Dimension scores are derived from public data and fields; weighted into the composite. Reference only.
Dive (divedx.com) is a “動画・AR手順書システム” for the Japanese market—essentially a video and AR work-instruction system. Its core message is that companies should not settle for “passively played videos”; instead, they should turn the knowledge frontline workers need into video-based work instructions that help individuals solve problems on their own. The product appears to target frontline scenarios where standard operating procedures need to be visualized, such as manufacturing, equipment maintenance, store operations, and training.
Based on the captured content, Dive explicitly offers video work instructions, AR work instructions, web-based usage, app downloads, document downloads, and entry points for demos/consultations. Its value proposition focuses on enabling on-site staff to troubleshoot and carry out tasks independently. Compared with ordinary video training, it places more emphasis on step-by-step guidance, on-site applicability, and self-service problem solving. However, the text does not disclose key details such as whether it supports step segmentation, search, QR-code access, offline viewing, version management, approval workflows, learning records, or operational audit trails.
The navigation includes “料金” (pricing), suggesting that the official website may have a pricing page. However, the captured main text does not include any plans, unit prices, billing methods, user limits, or enterprise quote information. There is also no mention of a free plan, free trial, or PoC period. On deployment, the page only says “Webで完結!5分で開始” (“complete on the web, start in 5 minutes”), which suggests that the product emphasizes quick web-based activation. That said, this alone is not enough to confirm whether it is a pure SaaS product or whether it supports private or on-premises deployment.
For enterprise software procurement, third-party integrations, team permissions, data security, and API capabilities are critical. The captured text does not mention integrations with systems such as ERP, MES, LMS, Slack/Teams, or SSO. It also does not describe role-based permissions, organizational hierarchy, audit logs, encryption, compliance certifications, or developer interfaces. As a result, its enterprise maturity would need to be verified further through document downloads or a consultation session.
Its strengths are a clear positioning and a strong focus on transferring frontline operational knowledge. Combining video with AR can help reduce the cognitive burden of understanding complex procedures. The “complete on the web, start in 5 minutes” message also implies a relatively low barrier to getting started. The drawbacks are the lack of public information, especially around pricing, permissions, security, integrations, and APIs. In addition, the page is in Japanese, which may create language barriers for Chinese teams in procurement, training, and support communication.
Access from mainland China cannot be determined from the available text and should be marked as unknown. If an enterprise plans to use it in mainland China, it should further evaluate access stability, the Japanese interface, contracts and payments, invoicing, and local support. Alternative options may include domestic enterprise training platforms, knowledge base/SOP systems, inspection and field-work tools, low-code form and workflow platforms, or enterprise software with video training and on-site work-guidance capabilities.
⚠ This review is compiled from public sources and does not constitute a purchase recommendation. Verify all facts on the vendor's official site. Verify on divedx.com official site.
divedx.com is an Japan SaaS provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 7.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of Workable. Click "Visit Official Site" to reach divedx.com directly.