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Claromentis vs Figma

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Your comparison:ClaromentisFigma2/2 selectedChange products
Claromentis logo
4.9 (14)
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Value-for-Money4.9
Functionality4.9
Ease of Use4.9
Customer Service4.9
Likely to Recommend4.9
Figma logo
4.4 (35)
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Value-for-Money4.1
Functionality4.5
Ease of Use4.6
Customer Service3.6
Likely to Recommend4.6

Claromentis Summary

Figma Summary

Claromentis is a digital workplace platform that users consistently praise for being approachable and capable. The 14 reviews are nearly unanimous in rating it highly (13 five-star, 1 four-star), with minimal critical feedback.

Users repeatedly highlight the ease of use — both for end employees and administrators — as the standout strength. The form builder, drag-and-drop interface, and intuitive navigation appear across multiple reviews. Customization and flexibility are also common themes; buyers value the ability to tailor the platform to company branding, define field-level permissions, and build workflows without heavy technical overhead. The breadth of modules — from eforms and task management to knowledge bases, discussion groups, and document storage — means many organizations can consolidate disparate tools into one space. Customer support is mentioned favorably by name in several reviews, described as responsive and knowledgeable.

The single four-star review notes flexibility and modularity without elaboration, suggesting even satisfied users may not call it perfect. Across all reviews, no substantive drawbacks are named. Users report measurable wins: reduced manual processes, faster internal search, better employee engagement, and centralized communication. Organizations ranging from small teams to universities and multi-site enterprises report successful deployments, often after evaluating competing platforms.

Figma earns strong marks for real-time collaboration, component systems, and reliability, though analytics and pricing complexity frustrate some users.

Users consistently praise real-time multiplayer editing, which eliminates coordination chaos and makes async feedback seamless. The component system and auto-layout feature are transformative once learned, though the learning curve is steeper than many expect—several reviewers note that the initial confusion dissolves quickly with practice. Developer handoff and dev mode have meaningfully improved the designer-to-engineer workflow. Stability is genuinely reliable; users report minimal downtime over years of daily use. Support quality varies; some experienced rapid, knowledgeable responses while others found service inconsistent.

The main pain points cluster around three areas. Analytics and reporting are thin—file activity exists but consolidated dashboards and library usage insights require workarounds or third-party tools, which frustrates teams scaling past twenty people. Per-seat pricing accumulates rapidly in growing orgs; the binary editor/viewer split doesn't match how non-designers actually use the tool, and mid-project seat adjustments are clunky. Performance on large files with hundreds of frames or complex nested components sometimes lags noticeably. Edge cases in auto-layout and library updates can behave unpredictably at scale, and documentation assumes simpler workflows.

Freelancers and small teams generally feel the pricing is fair; enterprise users and agencies find costs climb steeply. For product teams and established design systems, the value proposition is strong enough to overcome friction points.

4.9
★★★★★
14 reviews
  • ★★★★★13
  • ★★★★1
  • ★★★★★0
  • ★★★★★0
  • ★★★★0
4.4
★★★★
35 reviews
  • ★★★★★16
  • ★★★★18
  • ★★★★★1
  • ★★★★★0
  • ★★★★0

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