Common Questions
Q: Can Clueso and Tettra work together as a combined documentation stack?
A: Technically, you could use Clueso to produce video tutorials for customers and Tettra to manage internal team knowledge — since they serve completely different audiences. However, this means maintaining two separate platforms, two content workflows, and two pricing contracts. Teams that grow past a basic setup typically find this fragmentation costly and hard to govern. A unified platform like Docsie handles both internal and external documentation in one system.
Q: Does Tettra support any video content or multimedia documentation?
A: No. Tettra has no video capability whatsoever — it cannot record, import, process, or display video content in any meaningful way. It is a text-based knowledge base tool designed around written articles. If your team needs to document processes using video tutorials or convert existing training recordings into searchable content, you will need a different platform entirely.
Q: Does Clueso support internal knowledge management like Tettra?
A: Clueso includes a basic knowledge base publishing feature for sharing video tutorials and articles externally, but it is not a knowledge management system. It has no version control, no content verification, no governance workflows, and no Slack integration for internal Q&A. It is a video creation and publishing tool, not a knowledge management platform. Teams needing systematic internal knowledge sharing should look beyond Clueso.
Q: Which tool has better enterprise security compliance?
A: Clueso holds a stronger compliance posture with SOC 2 Type II and ISO 27001 certifications alongside GDPR, making it more suitable for enterprise buyers in regulated industries. Tettra is only GDPR-compliant with no SOC 2 certification, which is a meaningful barrier for procurement in healthcare, finance, or government. However, neither tool offers audit logs, data residency, or air-gap deployment options that the most demanding enterprise environments require.
Q: Is there a better alternative to both Clueso and Tettra?
A: Yes — Docsie is designed to cover the gaps both tools leave open. Clueso excels at video creation but cannot manage documentation at scale or serve multiple clients. Tettra is a solid internal wiki but cannot handle video, external delivery, or multilingual content. Docsie converts any video type into structured documentation, delivers through multi-tenant branded portals, supports 100+ languages, includes a built-in LMS with certifications, and provides enterprise compliance with SOC 2, SSO, and real-time monitoring — serving both the internal and external documentation needs that Clueso and Tettra split between them.
Q: How does pricing compare between Clueso and Tettra at team scale?
A: Tettra is significantly more affordable for small and mid-size teams, starting at $4/user/month with a free tier for up to 10 users. Clueso starts at $120/month ($1,440/year minimum) with strict export minute limits that don't roll over, making it expensive relative to its output volume. For a team of 20 people, Tettra's Scaling plan runs $160/month while Clueso's Growth plan runs $200/month — but they serve entirely different needs, so direct price comparison matters less than use-case fit.
Deep Dive
An in-depth look at how these two tools differ across the dimensions that matter most to enterprise documentation buyers — from content creation and knowledge management to enterprise readiness and delivery models.
Clueso and Tettra have almost no overlap in how content is created. Clueso takes screen recordings and transforms them into polished video tutorials with AI voiceovers, auto-zoom, cursor smoothing, and branded styling — plus auto-generating a step-by-step written article from the same recording. Tettra relies on a web-based editor with Google Docs and Notion imports for text-based knowledge articles. If your team needs to produce visual product walkthroughs or tutorial videos, Clueso is purpose-built for that. If you need a structured internal text wiki, Tettra is the better fit. Neither tool can convert existing training videos or real-world footage into documentation.
The audience each tool serves is fundamentally different. Clueso is designed for customer-facing content — SaaS onboarding videos, product tutorials, and customer education materials published via a knowledge base or embedded widget. Tettra is strictly internal — it serves employees, not customers, and has no mechanism for external delivery, custom domains, or client portals. Neither tool supports multi-tenant delivery, meaning teams managing documentation for multiple clients must resort to manual duplication or separate accounts. Enterprise teams that need to deliver branded documentation to external customers or multiple clients will find both tools insufficient for that use case.
Tettra edges ahead on knowledge management features thanks to its content verification system, which flags articles that may be outdated and prompts subject matter experts to review them. It also includes basic page history and role-based access controls. Clueso, as primarily a video creation tool, lacks version control, approval workflows, content reuse, and governance features entirely. Neither tool supports advanced documentation management capabilities like diff-based version comparison, rollback, content snippets, or multi-step approval workflows. For teams that need systematic governance over a growing knowledge base, both tools leave significant gaps that require workarounds or supplementary platforms.
Clueso carries a stronger compliance posture with SOC 2 Type II and ISO 27001 certifications alongside GDPR compliance, making it suitable for security-conscious SaaS buyers. However, it lacks SSO, role-based access control, audit logs, and API access — all standard enterprise requirements. Tettra offers SAML SSO and custom branding on its Professional plan ($12/user/month) and role-based access control across tiers, but holds no SOC 2 certification, which blocks adoption in regulated industries. Neither tool offers multi-tenant architecture, data residency options, air-gap deployment, or compliance monitoring — capabilities increasingly required by enterprise procurement teams in financial services, healthcare, and government sectors.
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