Feature Matrix
A comprehensive side-by-side comparison of knowledge management, training, AI, and enterprise capabilities between Guru and Lessonly (Seismic Learning).
| Feature |
Guru
|
Lessonly (Seismic Learning)
|
|---|---|---|
| Primary Use Case | Internal knowledge management | Sales & team training delivery |
| Knowledge Base | ||
| Course / Lesson Builder | ||
| Learning Paths & Certifications | ||
| Practice Exercises & Coaching | ||
| AI Content Generation | ||
| AI-Powered Search / Q&A | ||
| Expert Verification Workflows | ||
| Video to Documentation | ||
| Screen Recording | ||
| Multi-Language Support | 50+ languages | Limited |
| Auto-Translation | ||
| Version Control | ||
| Multi-Tenant Portals | ||
| Custom Domain | ||
| Custom Branding | ||
| Browser Extension | ||
| Chatbot / AI Assistant | ||
| Helpdesk Integration | ||
| SSO | Enterprise (SAML) | |
| SOC 2 Compliance | ||
| GDPR Compliance | ||
| API Access | ||
| Analytics & Reporting | ||
| Free Plan | ||
| Self-Serve Pricing |
Data as of February 2026. Features based on publicly available information and vendor documentation. Lessonly is now branded as Seismic Learning following acquisition by Seismic in 2021.
Strengths & Weaknesses
Deep Dive
Guru is fundamentally a knowledge management platform — it organizes internal tribal knowledge into a verified, searchable repository that surfaces answers inside tools like Slack or via browser extension. Lessonly (Seismic Learning) is a training delivery platform — it structures knowledge into lessons, learning paths, and practice exercises for sales and CS teams. The two tools address adjacent but distinct needs. Guru keeps knowledge current and findable; Lessonly structures it into courses. Neither provides a combined documentation-plus-training platform, meaning teams often need both — or a unified alternative.
Guru's AI is more mature and central to the product. Knowledge Agents — Chat, Research, and MCP Server modes — let employees ask questions and get verified answers from the knowledge base. Guru also offers AI-powered content suggestions and 50+ language auto-translation. Lessonly's AI, now branded under Seismic AI, focuses on content recommendations and enablement insights rather than real-time Q&A. It lacks a knowledge chatbot or semantic search layer. For teams that need AI to surface answers in real time, Guru has a significant advantage. Neither tool offers AI-driven video-to-documentation conversion.
Guru offers published per-seat pricing starting at $25/seat/month, but the 10-seat minimum creates a $250/month floor that's prohibitive for small teams. Enterprise features like Knowledge Agents require the top tier. Lessonly (Seismic Learning) offers no self-serve pricing at all — all plans are custom enterprise quotes, with reports of $300–$500+/month for base access. Neither tool has a free plan. For teams that want transparent, predictable pricing or want to evaluate before committing to a sales process, both tools present friction — Guru at least publishes its rates, while Lessonly requires a demo before any number is revealed.
Both Guru and Lessonly are designed exclusively for internal use. Guru has no multi-tenant portal capability, no custom domain support, and no external client-facing knowledge delivery. Lessonly delivers training to internal employees only — not to customers or external partners. Neither tool supports the use case of serving documentation or training content to multiple clients simultaneously from one centralized system. For implementation partners, consulting firms, or SaaS companies needing to deliver branded knowledge bases or training portals to multiple clients, both tools hit a hard ceiling — an area where a purpose-built alternative becomes necessary.
Our Recommendation
Guru and Lessonly (Seismic Learning) solve different problems — Guru manages and surfaces internal verified knowledge with AI agents, while Lessonly delivers structured training courses and coaching for sales and customer-facing teams. Both are internal-only platforms with no multi-tenant delivery, no video-to-docs conversion, and no combined documentation-plus-training workflow. The right choice depends on whether your primary need is knowledge retrieval or training delivery — but neither covers both.
Choose Guru if you need...
Choose Lessonly (Seismic Learning) if you need...
Choose Docsie if you need...
Winner: Docsie
Both Guru and Lessonly leave critical gaps — Guru has no training or LMS capabilities and no external delivery, while Lessonly has no knowledge base, no AI Q&A, and no documentation platform. Neither tool can convert existing videos into structured docs, deliver content to multiple external clients, or run the full workflow from content creation through training and compliance monitoring. Docsie's six-pillar platform — CONVERT, MANAGE, DELIVER, LEARN, AUTOMATE, MONITOR — addresses all of these gaps in one system, making it the superior choice for organizations that need more than an internal-only knowledge tool or a standalone training platform.
Common Questions
Q: What is the key difference between Guru and Lessonly (Seismic Learning)?
A: Guru is a knowledge management platform focused on organizing, verifying, and surfacing internal knowledge through AI agents and a browser extension. Lessonly (Seismic Learning) is a training delivery platform focused on structured lessons, practice exercises, and coaching for sales and customer-facing teams. Guru answers "what do we know?" while Lessonly answers "how do we train people?" — they serve adjacent but distinct use cases and are rarely direct competitors.
Q: Can Guru or Lessonly convert training videos into documentation?
A: Neither tool offers video-to-documentation conversion. Guru has no video processing capabilities at all — it relies on manually authored or AI-assisted text content. Lessonly allows video to be embedded within lessons, but it does not transcribe, analyze, or convert that video into structured documentation. Teams with libraries of training recordings need a dedicated video-to-docs platform to unlock that content.
Q: Do Guru or Lessonly support multi-tenant portals for external clients?
A: No — both platforms are designed exclusively for internal team use. Guru has no multi-tenant portal architecture, no custom domain support, and no external client-facing delivery. Lessonly delivers training only to internal employees. Neither tool is suitable for implementation partners, consultancies, or SaaS companies that need to deliver branded documentation or training portals to multiple external clients.
Q: How does Guru's AI compare to Lessonly's AI?
A: Guru's AI is significantly more developed for knowledge retrieval. Its Knowledge Agents (Chat, Research, MCP Server) let employees ask questions and get verified answers from the knowledge base in real time, with Slack integration and browser extension delivery. Lessonly's Seismic AI focuses on content recommendations and enablement analytics rather than conversational Q&A. Guru is the stronger choice if AI-powered knowledge surfacing is a priority.
Q: Is there a better alternative to both Guru and Lessonly (Seismic Learning)?
A: Yes — Docsie addresses the core gaps both tools leave. Unlike Guru, Docsie includes a built-in LMS with course builder, quizzes, certifications, and per-tenant progress tracking. Unlike Lessonly, Docsie provides a full knowledge base with AI-powered search, agentic chatbot, and version control. Both tools lack multi-tenant portal delivery and video-to-docs conversion — Docsie covers both. For teams needing documentation management AND training delivery AND client-facing portals in one platform, Docsie is the purpose-built alternative.
Q: Which tool is better for a sales enablement team?
A: Lessonly (Seismic Learning) is purpose-built for sales enablement with structured lessons, practice scenarios, coaching scorecards, and deep Salesforce integration — making it the stronger fit for sales training delivery. Guru complements sales teams differently by providing verified knowledge accessible via Slack and browser extension during live customer calls. If your primary need is structured onboarding and practice-based learning, Lessonly wins; if it's surfacing answers in the flow of work, Guru wins.
Q: What should I consider about pricing before choosing between Guru and Lessonly?
A: Guru publishes per-seat pricing at $25/seat/month with a 10-seat minimum ($250/month floor), making costs predictable but steep for small teams. Lessonly (Seismic Learning) provides no published pricing — all plans require an enterprise sales process, with community reports suggesting $300–$500+/month as a starting point. Neither tool offers a free plan or free trial beyond a demo. Teams wanting to evaluate before committing to a vendor conversation will find Guru more accessible, while Lessonly's opaque pricing requires budget commitment upfront.
Docsie combines what both tools lack — a unified platform that converts any training video into structured documentation, delivers it through multi-tenant branded portals, and includes a built-in LMS with certifications and per-tenant progress tracking. One system for knowledge management, training delivery, and client-facing documentation across 100+ languages.
Free plan includes AI credits to convert a 10-minute training video. No credit card required.
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