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Comparison · PM

Process Street vs Hive

Side-by-side trajectory, velocity, and editorial themes.

P5.0

Public feed is pure SEO content; the only product signal is the rebrand to 'Compliance Operations Platform.'

◆ Current state

Process Street's public feed is dominated by evergreen SEO content — checklists, listicles, productivity advice, course roundups. The only product-relevant signal in the timeline is the footer branding now reading 'Compliance Operations Platform,' a pointed repositioning away from generic BPM/checklists toward compliance workflows. Actual release notes are not represented in this changelog source.

◆ Where it's heading

The compliance positioning is the real story, even though it doesn't appear in any individual post: Process Street is reframing itself out of the crowded 'workflow tools' bucket into the regulated-ops segment, where willingness to pay is higher. The blog cadence keeps targeting broad operations-and-productivity keyword territory, which suggests inbound funnel is still optimized for generic BPM buyers even as the brand sharpens.

◆ Prediction

Expect a dedicated release-notes or product-update surface separated from the SEO blog, so the compliance pivot becomes visible as shipped features (audit trails, controls evidence, attestations) rather than just brand copy. Until that happens, public signal will continue to lag the actual product story.

Hive logo
Hive
COLLABPM
6.3

Hive's quarter is mobile parity, with chat and dashboards getting tidied on the side.

◆ Current state

Hive is in a steady incremental polish phase. The dominant thread is pulling more of the desktop experience onto mobile: workflow visibility, time tracking from action cards, Gantt views, and a beefed-up universal search all landed within a week of each other. Chat got a parallel set of refinements (inline video, file gallery, history preservation when members leave), and dashboards picked up median aggregation.

◆ Where it's heading

Hive looks focused on closing the desktop-mobile gap rather than opening new product surface area. Each mobile release individually is small, but together they push Hive toward being usable as a primary-not-secondary work surface on phones, which matters most for project managers who actually move around. Expect this cleanup arc to continue for at least another release cycle before strategic capabilities (AI, automation depth) reappear.

◆ Prediction

Next likely additions on mobile: editing or creating actions/workflows (currently view-only) and richer dashboard interaction. On the desktop side, a feature touching AI or workflow authoring is overdue given the cadence of small fixes.

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