Summary
Ask questionsDock is a sales content management system that helps marketing, sales, and customer success teams organize, share, and track customer-facing content. It provides a centralized content library, customer workspaces, and analytics to monitor content engagement. Dock integrates with popular CRMs like Salesforce and HubSpot to sync data and track content's impact on revenue.
Features7/18
See allMust Have
4 of 5
Centralized Asset Storage
Shareable Brand Guide URL
Version Control & Updates
Asset Organization & Search
Brand Guideline Editor
Other
3 of 13
Customizable Sections
Automated Notifications
Integration with Design & Dev Workflows
Logo Variant Upload
Color Palette Definition
Typography Settings
Preview Mode
Google & Custom Fonts
Real-time Collaboration
Asset Generation Tools
Browser Extension Access
AI Consistency Checker
Whitelabel Agency Mode
PricingTiered
See allFree
- 50 workspaces
- Basic integrations (Slack, Loom, Pandadoc, etc.)
Standard
- What's included with Free, plus:
- 5 users
- Unlimited workspaces
- Basic CRM (Salesforce &Hubspot)
- Advanced Integrations (Gong, Chorus, etc.)
Premium
- What's included with Standard, plus:
- 10 users
- Advanced CRM(Custom Fields & Line Item)
- Content management
- Learning playbooks
- Sales order forms
- Connected workspaces
- Remove Dock branding
- Webhooks
- Priority support
- Kick off & working session with Dock team
Enterprise
- Everything in Premium, plus:
- Custom domain
- API
- Automation
- SSO
- Dedicated customer success
- Managed implementation
Rationale
Dock offers a content management system primarily for sales, marketing, and customer success teams to organize, share, and track customer-facing content. While it provides centralized storage, organization, and sharing of assets via links, and allows for updates, it is not specifically a 'brand guideline and asset management platform' as described in the concept. It focuses more on sales enablement and customer engagement through shared workspaces rather than strict brand guideline creation and enforcement. However, it does have features that overlap with general asset management and sharing, such as centralized storage, organization, version control, and shareable links for content. The 'Brand Guideline Editor' and specific typography/color palette definition features are not explicitly present, but the ability to create 'templates' and 'customizable sections' for content could be a loose match for a brand guide editor.