Common Questions
Q: Can Guru and Zendesk Guide be used together?
A: Yes — Guru actually lists Zendesk as a native integration. Support agents can use Guru's browser extension or Knowledge Agent to surface verified internal answers while working inside Zendesk, then use those answers to respond to tickets or populate Zendesk Guide articles. This is a common setup in larger support teams that need both an internal knowledge layer (Guru) and a customer-facing help center (Zendesk Guide). However, you're paying for two expensive platforms simultaneously.
Q: Is Zendesk Guide available without buying the full Zendesk Suite?
A: No. Zendesk Guide is not sold as a standalone product. It is bundled into every Zendesk Suite plan, starting at $55 per agent per month. If you only need a knowledge base or help center and don't need ticketing, you are paying for significantly more than you require. Teams that only need documentation should evaluate purpose-built documentation platforms rather than Zendesk's bundled suite.
Q: Does Guru support external customer-facing documentation?
A: Guru is primarily designed for internal team knowledge management, not external customer delivery. It lacks custom domains, white-label branding, and multi-tenant portal capabilities that are needed for professional customer-facing documentation. While Guru's embeddable widget can surface content in some external contexts, it is not architected for the kind of client-specific branded documentation portals that implementation partners and SaaS companies typically need.
Q: Which tool has better AI features — Guru or Zendesk Guide?
A: It depends on your use case. Guru's Knowledge Agents (Chat, Research, MCP Server) are best for internal Q&A — they surface verified answers from your own knowledge base with AI. Zendesk Guide's AI, trained on 18 billion customer interactions, is superior for customer support scenarios, with Autonomous AI Agents capable of resolving tickets end-to-end. For internal knowledge intelligence, Guru leads. For customer support automation, Zendesk Guide leads by a significant margin.
Q: Is there a better alternative to both Guru and Zendesk Guide?
A: Yes — Docsie addresses the gaps that both tools share. Neither Guru nor Zendesk Guide can convert training videos into structured documentation, support multi-tenant client portals, or include a built-in LMS with certifications. Docsie does all of this in one platform starting at $199/month, without per-seat pricing inflation or mandatory bundled features. For implementation partners, consultancies, and teams managing documentation for multiple clients simultaneously, Docsie provides a complete CONVERT → MANAGE → DELIVER → LEARN → AUTOMATE → MONITOR workflow that neither Guru nor Zendesk Guide can match.
Q: Which tool is better for a small team on a budget?
A: Neither tool is budget-friendly for small teams. Guru imposes a 10-seat minimum that creates a $250/month floor even if you only need three users. Zendesk Guide requires purchasing the full Zendesk Suite at $55/agent/month minimum, which adds up quickly for teams with many agents. Docsie's Premium plan at $199/month supports up to 15 users with no per-seat inflation and includes a free plan with real AI credits and no credit card required — making it the most accessible option for growing teams.
Deep Dive
Guru's AI is built around internal knowledge accuracy — Knowledge Agents (Chat, Research, and MCP Server modes) surface verified answers from your own knowledge base, and the platform uses AI to flag stale content and suggest updates. Zendesk Guide's AI is trained on 18 billion customer interactions, giving it unmatched intent detection for support scenarios. Its Autonomous AI Agents can resolve customer tickets end-to-end without human involvement. Both have powerful AI, but for entirely different audiences — Guru for internal teams, Zendesk for customer support workflows. Neither offers video-to-docs AI conversion.
Guru's standout differentiator is its expert verification workflow system. Content can be assigned to subject-matter experts who receive periodic review reminders, ensuring internal knowledge doesn't drift into inaccuracy over time. Zendesk Guide offers approval workflows and team publishing controls — content goes through structured review before being published to customers. Both platforms take content governance seriously, but with different emphases. Guru optimizes for internal knowledge trust and accuracy; Zendesk optimizes for controlled, customer-facing publishing. Neither tool offers the multi-step, AI-assisted human-in-the-loop review cycles available in more advanced documentation platforms.
The most fundamental difference between Guru and Zendesk Guide is their target audience. Guru is designed exclusively for internal teams — sales reps, support agents, and employees who need verified answers fast while working in other apps. It surfaces knowledge in Slack, inside browsers, and within Salesforce. Zendesk Guide is purpose-built for external customer self-service — it creates branded help centers where end-users search for answers and deflect support tickets. Neither platform supports multi-tenant portals where one knowledge base powers separate, branded documentation experiences for multiple distinct clients or customer organizations.
Guru's pricing starts at $25/seat/month with a mandatory 10-seat minimum, creating a $250/month floor even for small teams. Advanced AI credits, Knowledge Agents, and SAML SSO are gated behind Builder and Enterprise tiers at custom pricing. Zendesk Guide is not sold independently — you must purchase the Zendesk Suite starting at $55/agent/month, rising to $249/agent/month for Enterprise Plus. Autonomous AI Agents add another $50/agent/month on top. For teams that only need documentation capability, both tools force significant spend on features outside their documentation needs. Guru bundles ticketing-adjacent features; Zendesk bundles full ticketing infrastructure whether you need it or not.
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