Documentation Tools vs Wikis vs Notes Is the Wrong Framing

Documentation Tools vs Wikis vs Notes Is the Wrong Framing

The real comparison is memory vs conversation

People compare documentation tools to wikis, note apps, or shared folders.
That comparison misses intent.

Notes support thinking.
Documentation supports remembering.

Why tool comparisons fail

Features like search, backlinks, or permissions only matter
after you decide what deserves permanence.

Without that decision, every tool becomes a dumping ground.

When notes and chats are enough

  • Small teams.
  • Fast-changing processes.
  • Knowledge that expires quickly.

Here, formal documentation adds drag.

When documentation tools make sense

  • Repeated onboarding questions.
  • Processes that rarely change.
  • Knowledge loss when people are away.

The trigger is stability, not scale.

A common misconception: writing equals documentation

Writing something once is not documentation.

Documentation is something others rely on without asking you first.

The quiet failure mode

Teams buy documentation tools hoping memory will appear.

Memory is built socially first.
Tools only preserve it.

Decision checkpoint


Should You Use a Documentation Tool at Your Current Stage?

Reframe the choice around permanence, not app categories.

Read the full decision framework →

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