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Common Questions

Dubble vs Lessonly (Seismic Learning): FAQ

Comparing Capabilities

Q: Can Dubble be used for employee training like Lessonly?

A: Not effectively. Dubble generates screenshot-based step guides for documenting browser workflows—it has no lesson builder, quizzes, learning paths, certifications, or progress tracking. Lessonly (Seismic Learning) is purpose-built for structured training with coaching exercises and formal learning programs. If your goal is repeatable, measurable employee training, Dubble lacks the necessary features.

Q: Can Lessonly replace Dubble for process documentation?

A: No. Lessonly is a training delivery platform, not a documentation creation tool. It cannot auto-capture browser workflows or generate step-by-step screenshot guides the way Dubble does. You can embed videos and documents into Lessonly lessons, but there is no mechanism for automatically generating SOPs from screen actions. The two tools solve different problems and neither can fully replace the other.

Q: Does either tool support multi-tenant portals for delivering content to multiple clients?

A: Neither Dubble nor Lessonly (Seismic Learning) supports multi-tenant portal delivery. Dubble creates shareable guides for internal use, and Lessonly delivers training to internal teams only. Neither tool allows you to spin up separate branded portals for different client organizations from a single knowledge base—a critical gap for consultancies, implementation partners, or agencies serving multiple enterprise customers.

Q: Which tool has better enterprise security features?

A: Lessonly (Seismic Learning) is significantly stronger on enterprise security. It offers SOC 2 certification, SAML/OAuth/Okta SSO, role-based access control, audit logs, and an enterprise SLA through the Seismic platform. Dubble is GDPR-compliant but lacks SSO, SOC 2, audit logs, and role-based permissions entirely—making it unsuitable for enterprise procurement processes or regulated industries.

Making the Right Choice

Q: Is there a better alternative to both Dubble and Lessonly (Seismic Learning)?

A: Yes—Docsie addresses the core limitations of both tools in a single platform. Where Dubble lacks training features and enterprise security, and Lessonly lacks documentation creation, video-to-docs conversion, and multi-tenant delivery, Docsie provides all six capabilities through its CONVERT → MANAGE → DELIVER → LEARN → AUTOMATE → MONITOR framework. Docsie converts any video or document into structured knowledge bases, delivers them through multi-tenant branded portals, and includes a built-in LMS with certifications—at transparent pricing starting at $199/month with a free trial.

Q: How do Dubble and Lessonly compare on pricing transparency?

A: Dubble is fully transparent with self-serve pricing at $0 (free, 25 guides), $18/user/month (Pro), or $12/user/month for teams of five or more. Lessonly (Seismic Learning) uses custom enterprise-only pricing with no published rates—reported ranges start around $300–$500/month, but actual costs require an enterprise sales engagement. Teams wanting predictable, self-serve pricing will find Dubble far more accessible, while Lessonly suits organizations already comfortable with enterprise procurement cycles.

Deep Dive

How Dubble and Lessonly (Seismic Learning) Compare in Detail

Process Documentation vs. Training Delivery

Dubble and Lessonly (Seismic Learning) serve fundamentally different purposes. Dubble is a lightweight process documentation tool—its Chrome extension captures browser actions and auto-generates screenshot guides for internal SOPs. It produces clean, step-by-step outputs but has no training delivery, assessment, or knowledge management layer. Lessonly is a training delivery platform with a drag-and-drop lesson builder, learning paths, and certifications designed for onboarding sales and customer-facing teams. Neither tool covers both use cases—teams frequently end up running two separate systems to handle documentation creation and training delivery simultaneously.

Learning & Training Capabilities

Lessonly (Seismic Learning) leads significantly in this category. Its lesson builder supports interactive content, embedded videos, quizzes, practice exercises with coaching scorecards, and formal certification programs with structured learning paths. These features are purpose-built for repeatable team onboarding. Dubble has no training features whatsoever—it creates process guides, not courses. There are no quizzes, learning paths, completion tracking, or certifications. Teams using Dubble for training must export guides and manage learning entirely outside the tool, adding manual overhead to every onboarding or skills development program.

Enterprise Readiness & Security

Lessonly (Seismic Learning) is the clear enterprise choice between the two. It offers SOC 2 certification, SAML/OAuth/Okta SSO, role-based access control, audit logs, and a dedicated enterprise SLA backed by Seismic's infrastructure. Dubble lacks every major enterprise security feature—no SSO, no SOC 2, no audit logs, no role-based permissions, and no uptime SLA. Dubble is GDPR-compliant, but that alone is insufficient for regulated industries or companies with strict security review requirements. Organizations in financial services, healthcare, or government cannot deploy Dubble at scale, while Lessonly's enterprise tier meets standard procurement requirements.

Scalability, Integrations & Multilingual Support

Neither tool performs well for global or multi-client documentation delivery. Dubble supports basic integrations with Notion, Confluence, and Slack but has no API, no multi-language support, no custom domains, and no multi-tenant delivery. Lessonly integrates deeply with Salesforce, HubSpot, Zoom, and Workday—but its multilingual support is limited and lacks auto-translation at scale. Neither tool offers multi-tenant portals for delivering content to multiple client organizations. For companies scaling documentation or training across regions or multiple enterprise customers, both tools hit hard limitations that require supplementary platforms or costly workarounds.

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