Slack runs full-page New York Times ad welcoming Microsoft Teams
5 min. read
Published on
Read our disclosure page to find out how can you help MSPoweruser sustain the editorial team Read more
As expected, Microsoft today announced Microsoft Teams, a new team collaboration tool to compete with Slack. Watch the introduction video of Microsoft Teams below.
https://youtu.be/nKU-FMzZFF0
Slack today ran a full-page ad in New York Times congratulating Microsoft for the launch and offered some advice. I think it is unnecessary for a startup to run a full-page ad for competitor’s product launch. Such move not only gives free publicity to the product launch and also reveals that they are really concerned about Microsoft’s entry into this market.
You can read Slack’s full page ad content below,
Dear Microsoft,
Wow. Big news! Congratulations on todayโs announcements. Weโre genuinely excited to have some competition.
We realized a few years ago that the value of switching to Slack was so obvious and the advantages so overwhelming that every business would be using Slack, or โsomething just like it,โ within the decade. Itโs validating to see youโve come around to the same way of thinking. And even though?โ?being honest here?โ?itโs a little scary, we know it will bring a better future forward faster.
However, all this is harder than it looks. So, as you set out to build โsomething just like it,โ we want to give you some friendly advice.
First, and most importantly, itโs not the features that matter. Youโre not going to create something people really love by making a big list of Slackโs features and simply checking those boxes. The revolution that has led to millions of people flocking to Slack has been, and continues to be, driven by something much deeper.
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. How far you go in helping companies truly transform to take advantage of this shift in working is even more important than the individual software features you are duplicating.
Communication is hard, yet it is the most fundamental thing we do as human beings. Weโve spent tens of thousands of hours talking to customers and adapting Slack to find the grooves that match all those human quirks. The internal transparency and sense of shared purpose that Slack-using teams discover is not an accident. Tiny details make big differences.
Second, an open platform is essential. Communication is just one part of what humans do on the job. The modern knowledge worker relies on dozens of different products for their daily work, and that number is constantly expanding. These critical business processes and workflows demand the best tools, regardless of vendor.
Thatโs why we work so hard to find elegant and creative ways to weave third-party software workflows right into Slack. And thatโs why there are 750 apps in the Slack App Directory for everything from marketing automation, customer support, and analytics, to project management, CRM, and developer tools. Together with the thousands of applications developed by customers, more than six million apps have been installed on Slack teams so far.
We are deeply committed to making our customersโ experience of their existing tools even better, no matter who makes them. We know that playing nice with others isnโt exactly your MO, but if you canโt offer people an open platform that brings everything together into one place and makes their lives dramatically simpler, itโs just not going to work.
Third, youโve got to do this with love. Youโll need to take a radically different approach to supporting and partnering with customers to help them adjust to new and better ways of working.
When we push a same-day fix in response to a customerโs tweet, agonize over the best way to slip some humor into release notes, run design sprints with other software vendors to ensure our products work together seamlessly, or achieve a 100-minute average turnaround time for a thoughtful, human response to each support inquiry, thatโs not โgoing above and beyond.โ Itโs not โus being clever.โ Thatโs how we do. Thatโs who we are.
We love our work, and when we say our mission is to make peopleโs working lives simpler, more pleasant, and more productive, weโre not simply mouthing the words. If you want customers to switch to your product, youโre going to have to match our commitment to their success and take the same amount of delight in their happiness.
One final point: Slack is here to stay. We are where work happens for millions of people around the world.
You can see Slack at work in nearly every newsroom and every technology company across the country. Slack powers the businesses of architects and filmmakers and construction material manufacturers and lawyers and creative agencies and research labs. Itโs the only tool preferred by both late night comedy writers and risk & compliance officers. It is in some of the worldโs largest enterprises as well as tens of thousands of businesses on the main streets of towns and cities all over the planet. And weโrejustgettingstarted.
So welcome, Microsoft, to the revolution. Weโre glad youโre going to be helping us define this new product category. We admire many of your achievements and know youโll be a worthy competitor. Weโre sure youโre going to come up with a couple of new ideas on your own too. And weโll be right there, ready.
โ Your friends at Slack
Do you think Slack’s full-page ad is a good idea?
User forum
0 messages