Enterprise Feature Matrix
A head-to-head comparison of enterprise-critical features including security, compliance, access control, scalability, administration, and support across both platforms.
| Enterprise Feature |
Bloomfire
|
Document360
|
|---|---|---|
| SSO (SAML) | Enterprise plan only | |
| OAuth / OIDC Support | ||
| Role-Based Access Control | ||
| Granular Permissions | ||
| Audit Logs | ||
| SOC 2 Compliance | ||
| GDPR Compliance | ||
| HIPAA Compliance | ||
| Data Residency Options | ||
| Multi-Tenant Portals | ||
| Custom Domain Support | ||
| Custom Branding / White-Label | ||
| Approval Workflows | ||
| Version Control | Basic | |
| API Access | ||
| Uptime SLA | Enterprise SLA (custom) | Not published |
| Dedicated Support / Success Manager | Enterprise plan only | Enterprise plan only |
| Self-Serve Pricing Transparency | Partial (starter listed) | |
| 50-User Minimum | ||
| Auto-Translation (50+ Languages) |
Data as of February 2026. Based on publicly available vendor documentation, G2 reviews, and published feature pages. Enterprise-tier features require direct sales engagement for both tools.
Strengths & Weaknesses
Deep Dive Analysis
Both Bloomfire and Document360 hold SOC 2 certification and GDPR compliance, making them viable for mainstream enterprise buyers. However, neither platform supports HIPAA compliance, limiting adoption in healthcare. Critically, neither offers data residency options — a significant gap for European enterprises subject to data sovereignty requirements. Bloomfire provides SAML and OAuth SSO on its Enterprise plan; Document360 offers SAML SSO with granular permissions. Both include audit logs. For organizations requiring HIPAA readiness, regional data centers, or air-gap deployment, both platforms fall short of true enterprise-grade security depth.
Bloomfire enforces a 50-user minimum (~$1,250/month floor), making it accessible only to mid-to-large teams. Document360 removed its free tier in November 2024 and now requires sales contact for all pricing, adding procurement friction. Neither platform publishes a concrete uptime SLA percentage, which is a red flag for enterprises with availability requirements. Bloomfire's AI-powered search scales well across video and audio content libraries. Document360 handles large external knowledge bases but lacks multi-tenant architecture, meaning each client organization requires a separate instance — creating administrative overhead at scale.
Document360 leads on administrative controls with robust approval workflows, granular role-based permissions, full version control with revision history, and content reuse capabilities — making it well-suited for teams with strict content governance requirements. Bloomfire offers role-based access and audit logs but lacks approval workflows and has only basic version control with no diff comparison. Neither platform supports multi-tenant portals, meaning organizations serving multiple clients must manage separate instances. Document360's Eddy AI adds 50+ language translation, while Bloomfire has no auto-translation — a notable gap for globally distributed enterprise teams.
Both Bloomfire and Document360 offer dedicated success managers on their Enterprise plans, but neither publishes a specific uptime SLA percentage publicly. Bloomfire has a longer track record (founded 2010) with an established enterprise customer base and a known Enterprise SLA commitment negotiated per contract. Document360's fully sales-led model means enterprise support terms are entirely custom and require negotiation. Document360's hidden pricing and elimination of the free tier creates friction during the evaluation phase. Both platforms offer onboarding support on Enterprise tiers, but neither provides the transparent, documented SLA commitments that regulated enterprises typically require.
Our Recommendation
Bloomfire is a mature enterprise knowledge management platform best suited for large internal teams that need AI-powered search across video and audio content libraries with strong CRM integrations. Document360 is a purpose-built external knowledge base with stronger content governance tools, 50+ language translation, and help desk integrations — though its opaque pricing and discontinued free tier add procurement friction. Both platforms share meaningful gaps in HIPAA compliance, data residency, multi-tenant delivery, and transparent SLAs that enterprise buyers should carefully evaluate.
Choose Bloomfire if you need...
Choose Document360 if you need...
Choose Docsie if you need...
Winner: Docsie
Both Bloomfire and Document360 leave critical enterprise gaps unaddressed — no HIPAA compliance, no data residency, no multi-tenant client portals, and no published uptime SLAs. Docsie fills all of these gaps with SOC 2 Type II, GDPR, HIPAA-ready, SOX, and ITAR compliance, EU data residency, air-gap capable private infrastructure, 99.9% uptime SLA, and multi-tenant architecture that scales to 10,000+ documentation sites. Add transparent pricing, 100+ language auto-translation, a built-in LMS with certifications, and autonomous agents — and Docsie delivers the enterprise readiness that neither competitor can match.
Common Questions
Q: Does Bloomfire or Document360 support HIPAA compliance?
A: Neither Bloomfire nor Document360 is HIPAA compliant. Bloomfire explicitly lists HIPAA as unsupported, and Document360 does not include HIPAA in its compliance certifications. Organizations in healthcare or handling protected health information (PHI) will need to evaluate alternatives. Docsie is HIPAA-ready and supports air-gap deployment on private infrastructure, making it the stronger choice for regulated industries.
Q: Which platform has better role-based access control for enterprise teams?
A: Document360 offers more granular role-based permissions with multiple user roles, content-level access controls, and approval workflows — giving it an edge for teams with strict content governance requirements. Bloomfire provides role-based access and audit logs but lacks approval workflows and fine-grained content permissions. For enterprises with complex permission hierarchies, Document360's access control model is more mature.
Q: Do Bloomfire or Document360 offer data residency or regional hosting options?
A: Neither platform currently offers data residency options for enterprises requiring data to remain in specific geographic regions. This is a significant limitation for European enterprises subject to GDPR data sovereignty requirements or organizations in regulated industries with regional data restrictions. Docsie provides EU data center options and full private infrastructure deployment for organizations with strict data residency requirements.
Q: Is there a better alternative to both Bloomfire and Document360 for enterprise use?
A: Yes — Docsie addresses the shared limitations of both platforms. Where Bloomfire lacks content governance and Document360 lacks multi-tenant delivery, Docsie provides both alongside HIPAA-ready compliance, SOC 2 Type II, data residency, a 99.9% uptime SLA, and transparent pricing. Docsie's six-pillar platform (CONVERT → MANAGE → DELIVER → LEARN → AUTOMATE → MONITOR) also adds a built-in LMS, autonomous agents, and real-time compliance monitoring that neither competitor offers.
Q: How do Bloomfire and Document360 compare on pricing transparency for enterprise buyers?
A: Bloomfire publishes a starter price (~$25/user/month with a 50-user minimum) but requires sales contact for Enterprise pricing. Document360 discontinued its free tier in November 2024 and now hides all pricing behind a sales contact requirement — making it one of the least transparent platforms for self-serve enterprise evaluation. This opacity can slow procurement cycles significantly. Docsie publishes clear pricing at $199/month (Premium) and $750/month (Organization), with Enterprise custom pricing disclosed through a straightforward sales process.
Q: Which platform is better for enterprises serving multiple client organizations?
A: Neither Bloomfire nor Document360 supports true multi-tenant portals. Both operate as single-tenant platforms, meaning organizations serving multiple clients must either provision separate instances or share a single workspace with manual access segmentation. Docsie's multi-tenant architecture allows one knowledge base to power unlimited individually branded client portals, each with custom domains, SSO, and content rules — making it the clear choice for consultancies, implementation partners, and SaaS companies with multi-client documentation needs.
Docsie delivers the enterprise readiness both tools lack — HIPAA-ready compliance, SOC 2 Type II, data residency, 99.9% uptime SLA, multi-tenant portals for unlimited clients, 100+ language auto-translation, built-in LMS with certifications, autonomous agents on private infrastructure, and real-time compliance monitoring for HIPAA, SOX, ITAR, and GDPR. All with transparent pricing and a free plan to get started without a sales call.
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