Common Questions
Q: Does Lessonly (Seismic Learning) have a free plan or public pricing?
A: No. Lessonly (now Seismic Learning) offers no free plan and no publicly listed pricing. All pricing requires contacting their sales team, and access starts with a demo. Reported market pricing suggests costs in the $300–500+/month range, but actual contracts vary significantly based on learner count and feature requirements.
Q: Why did Notion remove the AI add-on and what does that mean for pricing?
A: In May 2025, Notion discontinued its standalone AI add-on and moved full AI exclusively into the Business tier ($20/user/month). Plus plan users now receive only 20 AI trial responses as a one-time sample. This effectively doubled the per-seat cost for any team that relied on AI features — a 50-person team now pays $1,000/month instead of $500/month for AI access. Legacy add-on subscribers were grandfathered temporarily.
Q: How does Notion's per-seat pricing compare to Lessonly at scale?
A: At 100 users, Notion Business runs $2,000/month just for internal workspace access with no external publishing or LMS capability. Lessonly's cost at that scale is determined entirely by contract negotiation, but both models share the same fundamental problem: costs inflate linearly with headcount. Neither offers a workspace-based or credit-based model that rewards operational efficiency.
Q: Can Lessonly or Notion replace each other for documentation and training?
A: No — they serve fundamentally different purposes. Lessonly is a training delivery platform focused on structured lessons, practice exercises, and certifications for internal teams. Notion is an all-in-one internal workspace for docs, tasks, and databases with no training or LMS features. Teams typically need both, which significantly increases total cost of ownership.
Q: Is there a better alternative to both Lessonly (Seismic Learning) and Notion?
A: Yes — Docsie addresses the primary gaps in both platforms. Unlike Lessonly, Docsie delivers customer-facing knowledge portals with multi-tenant branding, custom domains, and 100+ language auto-translation. Unlike Notion, Docsie includes a built-in LMS with course builder, certifications, and per-learner progress tracking that references live documentation automatically. Docsie's workspace-based pricing ($199–$750/month for full teams) avoids per-seat inflation, and its AI credit model means you pay for what you process — not how many users you add. It also converts existing training videos and PDFs into structured knowledge bases, eliminating the need for manual content migration.
Q: Which platform is better for a team that needs both internal training and external documentation delivery?
A: Neither Lessonly nor Notion is designed for both. Lessonly handles internal training only — it has no knowledge base or external portal capability. Notion is an internal workspace with no custom domains, no multi-tenant portals, and no way to publish branded documentation for external audiences. Docsie was built specifically to bridge this gap: it manages documentation and training in one platform, with multi-tenant delivery, version control, and built-in LMS all under one pricing tier.
Deep Dive Analysis
Lessonly offers no self-serve pricing and requires an enterprise sales cycle before you see a number — reported costs start around $300–500+/month, making it inaccessible for smaller teams. Notion appears affordable at $10/user on Plus, but that tier excludes full AI, giving you only 20 trial responses. To unlock AI Agents, Enterprise Search, and meeting transcription, you must move to $20/user Business. A 50-person team paying for Business AI access costs $1,000/month — just for an internal wiki with no external delivery capability. Neither platform delivers strong value per dollar for teams needing both training and documentation.
Lessonly's custom pricing means costs scale opaquely — as your learner count grows, so does your contract value, with no public rate card to forecast against. Notion's per-seat model is equally punishing at scale: a 100-person organization on Business tier pays $2,000/month before any add-ons. Neither tool offers a credit-based or workspace-based model that rewards efficiency. Lessonly also risks bundling pressure from Seismic to upgrade to the full platform suite, which carries significantly higher enterprise contract values. Both tools create pricing uncertainty as organizations grow.
Lessonly's biggest hidden cost is what it doesn't include: no customer-facing knowledge portal means you'll need a separate documentation platform, support tool, and potentially a translation vendor — adding thousands per year. Notion's hidden cost is the AI cliff: teams on Plus who rely on AI features will face an abrupt $10/user/month jump to Business the moment the 20-response trial expires. Version history limitations on lower tiers (7 days) also create real operational risk for teams managing active content. Both platforms require additional tools to cover gaps, significantly raising total cost of ownership.
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