added by sari and · updated 4y ago
How Microsoft Crushed Slack
- In Levie’s telling — and he also wrote a blog post about the Slack sale — it all comes down to sales. The idea that workers would someday choose all their own tools was always a fantasy, he told me, in part because most workers don’t event want to think about their tools. In such a world, the winning app will almost always be one with a giant, er, ... See more
from How Microsoft Crushed Slack by platformer.news
sari added 3y ago
- But Slack’s struggle to succeed as an independent company sadly mirrors that of many one-time innovators in enterprise productivity. Mailbox died and Acompli sold to Microsoft, where it became the mobile Outlook app. Evernote is a pale shadow of its former self. Of that early cohort, only Box and Dropbox became — and still remain — public companies... See more
from How Microsoft Crushed Slack by platformer.news
sari added 3y ago
- “The only advantage Microsoft has is distribution, and so now they’ve neutralized the advantage that Microsoft has had,” he said. “All of a sudden, they can actually fulfill the ultimate promise of the opportunity, because they have 10 times the amount of salespeople that can go distribute this thing into corporations around the world.”
from How Microsoft Crushed Slack by platformer.news
sari added 3y ago
- And yet if there’s a lesson of the past four years, it’s that thoughtfulness and craftsmanship only got the company about 10 percent as far as Microsoft did by copy-pasting Slack’s basic design. In its open letter, Slack famously told Microsoft: “You’ve got to do this with love.” In 2020, looking at Slack’s size, the idea seems laughable. What’s lo... See more
from How Microsoft Crushed Slack by platformer.news
sari added 3y ago
- Levie is bullish on the acquisition, because it puts Slack and Salesforce on more even ground.
from How Microsoft Crushed Slack by platformer.news
sari added 3y ago
- The company embodied the belief, so common in Silicon Valley, that the best product would win in the end. “Building a product that allows for significant improvements in how people communicate requires a degree of thoughtfulness and craftsmanship that is not common in the development of enterprise software,” the company wrote in its open letter to ... See more
from How Microsoft Crushed Slack by platformer.news
sari added 3y ago