Common Questions
Q: Can Lessonly replace a knowledge base like Freshdesk's?
A: No. Lessonly (Seismic Learning) is a training-only platform with no customer-facing knowledge base, help center, or documentation portal capability. It is designed exclusively for internal team training. Freshdesk's knowledge base serves customer-facing support documentation. The two tools do not overlap — you would need both if you require both internal training and external support documentation.
Q: Does Freshdesk include LMS or training course features?
A: No. Freshdesk has no LMS, course builder, quizzes, certifications, or learning path features. It is a help desk platform with a bundled knowledge base for customer support. If your team needs structured training with measurable outcomes and certifications, Lessonly (or a dedicated LMS like Docsie) is required, as Freshdesk does not serve that use case.
Q: Which tool supports multiple languages better?
A: Freshdesk edges ahead here with a dedicated multi-language knowledge base feature available on its Pro plan ($49/agent/month), supporting multiple language versions of KB articles. Lessonly has very limited multi-language support and no auto-translation capability. Neither platform offers automated translation — Freshdesk requires manual content creation per language, and Lessonly's language support is minimal for training content at global scale.
Q: Can either tool deliver documentation or training to multiple clients simultaneously?
A: Neither Freshdesk nor Lessonly supports true multi-tenant delivery. Freshdesk offers separate product portals on Pro+ plans, but these are distinct portal instances — not a single source of truth delivering to many clients. Lessonly is strictly an internal training tool with no external client delivery model. Platforms like Docsie are purpose-built for multi-tenant documentation and training delivery at scale.
Q: Is there a better alternative to both Freshdesk Knowledge Base and Lessonly (Seismic Learning)?
A: Yes — Docsie addresses the core limitations of both platforms in one place. Freshdesk lacks training and LMS capabilities; Lessonly lacks documentation and customer-facing portals. Docsie combines a purpose-built knowledge base, built-in LMS with certifications, multi-tenant portal delivery for multiple clients, AI-powered video-to-docs conversion, and 100+ language auto-translation. For teams that need documentation and training managed together — especially those serving multiple clients — Docsie eliminates the need for both tools while offering capabilities neither provides.
Q: How does pricing compare between Freshdesk and Lessonly?
A: Freshdesk uses transparent per-agent monthly pricing starting at $0 (free, 2 agents), $15/agent on Growth, $49/agent on Pro, and $79/agent on Enterprise. Lessonly uses custom enterprise pricing only with no self-serve option and no free plan — reported costs start around $300-500+/month with a sales-led procurement process. Freshdesk is significantly more accessible for small and mid-sized teams, while Lessonly's pricing opacity and demo-only model add friction for buyers evaluating the platform independently.
Deep Dive
Freshdesk includes a built-in knowledge base tightly coupled to its ticketing system, supporting categorized articles, a customer-facing portal, SEO tools, and basic WYSIWYG editing. It works well for support teams that need a help center alongside ticket management. Lessonly has no knowledge base functionality at all — it is purely a training delivery platform. Neither tool supports structured documentation workflows with version inheritance, content snippets, or multi-tenant delivery. Teams that need a purpose-built, standalone documentation platform with enterprise content management will quickly find both tools lacking.
Lessonly is the clear winner in this category, offering drag-and-drop lesson builders, structured learning paths, practice exercises with coaching scorecards, quizzes, and certifications — all purpose-built for sales and customer success team enablement. Freshdesk has no LMS, training course builder, or certification capability whatsoever. If your primary need is structured internal training with measurable outcomes and coaching feedback, Lessonly delivers what Freshdesk cannot. However, Lessonly's training is limited to internal teams only; it cannot deliver training courses to external clients or customers through branded portals.
Both platforms offer limited AI compared to modern documentation tools. Freshdesk includes Freddy AI, which powers a chatbot on the customer portal to surface KB articles and provides basic AI-assisted content suggestions. Seismic AI within Lessonly focuses on content recommendations and surfacing relevant training materials for sales reps. Neither platform offers video-to-documentation conversion, auto-translation, autonomous agents, or agentic AI search. Both tools' AI features are supplementary to their core workflows rather than foundational capabilities that transform how documentation or training content is created and maintained at scale.
Freshdesk offers solid enterprise features at higher tiers — audit logs, IP whitelisting, sandbox environments, SAML SSO, and SOC 2 compliance. Its multi-product portals allow separate KB portals per product line but do not support true one-to-many multi-tenant architecture for serving multiple clients from one source. Lessonly offers enterprise SSO, audit logs, and SOC 2 but lacks data residency options and has no multi-tenant delivery model. Neither platform supports delivering branded documentation or training to external clients at scale, making them unsuitable for consultancies, implementation partners, or organizations that need to manage knowledge across many customer organizations simultaneously.
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