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Competitor comparison

Omni vs Zenlytic

A fair side-by-side comparison for teams choosing between a modern semantic-layer BI platform and an AI-native data analyst with verifiable, executive-grade artifacts.

Quick decision snapshot

Choose Omni for a modern semantic layer with workbook-style exploration, mature embedded analytics, and strong governance. Choose Zenlytic when you want an AI analyst that delivers verifiable, cited answers and executive-grade artifacts on top of an existing semantic layer. If you want governed AI-native dashboards in a unified BI workspace anyone can use, see the alternative section below.

Where Omni is strongest

Omni is one of the strongest options in the modern BI category for teams that want a real semantic layer without the implementation overhead of legacy modeling tools. The platform combines structured metric definitions with workbook-style exploration, which lets analysts move fast while keeping a governed source of truth underneath. The 2025 Explo acquisition adds a mature embedded analytics story on top, so Omni is one of the few modern platforms that covers both internal BI and customer-facing embeds.

Where Zenlytic is strongest

Zenlytic is built around a different shape of product: an AI analyst that delivers verifiable, cited answers and finished executive deliverables on top of a Git-managed semantic layer. Zoë investigates a question, validates the result against the Clarity Engine, and returns the deliverable — a written analysis, a deck, a Word report, an Excel model — with citations back to source tables and metrics. Zenlytic also integrates with existing dbt or Looker semantic layers, which makes it a possible complement rather than a strict replacement for Omni.

Detailed head-to-head comparison

Criterion Omni Zenlytic
Best fit Mid-market teams that want a modern semantic layer with workbook-style exploration Enterprises that want a verifiable AI analyst producing executive-grade artifacts
Modeling approach Modern semantic layer combining SQL modeling with workbook flexibility Self-modeling Clarity Engine in Git, with first-class integration to dbt and Looker
AI experience AI assistance integrated into modeling and exploration AI-native by design — Zoë investigates, validates, and delivers cited answers
Exploration model Workbook-style with SQL and Excel-like analyst interactions Conversational AI with verified answers and finished artifacts
Governance Strong semantic governance with reusable model definitions Git-managed context layer with PR-based metric review and SOC 2 Type II security
Embedded analytics Mature embedded analytics, especially after the Explo acquisition No first-class embedded analytics product — primarily an internal analyst surface
Output format Workbooks, dashboards, scheduled reports, and embedded views Artifacts — PowerPoint decks, Word reports, Excel models, interactive memos, Slack/Teams replies

Omni is usually better for

Mid-market teams that want a modern semantic layer with strong governance.

Workbook-style exploration combining SQL and Excel-like flows for analysts.

Mature embedded analytics, especially after the Explo acquisition.

Zenlytic is usually better for

Enterprises that want a verifiable AI analyst with cited answers.

Teams whose deliverables are decks, memos, and Excel models for executives.

Organizations that want their semantic layer governed in Git alongside dbt or Looker.

Why some teams evaluate a third option

Omni's semantic layer is a real strength, but maintaining a model still requires some analytics-engineering investment. Zenlytic's artifact-first AI analyst is genuinely differentiated, but it does not cover the long tail of operational dashboards most teams still need. A platform that delivers governed AI-native dashboards anyone can author may collapse the choice into something simpler.

Where Basedash can be a practical alternative

If your goal is governed AI-native dashboards anyone can use — without modeling overhead or an artifact-first analyst workflow — Basedash is often the better fit. Users describe what they want in plain English, the AI generates reviewable SQL against governed metric definitions, and dashboards are published in a unified BI surface that also covers reports, embedded analytics, and Slack-based answers. With 750+ data source connectors via built-in Fivetran integration, you also avoid standing up a separate ETL stack.

For another data point on how Basedash holds up in practice, see our reviews page, where founders, engineering leads, and operators rate it 5/5 across case studies, Product Hunt, G2, and Y Combinator.

Governed AI-native dashboards anyone can use, without modeling overhead.

Self-serve adoption beyond the data team — no analyst middle required.

750+ managed connectors via built-in Fivetran integration.

FAQ

Is Omni's semantic layer better than Zenlytic's Clarity Engine?

They solve adjacent problems differently. Omni's semantic layer is a modern take on the LookML pattern: a structured definition of metrics and relationships that powers governed dashboards and workbook-style exploration. Zenlytic's Clarity Engine is a self-modeling context layer that lives in Git and integrates with existing dbt or Looker definitions, designed so an AI analyst (Zoë) can reason against it. Omni's model is closer to traditional analytics-engineering practice and tends to scale better for governed enterprise dashboards. Zenlytic's is closer to AI-first context that fits how AI agents actually consume information.

Which has the better AI experience?

Zenlytic is more AI-native by design. AI agents are the primary interface, and the context layer is built so those agents have structured logic to reason about. Omni has integrated AI assistance into modeling and exploration, but the AI augments the modeling layer rather than driving the workflow. If you want AI as the spine, Zenlytic leans further in that direction; if you want strong modeling with AI on top, Omni is the more proven fit.

Which is better for embedded analytics?

Omni — by a wide margin. Omni acquired Explo in 2025, which strengthens its embedded story considerably. Zenlytic does not have a first-class embedded analytics product; it is an internal analyst surface. Teams that need customer-facing analytics should evaluate Omni for that use case, with Zenlytic kept separate for the internal AI-analyst workflow if both are needed.

When should teams consider Basedash instead?

Consider Basedash if you want AI-native dashboards with governed metrics — without the modeling overhead of Omni or the artifact-first orientation of Zenlytic. Basedash exposes AI-driven analytics through a unified BI workspace designed for non-technical users, with reviewable AI-generated SQL and role-based access controls underneath. It also includes 750+ data source connectors via built-in Fivetran integration, so SaaS data lands in a managed warehouse without a separate ETL stack.

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