Guru takes a fundamentally different approach to sales enablement. Instead of building another content management platform that reps have to log into separately, Guru puts knowledge where reps already work: inside their browser, Slack, Salesforce sidebar, and email client. The browser extension is the product. When a rep is on a sales call, drafting an email, or updating Salesforce, Guru surfaces relevant knowledge cards, competitive intel, talk tracks, and process documentation without requiring them to context-switch to a separate tool. For RevOps teams frustrated by low adoption on heavyweight enablement platforms, Guru's lightweight approach is refreshing. The trade-off is that Guru isn't a full enablement platform. There are no sales plays, no buyer engagement tracking, no content-to-revenue analytics. It's a knowledge layer, not an enablement suite.
Guru is an AI-powered knowledge management platform designed for revenue teams. The core product is a collection of knowledge 'cards' (bite-sized content pieces covering competitive intel, pricing, process documentation, talk tracks, objection handling, and product information) that are delivered to reps through a browser extension, Slack integration, Salesforce sidebar, and other in-workflow surfaces. For RevOps, Guru solves the most persistent adoption problem in enablement: reps don't use tools they have to open separately. Guru lives inside the tools reps already use every day.
The AI layer is increasingly central to the product. Guru's AI generates answers from your knowledge base, suggests relevant cards during conversations, and identifies knowledge gaps based on search queries that return no results. For example, if multiple reps search for competitive positioning against a specific competitor and no card exists, Guru flags that gap for the enablement team. This feedback loop helps RevOps and enablement prioritize content creation based on actual demand rather than guesswork.
Guru also provides verification workflows that ensure knowledge stays current. Cards have assigned owners who receive prompts to review and update content on a regular schedule. When a card is verified, the verification date is visible to reps, building trust that what they're reading is current. In fast-moving markets where pricing, product features, and competitive positioning change frequently, this verification system prevents reps from relying on outdated information.
Guru is a knowledge management tool, not a sales enablement platform. It does not provide buyer engagement tracking, content-to-revenue analytics, sales plays, or coaching modules. Evaluate Guru alongside (not instead of) full enablement platforms if those capabilities are requirements.
Guru offers transparent, published pricing that's accessible for teams of all sizes. The per-user model scales predictably and there's no minimum commitment on the lower tiers. Compared to Highspot, Seismic, and Showpad, Guru is dramatically cheaper.
| Plan | Price | What’s Included |
|---|---|---|
| Starter | $10/user/mo | Knowledge cards, browser extension, Slack integration, basic search, verification workflows, basic analytics |
| Builder | $20/user/mo | Starter plus AI-powered answers, advanced search, custom branding, API access, permissions management Most Common |
| Enterprise | Custom | Everything plus SSO, advanced analytics, custom integrations, dedicated support, compliance features |
Guru lives in a Chrome/Edge sidebar that surfaces relevant knowledge cards wherever reps work: in Salesforce, Gmail, Outreach, LinkedIn, or any web-based.
AI search that returns answers from your knowledge base, not just document links. Reps ask questions in natural language and get synthesized answers with.
Bite-sized knowledge units covering competitive intel, talk tracks, pricing, processes, and product information.
Cards have assigned owners who receive review prompts on configurable schedules. Verification dates are visible to reps, building trust that content is.
Native Slack integration lets reps search Guru from Slack channels and get answers without leaving the conversation.
Tracks which cards are viewed, searched, and used most frequently. Identifies knowledge gaps from unsuccessful searches.
No tool is perfect. Here are the real trade-offs you should know about:
Guru does not provide buyer engagement tracking, content-to-revenue analytics, sales plays, guided selling, digital sales rooms, or coaching modules.
Guru analytics show which knowledge cards reps view and search for. They don't track how buyers interact with externally shared content.
Guru excels at bite-sized knowledge cards but isn't designed for managing large content libraries with complex taxonomies, version control across hundreds.
Guru is the right choice when your primary problem is reps not finding the right information quickly. If knowledge access is the bottleneck and you don't.
If your requirements include measuring how buyers interact with your content, connecting content to revenue, or running structured coaching programs, Guru.
| Tool | Starting Price | Strength | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|
| Highspot | ~$50-75/user/mo | Full enablement with top-tier content analytics | Teams needing content-to-revenue attribution and buyer engagement tracking |
| Showpad | ~$35-50/user/mo | Balanced content + coaching at mid-market pricing | Organizations wanting both content management and coaching in one platform |
| Notion + Slite | From $8-10/user/mo | General-purpose wikis with lighter structure | Very small teams that need a simple knowledge base without sales-specific features |
RevOps teams use Guru to put operational knowledge in front of reps without requiring them to leave Salesforce, Outreach, or their browser. Typical RevOps-owned content includes competitive battlecards, pricing matrices, discount approval processes, CRM field definitions, territory rules, and handoff procedures. The browser extension surfaces these cards contextually while reps work. RevOps also uses Guru's knowledge gap analytics to identify what reps search for but can't find, which directly informs what process documentation or competitive intel needs to be created next.
At $10-20/user/mo, Guru is one of the highest-ROI tools in a RevOps stack. The math is simple: if your reps spend 15 minutes per day searching for competitive intel, pricing rules, or process docs across Slack, email, and shared drives, that's 65 hours per rep per year. Guru cuts that time dramatically with in-workflow access. The verification system prevents reps from using outdated pricing or stale competitive intel, which directly reduces deal errors. The ROI threshold is low. If Guru saves each rep 30 minutes per week, it pays for itself.
Guru Starter is $10/user/mo for knowledge cards, browser extension, Slack integration, basic search, and verification workflows. Builder is $20/user/mo and adds AI-powered answers, advanced search, API access, and permissions management. Enterprise is custom-priced for SSO, advanced analytics, and compliance features. Monthly billing is available, which is unusual for this category. At 100 users on Builder, that's $24K/year, roughly 70-85% cheaper than Highspot or Seismic. The Starter tier is functional, not a crippled trial.
Guru is not a full enablement platform. No buyer engagement tracking means you can't see how prospects interact with shared content. No content-to-revenue attribution means you can't prove which assets influence deals. No coaching or training modules. The knowledge card format works for bite-sized content (battlecards, process docs, talk tracks) but doesn't scale for managing 500+ long-form sales assets with versioning and governance. And if your CRM or enablement platform adds comparable in-workflow knowledge features, Guru could become redundant.
Completely different tools solving different problems. Guru is knowledge management: getting internal information to reps in their workflow. Highspot is sales enablement: managing external content, tracking buyer engagement, and attributing content to revenue. Guru costs $10-20/user/mo and deploys in days. Highspot costs $50-75/user/mo and takes months. Many organizations run both: Guru for internal knowledge (competitive intel, pricing, processes) and Highspot for external content (decks, proposals, case studies). They complement more than they compete.
Guru is a knowledge management tool with sales enablement adjacency, not a full sales enablement platform. The features that matter for sales enablement are: AI-powered answers that surface knowledge cards in Slack and Salesforce based on rep questions, the browser extension that puts cards in front of reps in any web tool, the verification system that prevents stale content from being shared with buyers, and the analytics that show which knowledge gaps reps hit most often. What Guru does not do: external content management with buyer engagement tracking, content-to-revenue attribution, coaching modules, or training paths. For internal knowledge enablement (battlecards, pricing matrices, competitive intel, process docs), Guru is excellent and the price is one-tenth of Highspot or Seismic. For external content enablement, Guru is the wrong category.
Guru's product centers on three capabilities. First, knowledge cards: bite-sized content units (battlecards, talk tracks, process docs, FAQ entries) with verification dates and ownership. Second, in-workflow surfacing: a browser extension and native integrations for Salesforce, Slack, Outreach, and Gmail that surface relevant cards based on context. Third, AI-powered answers: a generative AI layer that lets reps ask questions in plain language and get answers synthesized from your knowledge base with source attribution. The 2026 product is most valuable for revenue teams that have lots of operational knowledge scattered across tools and want it accessible in the workflow without leaving Salesforce or Slack. The product is less valuable for teams with very small knowledge bases or teams that already have strong knowledge access through their primary CRM.
Guru integrates natively with Slack in two ways. First, the Slack app lets reps ask questions in any channel or DM and Guru returns relevant knowledge cards with verification status and source attribution. Second, the AI-powered answers feature lets reps query the knowledge base in natural language and receive synthesized answers without manually searching for cards. Verified content gets prioritized in answers, and the source cards are linked so reps can see the underlying canonical knowledge. Slack notifications also alert content owners when their cards need re-verification or when reps fail to find answers, which surfaces knowledge gaps. For revenue teams that operate primarily in Slack, the integration removes the context switch to a separate knowledge tool.
Guru reports cover three categories. First, content health: which cards are verified, which are overdue for re-verification, and which content owners have stale content in their portfolio. Second, usage analytics: which cards get viewed and shared most, which integrations surface content most often, and which reps engage most with knowledge. Third, knowledge gap analysis: which questions reps ask that do not return strong answers, which is the most actionable report because it directly informs what content needs to be created next. The reporting is sufficient for managing a knowledge program but does not extend to content-to-revenue attribution or external buyer engagement tracking, which is where dedicated sales enablement platforms still differentiate.
For revenue teams specifically, Guru is one of the highest-ROI tools available at $10-20/user/month. The value comes from putting operational knowledge (competitive battlecards, pricing matrices, discount approval processes, CRM field definitions, handoff procedures) in front of reps in their workflow without forcing context switches to a separate knowledge tool. The verification system prevents reps from sharing outdated pricing or stale competitive intel, which directly reduces deal errors. The knowledge gap analytics identify what content needs to be created next based on what reps actually search for. Limitations: not a full enablement platform, no external content management, no content-to-revenue attribution, and the knowledge card format works for bite-sized content but does not scale for 500+ long-form sales assets. For internal knowledge enablement on revenue teams, Guru is a clear yes. For external content enablement, look at Highspot or Seismic.
Guru is the smartest way to get knowledge in front of reps without asking them to change their workflow. The browser extension approach solves the adoption problem that kills heavyweight enablement platforms. AI-powered search, verification workflows, and knowledge gap identification make the content useful. At $10-20/user/mo with day-one deployment, the ROI math is straightforward. But Guru is not a full enablement platform. No buyer engagement, no content-to-revenue analytics, no coaching. It's a knowledge layer that does one thing exceptionally well. For teams where knowledge access is the bottleneck, Guru is the highest-ROI enablement investment you can make. For teams that need to measure content's impact on revenue, Guru is a complement, not a replacement, for platforms like Highspot or Seismic.
But know the trade-offs:
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