Skip to content

Common Questions

360Learning vs Slite: FAQ

Pricing & Plans

Q: Does 360Learning have a free plan?

A: No. 360Learning does not offer a free plan. It provides a 30-day free trial for evaluation, after which teams must subscribe to the Team plan at $8/user/month (for up to 100 users) or negotiate Business plan pricing for larger organizations. There is no permanently free tier, which makes it less accessible for small teams or early-stage evaluation.

Q: What do you get on Slite's free plan, and is it enough?

A: Slite's free plan includes up to 50 documents, basic AI search, and core integrations like Slack and Google Drive. For very small teams or solo users, it can be useful for initial exploration, but the 50-document cap is quickly hit in real usage. Growing teams will need the Standard plan at $8/member/month for unlimited docs and full Ask AI access.

Q: At what team size does 360Learning pricing become unpredictable?

A: Once a team exceeds 100 users, 360Learning moves to custom Business pricing with no published rates. This means teams of 100+ must contact sales, negotiate contracts, and lose the transparency of the $8/user/month Team plan. For organizations trying to plan software budgets a year in advance, this creates meaningful cost uncertainty at a relatively modest team size.

Q: What features does Slite lock behind its Premium plan at $12.50/member/month?

A: Slite's Premium plan ($12.50/member/month) unlocks SAML SSO, advanced permissions, API access, and priority support. These are features that many mid-sized organizations require as a baseline — particularly SSO for security compliance. Locking API access behind this tier also means any integration or automation workflows require the higher-priced plan, adding per-seat cost for every team member.

Choosing the Right Tool

Q: Can 360Learning or Slite deliver documentation to external customers or multiple clients?

A: Neither tool supports customer-facing documentation delivery. 360Learning is an internal LMS for employee training, and Slite is an internal knowledge base for team documentation. Neither offers custom-branded external portals, multi-tenant delivery, or the ability to publish different content to different client organizations from one platform. If customer-facing or multi-client documentation delivery is a requirement, both tools are architectural dead ends.

Q: Is there a better alternative to both 360Learning and Slite?

A: Yes — Docsie addresses the core limitations of both tools simultaneously. Where 360Learning covers internal LMS and Slite covers internal wikis, Docsie provides a complete platform that converts any video or document into structured knowledge, delivers through unlimited multi-tenant branded portals to customers and partners, includes a built-in LMS with certifications, supports 100+ languages with auto-translation, and runs autonomous documentation workflows — all at a predictable workspace price rather than a per-seat model. Teams that need both training and knowledge delivery capabilities no longer need to pay for two separate tools.

Deep Dive

How 360Learning and Slite Compare in Detail

An in-depth analysis of value for money, scalability costs, and hidden limitations across both tools' pricing tiers.

Value for Money

360Learning's $8/user/month Team plan is competitive for what it delivers — a full collaborative LMS with SCORM support, AI course creation, HR integrations, and mobile access. For internal L&D teams under 100 users, it represents solid value. Slite's Standard plan at $8/member/month is similarly priced and provides unlimited docs plus Ask AI Q&A, making it reasonable for internal knowledge sharing. However, both tools charge the same entry price for fundamentally different capabilities, and neither delivers customer-facing documentation, multi-tenant portals, or video-to-documentation conversion — meaning buyers often need to pay for additional tools alongside either platform.

Scalability Costs

360Learning's per-user model becomes problematic at scale. Once you exceed 100 users, pricing moves to custom (Business) with no published rates, making budget planning difficult. A team of 250 users could easily face negotiations rather than predictable invoices. Slite's per-member model scales more predictably — Standard at $8 and Premium at $12.50 per member are published — but enterprise features like audit logs and dedicated support require a custom Enterprise contract. Both tools punish growth with either opaque pricing or feature gates that force upgrades, creating cost uncertainty as organizations scale their teams.

Hidden Costs & Limitations

With 360Learning, the most significant hidden cost is what the platform doesn't do — it has no knowledge base, no customer portal, and no documentation management. Teams frequently end up paying for a separate wiki or docs platform alongside 360Learning. With Slite, the hidden limitation is its internal-only architecture; companies that eventually need to publish documentation externally, support multiple clients, or deliver training content must migrate entirely to a different platform. Both tools also gate critical enterprise features (SSO, API, advanced analytics) behind higher tiers, meaning the sticker price understates the real cost for teams needing those capabilities from day one.

Ready to Transform Your Documentation?

Start creating professional documentation that your users will love