Feature Matrix
A comprehensive feature-by-feature comparison of Guru and Slite across AI capabilities, knowledge management, collaboration, enterprise security, and delivery features.
| Feature |
Guru
|
Slite
|
|---|---|---|
| AI-Powered Q&A / Chatbot | Knowledge Agent Chat | Ask AI |
| AI Content Generation | ||
| Expert Verification Workflows | ||
| Version Control | Via verification cycles | Page history |
| Multi-Language Support | 50+ languages | |
| Auto-Translation | ||
| Browser Extension | ||
| Knowledge Base Platform | ||
| Real-Time Collaboration | ||
| Comments & Mentions | ||
| Multi-Tenant / Client Portals | ||
| Custom Domain Support | ||
| Custom Branding | ||
| Embeddable Widget | ||
| API Access | Premium+ plan | |
| SSO (SAML) | Enterprise only | Premium+ plan |
| SOC 2 Compliance | ||
| GDPR Compliance | ||
| HIPAA Compliance | ||
| Analytics & Reporting | Premium+ plan | |
| Helpdesk Integration | ||
| Content Reuse / Snippets | ||
| MCP Server Support | ||
| Video-to-Documentation | ||
| Built-in LMS / Certifications | ||
| Free Plan Available | ||
| Starting Price | $250/month minimum | $8/member/month |
Data as of February 2026. Features are based on publicly available information and vendor documentation. Guru's 10-seat minimum creates a $250/month floor even on the Starter plan.
Strengths & Weaknesses
Deep Dive
Guru's AI offering is more mature and enterprise-focused, featuring Knowledge Agents in Chat, Research, and MCP Server modes — essentially turning your knowledge base into an AI assistant. Its browser extension surfaces relevant docs anywhere on the web. Slite's Ask AI is simpler but effective for quick internal Q&A, answering questions directly from your team's documents. Both tools use AI to reduce time spent searching, but Guru's credit-based model means heavy AI users on lower tiers may hit limits, while Slite offers unlimited Ask AI on its Standard plan at a much lower price point.
Both Guru and Slite take content accuracy seriously, but approach it differently. Guru's verification workflow system assigns subject matter experts to review and verify knowledge cards on a scheduled cycle — a standout feature for organizations where outdated information is a real liability. Cards display verification status so readers know how current the content is. Slite's doc verification is lighter-weight, nudging document owners to review content periodically. For enterprise teams where accuracy directly impacts sales, support, or compliance outcomes, Guru's structured verification workflows offer significantly stronger governance than Slite's more lightweight reminders.
Pricing is where Guru and Slite diverge sharply. Slite offers a free plan for up to 50 docs and paid plans starting at just $8/member/month — making it one of the most accessible knowledge bases for small and mid-sized teams. Guru has no free plan and enforces a 10-seat minimum, creating a $250/month floor even for small teams. This makes Guru difficult to justify for teams under 20 people. For larger enterprise teams that can amortize the cost across many seats and need enterprise integrations, Guru's pricing becomes more competitive. Budget-conscious teams or startups will find Slite significantly more accessible.
Guru integrates deeply with enterprise sales and support stacks — Salesforce, Zendesk, Slack, and Microsoft Teams — making it especially valuable for customer-facing teams that need verified answers fast. Its browser extension and embeddable widget extend knowledge delivery into external tools. Slite takes a developer-friendly integration approach with GitHub, Linear, Figma, and Asana, making it more suitable for engineering and product teams. Slite's Loom acquisition hints at future video integration capabilities. Neither platform offers API access on its most affordable plans, though Guru's API is available on its standard paid tiers while Slite requires the Premium plan.
Our Recommendation
Guru and Slite are both capable internal knowledge platforms that serve meaningfully different audiences. Guru is built for enterprise teams — particularly sales and support — that need verified, AI-searchable knowledge with deep integrations into tools like Salesforce and Zendesk, and are willing to pay a premium for it. Slite is better suited for tech startups and engineering teams that want a clean, affordable, low-friction internal wiki with solid AI Q&A. Both tools share a critical limitation — they are internal-only platforms with no external delivery, no multi-tenant portals, no video-to-docs, and no built-in training capabilities.
Choose Guru if you need...
Choose Slite if you need...
Choose Docsie if you need...
Winner: Docsie
Both Guru and Slite are internal-only knowledge platforms with no ability to convert video into documentation, deliver knowledge to external clients through branded portals, or power training and certification workflows. Docsie addresses all of these gaps with its six-pillar CONVERT → MANAGE → DELIVER → LEARN → AUTOMATE → MONITOR framework — turning any video or document source into multi-tenant knowledge bases with built-in LMS, 100+ language support, autonomous agents, and real-time compliance monitoring, all on private infrastructure.
Common Questions
Q: What is the main difference between Guru and Slite?
A: Guru is an enterprise knowledge management platform focused on expert verification workflows, AI Knowledge Agents, and deep integrations with sales and support tools like Salesforce and Zendesk. It enforces a 10-seat minimum at $25/seat/month. Slite is a lightweight, affordable internal wiki with AI-powered Q&A (Ask AI) that appeals to startups and engineering teams. Guru is better for large enterprises needing governed knowledge; Slite is better for small-to-mid teams wanting a clean, low-cost internal wiki.
Q: Does Guru or Slite support external customer-facing documentation?
A: Neither Guru nor Slite supports external customer-facing documentation delivery. Both platforms are designed exclusively for internal team knowledge. They offer no custom domain publishing, no multi-tenant client portals, and no white-label branding for external audiences. If you need to publish documentation portals to customers, partners, or clients, you will need a different platform entirely.
Q: Can Guru or Slite convert training videos into documentation?
A: No — neither Guru nor Slite has any video-to-documentation capability. Guru's AI features focus on surfacing and verifying existing text-based knowledge cards. Slite's Ask AI answers questions over written docs. If your team has hours of training video content that needs to become structured documentation, neither tool can help with that conversion workflow.
Q: Which tool has better AI features — Guru or Slite?
A: Guru's AI is more powerful and enterprise-grade, offering Knowledge Agents in Chat, Research, and MCP Server modes, plus 50+ language translation. However, Guru's AI is credit-based, meaning heavy users on lower tiers may hit usage limits. Slite's Ask AI is simpler but unlimited on its Standard plan ($8/member/month), making it more accessible for everyday Q&A use. For teams needing deep AI-powered knowledge retrieval tied to enterprise tools, Guru wins; for affordable daily AI Q&A, Slite is more practical.
Q: Is there a better alternative to both Guru and Slite?
A: Yes — Docsie addresses the core limitations both platforms share. While Guru and Slite are internal-only wikis, Docsie converts any training video, PDF, or website into structured documentation, delivers it through multi-tenant portals with custom branding and domains, supports 100+ languages with auto-translation, and includes a built-in LMS with course builder, quizzes, and certifications. For teams that need to manage and deliver knowledge both internally and externally — especially implementation partners, consultancies, or enterprise teams with multilingual documentation needs — Docsie provides a more complete solution than either Guru or Slite.
Q: Which is more cost-effective for a small team — Guru or Slite?
A: Slite is significantly more cost-effective for small teams. Slite offers a free plan for up to 50 docs and paid plans from $8/member/month with no seat minimums. Guru requires a minimum of 10 seats at $25/seat/month, creating a $250/month floor regardless of team size. For teams under 15 people, Slite is often 5–10x cheaper than Guru and offers comparable core wiki functionality. Guru's cost only becomes justifiable for larger enterprise teams that need its verification workflows and enterprise integrations.
Both Guru and Slite are internal-only knowledge platforms with no video-to-docs conversion, no multi-tenant client portals, no built-in LMS, and no multilingual delivery at scale. Docsie does all of it — convert any training video into structured docs, deliver through branded portals to multiple clients simultaneously, train teams with built-in certifications, and monitor compliance in real time across 100+ languages.
Free plan includes AI credits to convert a 10-minute training video. No credit card required.
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