing + KB setup. 3. **Help Scout Docs** Best for small to mid-size SaaS teams that want a clean, simple, customer-friendly help center. 4. **Guru** Best for internal knowledge bases and support team knowledge. Strong for keeping answers current. 5. **Notion** Best for lightweight or internal docs. Flexible, cheap, and easy to start, but less polished for public customer KBs. 6. **Document360** Best dedicated knowledge base platform for SaaS. Strong structure, analytics, versioning, and publishing controls. 7. **Confluence** Best if your company already uses Atlassian. Good for internal documentation, less ideal for customer-facing help centers. **Quick picks:** - **Best overall:** Intercom - **Best dedicated KB:** Document360 - **Best simple/support-friendly:** Help Scout Docs - **Best internal KB:** Guru - **Best budget/flexible:** Notion If you want, I can also give you the **top 3 based on company size**: startup, mid-market, or enterprise.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
For SaaS companies, the best knowledge base tools are usually the ones that are: - easy for customers to search - strong at article management/versioning - good for in-app help and deflection - can scale with internal docs too ### Top picks **1. Zendesk Guide** Best if you already use Zendesk for support. Strong ticket deflection, good AI/search, solid workflows. **2. Intercom Articles** Best for product-led SaaS and in-app support. Great if you want a polished help center tied to chat and proactive messaging. **3. Help Scout Docs** Best simple, clean knowledge base for smaller SaaS teams. Easy to use, fast to launch, less complex than enterprise tools. **4. Guru** Best for internal knowledge bases and support team playbooks. Great for keeping answers current inside Slack/Chrome. **5. Notion** Best low-cost flexible option. Good for internal docs and lightweight public knowledge bases, but weaker for customer-facing help centers. **6. Document360** Best dedicated knowledge base platform. Strong for structured documentation, analytics, and multi-article content. **7. Confluence** Best for internal team documentation at scale. Strong collaboration, but not ideal as a polished customer-facing KB. ### Best by use case - **Customer support KB:** Zendesk Guide, Intercom Articles, Help Scout Docs - **Internal SOPs / support playbooks:** Guru, Confluence, Notion - **Dedicated doc portal:** Document360 - **Best all-in-one with chat:** Intercom ### My quick recommendation If you're a SaaS company choosing today: - **Startup / lean team:** Help Scout Docs or Notion - **Growth-stage SaaS:** Intercom Articles or Zendesk Guide - **Heavy internal knowledge management:** Guru or Confluence - **Documentation-first product:** Document360 If you want, I can also give you: 1. a **top 5 comparison table**, or 2. the **best knowledge base tool for your specific SaaS stage**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
For SaaS companies, the best knowledge base tools are usually: - **Intercom Articles** — best if you already use Intercom for support/chat. - **Zendesk Guide** — best for larger support teams and ticket-heavy ops. - **Document360** — best standalone knowledge base software for structured public + internal docs. - **Help Scout Docs** — best for simple, clean customer help centers. - **Guru** — best for internal knowledge base + team knowledge, not customer docs. - **Confluence** — best if your team already lives in Atlassian. - **Notion** — best lightweight option for an internal wiki or early-stage KB. ### Best picks by use case - **Best overall for SaaS support:** **Intercom Articles** - **Best enterprise support suite:** **Zendesk Guide** - **Best dedicated KB product:** **Document360** - **Best simple help center:** **Help Scout Docs** - **Best internal knowledge base:** **Guru** - **Best budget/flexible option:** **Notion** ### Quick advice If you want a **customer-facing help center**, start with **Intercom Articles**, **Zendesk Guide**, or **Document360**. If you want an **internal SOP/wiki**, use **Guru** or **Notion**. If you want, I can also give you: 1. a **top 5 comparison table**, or 2. a **recommendation based on your SaaS size and stack**.
What are the best searchable help center software options? 210/mo
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are the best searchable help center software options, based on ease of use, search quality, and overall support experience: 1. **Zendesk Guide** - Best for: Teams already using Zendesk - Strong search, AI suggestions, multilingual support, good analytics 2. **Intercom Fin + Help Center** - Best for: SaaS companies wanting AI + support automation - Great in-product search, strong self-service, clean UI 3. **Help Scout Docs** - Best for: Simple, polished knowledge bases - Fast setup, good search, easy editing, customer-friendly design 4. **Freshdesk Knowledge Base** - Best for: Budget-friendly support teams - Solid search, easy article management, good if you already use Freshdesk 5. **Guru** - Best for: Internal knowledge + support teams - Excellent search and AI answers, great for distributed teams 6. **Document360** - Best for: Dedicated public help centers - Powerful search, versioning, categories, strong analytics 7. **Confluence + Atlassian AI** - Best for: Teams already on Atlassian - Flexible, searchable, good for internal and external docs with add-ons ### Best overall picks - **Best overall:** Zendesk Guide - **Best modern SaaS choice:** Intercom - **Best simple/easy option:** Help Scout Docs - **Best dedicated knowledge base:** Document360 If you want, I can also rank these by **SEO**, **AI search**, or **price**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best searchable help center software options: 1. **Zendesk Guide** - Best for: larger support teams - Strong search, AI suggestions, tight ticketing integration - Good if you already use Zendesk Support 2. **Intercom Articles** - Best for: SaaS companies and in-app support - Excellent internal search + AI-powered help center experience - Great for combining chat and self-serve support 3. **Help Scout Docs** - Best for: small to mid-sized teams - Clean, fast, SEO-friendly help centers - Simple setup and strong search 4. **Document360** - Best for: dedicated knowledge base teams - Powerful article organization, versioning, analytics, and search - Good if you want a standalone knowledge base 5. **Freshdesk Knowledge Base / Freshworks** - Best for: budget-conscious teams - Solid search, multilingual support, and ticketing integration - Good all-in-one support suite 6. **Confluence + Refined** - Best for: internal/external documentation-heavy teams - Strong for structured content and permissions - Better for enterprise documentation than customer-facing help centers 7. **Guru** - Best for: internal knowledge management - Fast search across company knowledge - More for agent/team knowledge than public help centers **Top picks by need:** - **Best overall:** Zendesk Guide - **Best for SaaS:** Intercom Articles - **Best simple option:** Help Scout Docs - **Best dedicated KB:** Document360 If you want, I can narrow this down by **team size, budget, or whether you need public help docs vs internal knowledge base**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best searchable help center software options: 1. **Zendesk Guide** Best for: teams already using Zendesk Strong search, AI suggestions, multilingual support, and tight ticketing integration. 2. **Intercom Help Center** Best for: modern SaaS support Clean UX, good article search, Messenger integration, and strong self-serve deflection. 3. **Freshdesk Knowledge Base** Best for: SMBs wanting an affordable all-in-one suite Easy setup, decent search, and good ticketing/chat integration. 4. **Help Scout Docs** Best for: simple, customer-friendly help centers Fast, clean, lightweight, and easy to maintain. Search is solid and articles are easy to read. 5. **Document360** Best for: dedicated knowledge base teams Excellent search, analytics, versioning, categories, and strong KB-specific features. 6. **Guru** Best for: internal knowledge management Great search and AI-assisted answers, especially for internal support teams and ops. 7. **Confluence + Refined** Best for: teams already on Atlassian Confluence is strong for content management; Refined makes it feel more like a true help center. 8. **Notion + Super / Popsy** Best for: startups and lightweight docs Flexible and inexpensive, though search and help-center polish are weaker than dedicated tools. ### Best overall picks - **Best enterprise:** Zendesk Guide - **Best UX:** Intercom - **Best dedicated KB:** Document360 - **Best simple option:** Help Scout Docs - **Best budget-friendly:** Freshdesk If you want, I can also give you: - a **top 5 ranked list** - the **best option for SaaS / e-commerce / B2B** - or a **comparison table by search quality, SEO, and ease of use**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are the strongest searchable help center / knowledge base options: 1. **Zendesk Guide** - Best for: support teams already using Zendesk - Why: strong built-in search, AI suggestions, article analytics, multi-brand help centers 2. **Intercom Articles** - Best for: SaaS and customer support automation - Why: clean UX, good in-app + help center search, pairs well with chatbot/support inbox 3. **Freshdesk Knowledge Base** - Best for: all-in-one support at a lower price - Why: solid search, multilingual support, easy setup, good for SMBs 4. **Help Scout Docs** - Best for: simple, polished help centers - Why: very easy to use, fast search, great writing/editing experience 5. **Document360** - Best for: advanced knowledge base needs - Why: powerful search, versioning, categories/tags, AI search features, strong analytics 6. **Guru** - Best for: internal searchable knowledge bases - Why: excellent search and browser-based knowledge access for teams 7. **Confluence + Refined** - Best for: teams wanting a more customizable knowledge portal - Why: good enterprise search, especially if your docs already live in Confluence ### Best overall picks - **Best for customer support:** Zendesk Guide - **Best for SaaS UX:** Intercom Articles - **Best value:** Help Scout Docs - **Best advanced search:** Document360 If you want, I can also give you a shortlist based on **budget**, **team size**, or **whether you need public help center vs internal KB**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are the best searchable help center software options: 1. **Zendesk Guide** Best for: larger teams needing strong support integration - Excellent search - Deep ticketing/chat integration - Strong knowledge base analytics 2. **Intercom Articles** Best for: SaaS companies focused on in-app support - Very good semantic search - Easy customer-facing help center - Works well with chatbot/live chat 3. **Freshdesk Knowledge Base (Freshworks)** Best for: budget-friendly all-in-one support - Solid search - Simple setup - Good for small to mid-sized teams 4. **Help Scout Docs** Best for: clean, simple help centers - Fast search - Easy to manage - Great UX and straightforward publishing 5. **Document360** Best for: advanced knowledge base management - Strong search and categorization - Good for internal + external docs - Great versioning and analytics 6. **Guru** Best for: internal searchable knowledge bases - Powerful enterprise search - Best for team knowledge, not public help centers - Good browser and Slack integrations 7. **Confluence + Atlassian Intelligence/search** Best for: teams already using Atlassian - Flexible documentation - Search improves with structure - Better for internal docs than customer help centers **Top picks overall:** - **Zendesk Guide** for enterprise support - **Intercom Articles** for SaaS/customer onboarding - **Document360** for dedicated knowledge base control - **Help Scout Docs** for simplicity If you want, I can also rank them by **search quality, ease of use, or price**.
What are the best documentation platforms for product teams? 390/mo
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best documentation platforms for product teams, depending on how you work: - **Notion** — Best all-around for lightweight product docs, specs, meeting notes, and wiki-style collaboration. Great if you want docs + project tracking in one place. - **Confluence** — Best for larger teams already using Jira/Atlassian. Strong for structured internal knowledge bases and approval-heavy workflows. - **Coda** — Great for interactive docs that behave like mini apps. Useful for product requirements, launch checklists, and cross-functional workflows. - **Guru** — Best for team knowledge that needs to stay current. Strong browser extension and verification features for always-up-to-date internal docs. - **Slab** — Clean, simple team wiki with strong search. Good for product teams that want something easier than Confluence but more structured than Notion. - **Aha! Roadmaps** — Best if you want product strategy, roadmaps, and docs together. Strong for product managers in more mature orgs. - **Document360** — Best for polished internal or external knowledge bases. Good if you need a more traditional documentation portal. - **Tettra** — Best for smaller teams wanting a Slack-friendly internal wiki. Simple and fast to roll out. ### Quick picks - **Best overall:** Notion - **Best for enterprise:** Confluence - **Best for dynamic team knowledge:** Guru - **Best for product strategy + docs:** Aha! Roadmaps If you tell me your team size, stack, and whether you need internal docs, customer docs, or both, I can narrow it to the top 3.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are the best documentation platforms for product teams, depending on what you need: ### Best overall - **Notion** — best for flexible product docs, specs, roadmaps, and cross-functional collaboration. - **Confluence** — best for larger teams already using Jira/Atlassian. ### Best for product specs and PRDs - **Notion** — simple, fast, and easy to structure. - **Coda** — great if you want docs + lightweight workflows in one place. ### Best for engineering-facing documentation - **GitBook** — polished, easy to publish, good for internal/external docs. - **Confluence** — strong for internal knowledge bases. ### Best for customer-facing product docs/help centers - **Zendesk Guide** — best if you already use Zendesk. - **Intercom Articles** — great for in-app support and product education. - **Help Scout Docs** — clean and easy for support content. ### Best for design/product collaboration - **Notion** - **Confluence** - **Craft** — nice writing experience and strong visuals. ### Best for startups / small product teams - **Notion** - **Coda** - **GitBook** ### Best for enterprise teams - **Confluence** - **Guru** — good for internal knowledge access. - **Document360** — strong knowledge base and admin controls. ### My quick picks - **Most teams:** Notion - **Atlassian stack:** Confluence - **Docs that need publishing:** GitBook - **Customer help center:** Zendesk Guide or Intercom Articles If you want, I can also rank these by **ease of use, collaboration, AI features, or pricing**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
For product teams, the best documentation platforms are usually: ### Best all-around - **Notion** — best for lightweight internal product docs, specs, meeting notes, roadmaps. - **Confluence** — best for larger orgs already using Jira/Atlassian; strong for structured internal docs. ### Best for customer-facing docs - **Zendesk Guide** — best if you want help center + support workflow together. - **Intercom Articles** — great for in-app help and customer education. - **Document360** — strong dedicated knowledge base platform. ### Best for developer/product docs - **GitBook** — clean, modern docs for product + API documentation. - **ReadMe** — excellent for API docs and developer portals. - **Docusaurus** — best if your team wants docs in code and full customization. ### Best for fast-moving teams - **Coda** — flexible for product ops, specs, and living docs. - **Slab** — simple, polished internal knowledge base for teams. ### Best enterprise options - **Guru** — good for company-wide knowledge sharing and searchable docs. - **SharePoint** — common in Microsoft-heavy organizations, though less product-friendly. ## My quick picks - **Startups / product teams:** Notion or Slab - **Enterprise product orgs:** Confluence - **Customer docs:** Document360 or Zendesk Guide - **API/developer docs:** ReadMe or GitBook If you want, I can also give you a **top 5 ranked list based on your team size and use case**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are the best documentation platforms for product teams: ### Best overall - **Notion** — Best all-around for product specs, meeting notes, roadmaps, and lightweight knowledge bases. Very flexible and easy to adopt. - **Confluence** — Best for larger teams already using Jira/Atlassian. Strong for structured internal docs and cross-team workflows. ### Best for product documentation specifically - **Coda** — Great if you want docs that act like mini-apps with tables, workflows, and status tracking. - **Slab** — Excellent for clean, searchable internal knowledge bases with less clutter than Confluence. - **GitBook** — Best for polished product docs, especially if you also publish customer-facing documentation. ### Best for engineering + product collaboration - **Nuclino** — Lightweight, fast, and simple for shared product/engineering docs. - **Linear** + docs tools — If your team lives in Linear, it works well alongside Notion or GitBook for specs and issue tracking. ### Best for internal knowledge management - **Guru** — Strong for team knowledge that needs to be trusted and surfaced in workflows, especially support/sales/product ops. ### My quick picks - **Startup/product team:** Notion - **Enterprise / Jira-heavy team:** Confluence - **Polished public docs:** GitBook - **Simple internal wiki:** Slab If you want, I can also give you the **best platform by team size** or **a top 3 based on your workflow**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are the best documentation platforms for product teams, depending on what you need: ### Best overall: **Notion** - Great for product specs, meeting notes, roadmaps, and internal wiki docs - Easy to use, flexible, strong templates - Best if your team wants one tool for docs + lightweight project management ### Best for larger teams/enterprises: **Confluence** - Strong permissions, structure, and integrations with Jira - Good for formal product requirements and cross-functional docs - Best if your team already uses Atlassian ### Best for clean internal knowledge bases: **Slab** - Simple, polished UI - Fast search and easy organization - Best for product teams that want docs to stay readable and low-friction ### Best for product + technical docs: **GitBook** - Excellent for structured documentation and developer-facing product docs - Clean publishing, versioning, and collaboration - Best for teams shipping public docs or hybrid product/engineering docs ### Best for collaborative docs and databases: **Coda** - Powerful for combining docs, tables, workflows, and product planning - Great for specs, decision logs, and lightweight ops - Best if you want docs that behave more like an app ### Best for customer-facing help docs: **ReadMe** - Strong for API docs, product help centers, and developer portals - Great analytics and interactive docs - Best if you need public documentation for customers or developers ## Quick picks - **Most product teams:** Notion - **Best structured enterprise wiki:** Confluence - **Best internal docs UX:** Slab - **Best public/product docs:** GitBook - **Best API/help center docs:** ReadMe If you want, I can also give you a **top 5 ranked list by team size** or a **comparison table by features**.
What are the best knowledge base systems for small businesses?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
For most small businesses, the best knowledge base systems are: 1. **Notion** — best all-around for internal docs + SOPs - Easy to set up, flexible, affordable - Great if you want a wiki, process library, and lightweight collaboration 2. **Confluence** — best for growing teams already using Jira/Atlassian - Strong permissions, page structure, search - Better for more formal internal documentation 3. **Zendesk Guide** — best for customer support knowledge bases - Ideal if you already use Zendesk for tickets - Good help-center publishing and self-service support 4. **Help Scout Docs** — best simple customer help center - Very easy to use, clean design, fast setup - Great for small support teams that want minimal complexity 5. **Guru** — best for team knowledge that needs quick answers - Strong browser extension and AI-style retrieval - Good for sales, support, and operations teams 6. **Document360** — best for polished public/private knowledge bases - Powerful editor, analytics, versioning - Good if you care about a professional help center ### Best picks by use case - **Internal wiki:** Notion - **Support help center:** Help Scout Docs or Zendesk Guide - **More structured team wiki:** Confluence - **Fast team answer hub:** Guru - **Most polished KB platform:** Document360 ### My short recommendation If you’re a small business starting from scratch: - **Notion** for internal knowledge - **Help Scout Docs** for customer-facing docs If you want, I can also rank these by **price**, **ease of use**, or **best for 5-person vs 50-person teams**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
For small businesses, the best knowledge base systems are usually: 1. **Notion** — best all-around - Great for internal docs, SOPs, wikis, and lightweight customer help centers - Easy to use, flexible, affordable - Good if you want one tool for docs + tasks + knowledge 2. **Confluence** — best for teams already using Jira/Atlassian - Strong for structured internal knowledge bases - Good permissions, versioning, collaboration - Better for larger or more process-heavy teams 3. **Zendesk Guide** — best for customer support knowledge bases - Best if you already use Zendesk for support tickets - Easy to build help centers and self-service articles - Strong search and support integration 4. **Help Scout Docs** — best simple help center - Clean, easy, fast to launch - Ideal for small support teams that want something low-maintenance - Works well with Help Scout inbox 5. **Guru** — best for internal team knowledge - Great for searchable, in-workflow knowledge sharing - Good for sales, support, and ops teams - Strong browser-based knowledge delivery 6. **Document360** — best dedicated knowledge base software - Built specifically for knowledge bases - Strong analytics, categorization, and publishing tools - Good if you want a polished public-facing KB **My quick picks:** - **Best overall:** Notion - **Best customer help center:** Zendesk Guide - **Best internal wiki:** Confluence or Guru - **Best dedicated KB:** Document360 If you want, I can also give you the **best option based on your budget, team size, and whether it’s for internal docs or customer support**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
For small businesses, the best knowledge base systems are usually the ones that are **easy to set up, searchable, and affordable**. ### Top picks - **Notion** — Best all-around for internal knowledge bases. Flexible, simple, great for small teams. - **Guru** — Best for fast team knowledge sharing. Strong browser/Slack support. - **Confluence** — Best if you already use Jira/Atlassian. Good for structured documentation. - **Zendesk Guide** — Best for customer-facing help centers. Great if you use Zendesk support. - **Help Scout Docs** — Best simple external help center. Clean, easy, and small-business friendly. - **Document360** — Best dedicated knowledge base software. Strong search, analytics, and publishing tools. - **Coda** — Best if you want docs + workflow tools in one place. - **Slab** — Best for polished internal documentation with a clean UI. ### Best by use case - **Internal team wiki:** Notion, Guru, Slab - **Customer help center:** Help Scout Docs, Zendesk Guide, Document360 - **Technical/docs-heavy teams:** Confluence, Document360 ### My practical recommendation - **Small team, low budget:** Notion - **Support team with customers:** Help Scout Docs - **Growing company that wants a true KB:** Document360 - **Already on Jira/Atlassian:** Confluence If you want, I can also give you a **top 5 ranked list by price**, or compare **Notion vs Confluence vs Document360**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
For small businesses, the best knowledge base systems usually balance **easy setup, clean search, AI help, and affordable pricing**. ### Best overall - **Notion** — Best if you want an all-in-one wiki + docs + lightweight project management. - **Guru** — Best for internal team knowledge and fast browser-based access. - **Help Scout Docs** — Best for customer-facing help centers tied to support. - **Zendesk Guide** — Best if you already use Zendesk support. - **Freshdesk Knowledge Base** — Best budget-friendly help center option. - **Document360** — Best for more polished, scalable knowledge bases. - **Confluence** — Best for teams already using Atlassian tools. ### My top picks by use case - **Internal company wiki:** Notion, Guru, Confluence - **Customer support knowledge base:** Help Scout Docs, Zendesk Guide, Freshdesk Knowledge Base, Document360 - **Simple and low-cost:** Notion, Freshdesk Knowledge Base - **Most structured/enterprise-ready:** Document360, Zendesk Guide ### Quick recommendation If you’re a small business and want the easiest starting point: - **Notion** if it’s mostly internal docs - **Help Scout Docs** if it’s customer support content - **Guru** if your team needs answers embedded into daily workflows If you want, I can also give you a **ranked list by price**, **best AI features**, or **best for a specific business type**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
For most small businesses, the best knowledge base systems are: ### Best overall **Zendesk Guide** - Best if you already use Zendesk for support - Strong article management, search, and customer self-service - Good for growing teams ### Best for internal docs + lightweight external help center **Notion** - Very easy to set up - Great for SOPs, onboarding, and team knowledge - Works well if you want one place for docs, wikis, and project notes ### Best for clean, fast, public help centers **Document360** - Built specifically for knowledge bases - Strong search, categories, versioning, and analytics - Good for customer-facing support docs ### Best budget option **HelpScout Docs** - Simple, affordable, and easy to use - Nice for small support teams - Good if you want a polished help center without complexity ### Best if you want an all-in-one workspace **Confluence** - Strong for internal knowledge management - Integrates well with Jira and other Atlassian tools - Better for teams than pure customer support ### Best free/open-source option **BookStack** - Self-hosted and open source - Simple, clean structure - Good if you have technical help available ## Quick picks by use case - **Customer support KB:** Zendesk Guide, Document360, HelpScout Docs - **Internal wiki:** Notion, Confluence, BookStack - **Lowest cost / easiest:** Notion or HelpScout Docs - **Most scalable:** Zendesk Guide or Document360 If you want, I can also give you a **top 5 ranked list by price, ease of use, and features**.
What are the most used knowledge base software solutions?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
Some of the most widely used knowledge base software solutions are: - **Zendesk Guide** — very common for customer support knowledge bases - **Confluence** (Atlassian) — popular for internal documentation and team wikis - **Notion** — widely used for lightweight internal knowledge bases - **Guru** — strong for sales/support team knowledge bases - **Help Scout Docs** — simple, customer-facing help center tool - **Freshdesk Knowledge Base** — often used by support teams - **Document360** — dedicated knowledge base platform for customer support and self-service - **Zoho Desk KB** — part of Zoho’s support suite - **Salesforce Knowledge** — common in larger enterprises already using Salesforce - **Microsoft SharePoint / Viva** — common for internal company knowledge management If you want, I can also rank these by: 1. best for customer support, 2. best for internal company wikis, or 3. best for small businesses.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
Some of the most widely used knowledge base software solutions are: - **Zendesk Guide** — common for customer support knowledge bases - **Confluence** (Atlassian) — very popular for internal documentation and team wikis - **Notion** — widely used for lightweight internal knowledge bases - **Guru** — popular for team knowledge management and support ops - **Document360** — strong dedicated knowledge base platform - **Help Scout Docs** — simple customer help centers - **Freshdesk Knowledge Base** (Freshworks) — often used by support teams - **Intercom Articles** — good for in-app help centers - **Bloomfire** — used for enterprise knowledge sharing - **SharePoint** (Microsoft) — common in larger organizations for internal knowledge repositories If you want, I can also rank these by **best for internal use**, **best for customer support**, or **best overall**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
Some of the most widely used knowledge base software solutions are: - **Zendesk Guide** — very common for customer support KBs - **Confluence** — popular for internal documentation and team knowledge - **Guru** — strong for internal knowledge sharing - **Notion** — widely used for flexible wikis and KBs - **Freshdesk Knowledge Base** — common in support teams - **Help Scout Docs** — simple customer-facing help center - **Document360** — dedicated KB platform for SaaS/support - **Atlassian Jira Service Management Knowledge Base** — often paired with Confluence - **Zoho Desk Knowledge Base** — used by small and mid-sized businesses - **Intercom Articles** — common for in-app help centers If you want, I can also give you: 1. the **best options by use case** (internal wiki vs customer support), or 2. a **comparison table** of pricing, ease of use, and features.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
The most widely used knowledge base software solutions include: - **Zendesk Guide** — very common for customer support knowledge bases - **Confluence** — popular for internal team documentation and wikis - **Notion** — widely used for lightweight internal knowledge bases - **Guru** — strong for sales/support team knowledge management - **Freshdesk Knowledge Base** — common in support stacks - **Document360** — dedicated knowledge base platform, popular for both internal and external docs - **Help Scout Docs** — simple and popular for customer-facing help centers - **Intercom Articles** — often used alongside chat/support - **Salesforce Knowledge** — common in enterprise environments - **SharePoint** — widely used in larger organizations for internal knowledge bases If you want, I can also give you: 1. the **best knowledge base software for small businesses**, 2. the **best enterprise options**, or 3. a **comparison table by features and price**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
Some of the most widely used knowledge base software solutions are: - **Zendesk Guide** — very common for customer support self-service portals. - **Confluence** by Atlassian — popular for internal documentation and team wikis. - **Notion** — widely used for lightweight internal knowledge bases and docs. - **Freshdesk Knowledge Base** — often used by support teams already on Freshdesk. - **Guru** — strong for internal knowledge management and team knowledge sharing. - **Document360** — built specifically for public/private knowledge bases. - **Help Scout Docs** — simple, customer-facing help centers. - **Helpjuice** — enterprise-focused knowledge base software. - **HubSpot Knowledge Base** — good for companies already using HubSpot. - **Zoho Desk Knowledge Base** — common in Zoho-based support stacks. If you want, I can also give you: 1. the **best knowledge base tools for customer support**, 2. the **best for internal company wiki/docs**, or 3. a **comparison table by price and features**.
What are the best knowledge base software choices overall?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are the best knowledge base software choices overall, by reputation and real-world use: 1. **Zendesk Guide** — best overall for customer support teams - Strong article management, search, workflows, and support integrations - Best if you already use Zendesk for tickets 2. **Document360** — best dedicated knowledge base platform - Built specifically for public/private knowledge bases - Good analytics, versioning, and multi-product support 3. **Intercom Articles** — best for in-app customer self-service - Excellent if you want help docs tightly tied to chat/support - Great UX, especially for SaaS products 4. **Help Scout Docs** — best simple option for small teams - Clean, easy to set up, and not overcomplicated - Good for straightforward support centers 5. **Confluence** — best for internal knowledge bases - Strong for team wikis, SOPs, and internal documentation - Especially good if your company already uses Atlassian tools 6. **Notion** — best lightweight all-in-one workspace KB - Very flexible and fast to publish internally or publicly - Great for teams that want docs + collaboration in one place 7. **Guru** — best for searchable team knowledge - Great for internal knowledge delivery inside Slack/Chrome - Better for “find answers fast” than polished public docs 8. **GitBook** — best for developer documentation / technical KBs - Clean, modern docs experience - Strong for product docs and API references **Quick picks:** - **Best overall:** Zendesk Guide - **Best dedicated KB:** Document360 - **Best internal wiki:** Confluence - **Best simple/easy:** Help Scout Docs - **Best for SaaS in-app help:** Intercom Articles If you want, I can also rank these for **small business**, **enterprise**, or **internal wiki vs customer help center**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
The best knowledge base software overall depends on whether you want **internal docs**, **customer help center**, or **AI/search-first knowledge**. My top picks: ### Best overall - **Notion** — best all-around for teams that want docs, wikis, tasks, and databases in one place. - **Confluence** — best for larger companies, especially if you already use Jira/Atlassian. - **Zendesk Guide** — best for customer support knowledge bases tied to a help desk. ### Best for public help centers - **Intercom Articles** — great if your support is chat-first and you want strong in-app help. - **Help Scout Docs** — simple, clean, and easy to manage. ### Best for internal company wiki - **Notion** - **Confluence** - **Guru** — strong for searchable team knowledge and browser-based workflows. ### Best for AI-powered knowledge - **Guru** - **Sinequa** (enterprise search/knowledge) - **Glean** — excellent if you want company-wide search across tools. ### Best open-source / self-hosted - **BookStack** — easy to use, great for structured documentation. - **MediaWiki** — powerful, but more technical. - **DokuWiki** — lightweight and simple. ### Best for product documentation - **GitBook** — polished docs for software teams. - **ReadMe** — best for API docs and developer portals. ## Quick picks - **Best overall:** Notion - **Best enterprise:** Confluence - **Best customer support KB:** Zendesk Guide - **Best simple docs:** Help Scout Docs - **Best developer docs:** GitBook / ReadMe - **Best internal search:** Guru / Glean If you want, I can also give you the **best knowledge base software for small businesses, startups, or enterprise** specifically.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
Best overall: **Confluence** by Atlassian. It’s the strongest all-around choice for teams that want a serious knowledge base with good permissions, search, collaboration, and integrations. For the best alternatives by use case: - **Notion** — best for flexible internal docs and lightweight KBs - **Zendesk Guide** — best for customer support knowledge bases - **Document360** — best dedicated knowledge base software - **Guru** — best for internal team knowledge and quick answers - **Help Scout Docs** — best simple customer-facing help center - **Slab** — best for clean internal documentation If you want a standalone recommendation: - **Best overall:** Confluence - **Best easiest:** Notion - **Best customer support KB:** Zendesk Guide - **Best dedicated KB product:** Document360 If you want a simple summary: **Confluence + Notion + Document360** are the top three to compare first.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
Best overall knowledge base software depends on whether you mean **internal wiki** or **customer help center**. My top picks: ### Best overall 1. **Notion** — best all-around for teams that want a flexible, easy-to-use internal knowledge base. 2. **Guru** — best for fast, in-workflow team knowledge with strong browser/Slack integrations. 3. **Zendesk Guide** — best for customer support knowledge bases, especially if you already use Zendesk. 4. **Confluence** — best for large teams needing structured documentation and permissions. 5. **Help Scout Docs** — best simple, polished customer-facing help center. ### Best by use case - **Internal wiki:** Notion, Confluence, Guru - **Customer help center:** Zendesk Guide, Help Scout Docs, Document360 - **Engineering docs:** Confluence, GitBook, Notion - **SaaS support KB:** Help Scout Docs, Zendesk Guide, Intercom Articles - **Small teams / easy setup:** Notion, Help Scout Docs, Slab ### My short recommendation - **Best overall for most teams:** **Notion** - **Best for support teams:** **Zendesk Guide** - **Best for company-wide knowledge capture:** **Guru** - **Best for enterprise documentation:** **Confluence** If you want, I can also give you a **top 10 comparison table** with pricing, strengths, and who each one is best for.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are the best knowledge base software choices overall: ### Best overall - **Notion** — best all-around for internal knowledge bases, docs, and lightweight wikis. - **Confluence** — best for larger teams already using Atlassian/Jira. ### Best for customer support knowledge bases - **Zendesk Guide** — best if you already use Zendesk. - **Document360** — strong dedicated KB tool with good article management and search. - **Help Scout Docs** — simple, polished, great for small teams. ### Best for internal team wikis - **Slab** — clean UI, easy adoption, strong internal knowledge sharing. - **Guru** — best for searchable, in-workflow knowledge and sales/support teams. - **Nuclino** — fast, lightweight, easy to use. ### Best for open-source / self-hosted - **BookStack** — one of the easiest self-hosted wiki/KBase options. - **Wiki.js** — more modern, flexible, developer-friendly. - **DokuWiki** — old-school but reliable and simple. ### Best for AI-powered knowledge management - **Guru** — strong AI-assisted knowledge surfacing. - **Notion AI** — good if your docs already live in Notion. - **Document360** — increasingly strong AI search and article workflows. ## Quick picks - **Startup/internal docs:** Notion - **Enterprise wiki:** Confluence - **Support center:** Zendesk Guide or Document360 - **Small team simplicity:** Help Scout Docs or Slab - **Self-hosted:** BookStack If you want, I can also rank these by **price**, **ease of use**, or **best for customer-facing vs internal**.

All 72 prompts run for Panviva

LBA — Latent Brand Association (6)

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

Authority — LLM Authority (50)

  • 1 What are the best knowledge base tools for customer support teams? discovery
  • 2 What knowledge base software works well for remote teams? discovery
  • 3 What are the best knowledge base platforms for startups? discovery
  • 4 Which knowledge base software is best for growing businesses? discovery
  • 5 What are the best knowledge base tools for IT teams? discovery
  • 6 What knowledge base software is best for HR policies and onboarding? discovery
  • 7 What are the best knowledge base platforms for employee onboarding? discovery
  • 8 What are the best knowledge base tools for product documentation? discovery
  • 9 What knowledge base software is best for publishing FAQs? discovery
  • 10 What are the best knowledge base options for reducing support tickets? discovery
  • 11 What knowledge base software is best for multi-language support? discovery
  • 12 What are the best knowledge base tools for SaaS customer self-service? discovery
  • 13 What are the best knowledge base platforms for internal wikis? discovery
  • 14 What knowledge base software is best for mobile access? discovery
  • 15 What are the best knowledge base tools with advanced search? discovery
  • 16 What knowledge base software is best for customer portals? discovery
  • 17 What are the best knowledge base platforms for e-commerce support? discovery
  • 18 What knowledge base software is best for regulated industries? discovery
  • 19 What are the best knowledge base tools for growing support libraries? discovery
  • 20 What knowledge base software is best for team collaboration? discovery
  • 21 What are the best alternatives to an enterprise knowledge base platform? comparison
  • 22 Which knowledge base software alternatives are better for small teams? comparison
  • 23 What are the best alternatives to a self-service help center platform? comparison
  • 24 What knowledge base software alternatives are easier to set up? comparison
  • 25 What are the best alternatives to an internal wiki tool? comparison
  • 26 Which knowledge base platforms are better than a basic documentation tool? comparison
  • 27 What are the best alternatives for teams needing better search in a knowledge base? comparison
  • 28 What knowledge base options are better for customer support than a generic CMS? comparison
  • 29 What are the best alternatives to a simple FAQ page builder? comparison
  • 30 Which knowledge base software alternatives are best for scaling content? comparison
  • 31 How do I organize a large knowledge base with many articles? problem
  • 32 How do I reduce support tickets with a knowledge base? problem
  • 33 How do I make FAQs easy to search and find? problem
  • 34 How do I build a help center for customer self-service? problem
  • 35 How do I create internal documentation that employees will use? problem
  • 36 How do I keep product documentation up to date? problem
  • 37 How do I let users find answers without contacting support? problem
  • 38 How do I improve knowledge base search results? problem
  • 39 How do I create a knowledge base for a SaaS product? problem
  • 40 How do I publish internal policies in one place? problem
  • 41 How much does knowledge base software cost? transactional
  • 42 Is there free knowledge base software? transactional
  • 43 What is the cheapest knowledge base software? transactional
  • 44 What knowledge base software has a free plan? transactional
  • 45 What knowledge base software offers pricing for small teams? transactional
  • 46 What are the best value knowledge base tools? transactional
  • 47 What knowledge base software is worth the price? transactional
  • 48 How much is a help center platform per month? transactional
  • 49 What are the pricing tiers for knowledge base software? transactional
  • 50 Which knowledge base software is best for a limited budget? transactional

TOM — Top of Mind (15)

  • 1 What are the best knowledge base software options for a company? 320/mo
  • 2 What are the top knowledge base software tools for teams?
  • 3 What is the most recommended knowledge base software?
  • 4 What are popular knowledge base software platforms?
  • 5 Which knowledge base software is best for businesses?
  • 6 What are the best customer self-service knowledge base tools?
  • 7 What are the best internal knowledge base software options? 210/mo
  • 8 Which knowledge base software is easiest to use?
  • 9 What are the best knowledge base platforms for support teams?
  • 10 What are the best knowledge base tools for SaaS companies?
  • 11 What are the best searchable help center software options? 210/mo
  • 12 What are the best documentation platforms for product teams? 390/mo
  • 13 What are the best knowledge base systems for small businesses?
  • 14 What are the most used knowledge base software solutions?
  • 15 What are the best knowledge base software choices overall?