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StoreIQ Alternatives

Best StoreIQ Alternatives for Franchises (2026)

StoreIQ, now sold as Cegid Retail Store Excellence, is a retail task management and store execution platform used across 85,000+ stores. It is built for company-owned store networks, where a corporate retail operations team manages locations directly.That design is the problem for a franchise brand. A franchisor does not manage stores directly. It works through franchisees, their managers, and frontline teams, and StoreIQ has no permission hierarchy for that structure. It also has no training system, no knowledge base, and reporting that pushes work back onto your team. This page covers the strongest StoreIQ alternatives in 2026, with an honest look at what each does and where each falls short, so you can tell which fits your franchise.

The context

Why teams switch from StoreIQ

Retail architecture, not franchise-native

StoreIQ is built for company-owned store networks where a corporate retail operations team manages stores directly. A franchise brand runs on a different model: a franchisor sets standards, franchisees own and operate locations, and managers and frontline teams execute on the ground. StoreIQ has no franchisor, franchisee, manager, and frontline permission hierarchy to reflect that, so a franchise operator is forced to bend a retail tool around a structure it was not designed for.

No training or knowledge management layer

StoreIQ assigns and tracks tasks, but it has no integrated training, no knowledge base, and no in-product search for brand standards. Task execution without a connected training layer means the same compliance gaps recur: a team completes the checklist but was never taught the standard behind it, so the underlying problem stays unsolved. Franchise operators using StoreIQ still run a separate LMS and a separate SOP system, with the version drift and handoff gaps that come from disconnected tools.

Reporting pushes work back onto your team

Most reporting in StoreIQ requires custom building or exporting data to another tool. For a 40-location network, tracking compliance trends and identifying training gaps becomes ongoing manual work, exporting to a spreadsheet and rebuilding the analysis each time. The data exists, but turning it into a decision is a recurring task rather than a built-in view.

Task completion without operational context

When tasks are disconnected from training history, audit outcomes, and brand standards, completing a task becomes a checkbox rather than a signal. A franchisor cannot see whether a recurring failure traces back to a training gap, a process gap, or a standards gap, because StoreIQ does not connect those records. That fragmentation leaves a franchise network without a clear view of why locations underperform.

Side by side

How the alternatives compare

FeatureRecommendedDelightreeStoreIQ (Cegid)Zenput (Crunchtime)Monday.comAsana
Best forFranchise networks across every verticalCompany-owned specialty and luxury retailQSR and food retail complianceGeneral business project trackingOffice project management
PricingPer location, unlimited usersCustom (no public pricing)Custom (est. $4-6/user/mo)$9-$19/user/mo$13.49-$30.49/user/mo
Franchise-native hierarchyYesNo (retail-focused)Partial (QSR focus)NoNo
Training / LMSYes, with microlearningNoNoNoNo
Knowledge base / SOPsYes, AI-searchableNoNoNoNo
AuditsYes, franchise-nativeYes, retail task focusYes, food safety focusNoNo
Task managementYes, with hierarchyYes, retail executionYesYes, project-basedYes, project-based
Location launchingYes, Location LauncherNoNoNoNo
AI capabilitiesAI Search on brand contentNoNoNoNo
ReportingBuilt-in cross-module analyticsCustom build or Excel exportCompliance dashboardsProject dashboardsProject dashboards
The shortlist

The best StoreIQ alternatives

Delightree

Recommended

Delightree is a franchise-native platform covering Site Visits (audits), Tasks and Checklists, Training, Knowledge Base, AI Search, Location Launcher, Support Tickets, and Forms on one data layer. It supports every franchise vertical with per-location pricing and unlimited users.

The difference from StoreIQ is the architecture underneath. Delightree is built around the franchise relationship, with roles from franchisor to franchisee to manager to frontline, so a corporate team sees the whole network while a franchisee sees only their locations. A retail tool built for direct store management has no equivalent structure.

Tasks also carry operational context. A failing standard can trigger a training assignment, a corrective task, or a follow-up visit, all tied to the same location and team, and cross-module analytics connect task and audit performance to training completion. A recurring failure points to whether the team was trained and to what to do next, without a manual export.

Pricing

Per location with unlimited users.

Strengths

  • Franchise-native permission hierarchy from franchisor to frontline.
  • Training and knowledge base connected to tasks and audits on one data layer.
  • AI Search that answers from your own SOPs and brand content.
  • Built-in cross-module reporting, no spreadsheet exports to track trends.

Limitations

  • Delightree is not a deep retail merchandising tool. If your primary daily need is visual merchandising execution for a company-owned retail estate, you will keep a dedicated tool for that function.

StoreIQ (Cegid Retail Store Excellence)

StoreIQ, now sold as Cegid Retail Store Excellence, is a retail task management and store execution platform used across 85,000+ stores, with visual merchandising features for specialty and luxury retail chains.

For a franchise brand, the design works against the operating model. There is no franchisor, franchisee, and frontline permission hierarchy, no training system, and no knowledge base, so brands run StoreIQ alongside separate tools for training and SOPs. Reporting requires custom building or exporting to another tool, which adds ongoing manual work at network scale.

Pricing

Custom (no public pricing).

Limitations

  • Built for company-owned retail, not franchisor and franchisee networks.
  • No franchise permission hierarchy.
  • No training system, LMS, or knowledge base.
  • Reporting requires custom build or Excel export.

Verdict. StoreIQ handles task execution and merchandising for company-owned retail chains, but it is not a franchise OS. A multi-unit franchise still needs the permission hierarchy, training, knowledge management, and connected reporting it does not provide.

Zenput (Crunchtime)

Zenput, now sold as Crunchtime Ops Execution after the 2022 acquisition, is an operations execution platform for QSR and food retail, with food safety compliance, task management, and corrective action workflows.

For a franchise brand outside food service, the restaurant assumptions limit the fit. Even within food service, the scope stops at execution: there is no training system, no knowledge base, and no location launch management, so brands run separate tools for onboarding, SOPs, and new openings. Per-user pricing also compounds as each location adds staff.

Pricing

Custom, estimated $4 to $6 per user per month.

Limitations

  • QSR and food retail focus limits non-food franchise fit.
  • No training system, LMS, or knowledge base.
  • No location launch management.
  • Per-user pricing escalates at scale.

Verdict. Zenput covers QSR and food retail execution, but it is not a full franchise OS. A multi-unit brand still needs the training, knowledge management, and location launches it lacks, and non-food franchises hit its restaurant assumptions immediately.

Monday.com

Monday.com is a general-purpose work management platform used for visual project tracking across many business functions. Teams configure boards, automations, and dashboards to fit their own workflows.

For a franchise brand, that flexibility is also the limitation. There is no franchise permission hierarchy, no training system, no knowledge base, and no audit or location launch workflow, so a franchise operator builds and maintains all of it by hand. Per-user pricing compounds across frontline teams who need task access but are not running projects.

Pricing

$9 to $19 per user per month, with higher enterprise tiers.

Limitations

  • No franchise permission hierarchy.
  • No training, knowledge base, audits, or location launching.
  • Heavy configuration required to approximate franchise workflows.
  • Per-user pricing compounds across frontline staff.

Verdict. Monday.com tracks projects for office teams, but it is not built for franchise operations. Recreating training, audits, and franchise hierarchy in a general-purpose tool means ongoing manual setup, and per-user pricing climbs as locations add staff.

Asana

Asana is a project management platform built for office-based teams running campaigns, launches, and strategic initiatives. It tracks projects, timelines, and milestones well within that context.

For a franchise brand, the framework does not map to daily operational execution at the location level. There is no franchise network concept, no SOP or knowledge management, no training system, and no audit capability. At per-user pricing, it also compounds quickly across frontline workforces where hourly staff need task access.

Pricing

$13.49 to $30.49 per user per month.

Limitations

  • No franchise architecture or location-level permissioning.
  • No training, knowledge base, or audit capability.
  • Built for projects, not recurring operational execution.
  • Per-user pricing compounds across frontline workforces.

Verdict. Asana manages projects for office teams, but it is not a franchise operations platform. It has no training, audits, SOP management, or franchise hierarchy, and its per-user model becomes expensive across a frontline workforce.

Making the call

How to choose

The obvious choice

Choose Delightree

If you run a franchise network that needs tasks, training, knowledge management, audits, and reporting connected in one platform, Delightree covers all of it with franchise-native permissions and per-location pricing for unlimited users. It works across every vertical, retail included, and closes the loop from a failing task or audit to the training that fixes it.

StoreIQ

StoreIQ runs task execution and merchandising for company-owned retail, but it has no franchise permission hierarchy, no training, and no knowledge base, and its reporting requires manual exports. A franchise brand still needs the network layer Delightree provides.

Zenput

Zenput handles QSR and food retail compliance, but it stops at execution with no training, knowledge base, or location launches, and its restaurant assumptions do not fit non-food franchises.

Monday.com

Monday.com is a flexible project tool, but it has no franchise hierarchy, training, audits, or location launches, so a franchise operator builds and maintains all of it by hand while per-user pricing climbs.

Asana

Asana manages office projects well, but it has no franchise architecture, training, or audits, and its per-user pricing becomes expensive across a frontline workforce.

Staying with StoreIQ?

If you run a franchise brand rather than a company-owned retail estate, StoreIQ's retail architecture, missing training and knowledge layers, and manual reporting work against you. A franchise-native OS fits the operating model better.

Questions

Frequently asked questions

What is the best StoreIQ alternative for franchise brands?

Delightree. It provides a full franchise OS including tasks, audits, training, knowledge management, AI Search, location launching, support tickets, and forms on one data layer, with a franchise-native permission hierarchy from franchisor to frontline. It prices per location with unlimited users, and a failing task or audit can trigger the training that fixes it in the same platform.

Is StoreIQ the same as Cegid Retail Store Excellence?

Yes. StoreIQ is now sold as Cegid Retail Store Excellence. It is a retail task management and store execution platform used across 85,000+ stores, built for company-owned retail networks.

What are the biggest gaps in StoreIQ for franchises?

StoreIQ has no franchisor and franchisee permission hierarchy, no training system, and no knowledge base, and its reporting requires custom building or exporting to another tool. Franchise operators using it run separate systems for training and SOPs and do manual work to track compliance trends.

How does Delightree compare to StoreIQ?

StoreIQ is a retail task execution tool for company-owned store networks. Delightree is a franchise OS that adds a franchise permission hierarchy, Training, Knowledge Base, AI Search, Location Launcher, and connected reporting on a single data layer. Delightree prices per location with unlimited users, and it connects task and audit results to training so recurring failures point to a cause.

See the difference for your network

Find out where Delightree fits your franchise

A short interactive demo, or a live one with our team. Your call.

StoreIQ and the other product names, logos, and brands referenced on this page are the property of their respective owners. Delightree is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or sponsored by StoreIQ or any other company named here. This page reflects Delightree's opinions and is based on publicly available information believed to be accurate as of April 2026. Competitor pricing and features change frequently; confirm current details on each provider's official website before making a purchasing decision.