Slack's growth prospects in a critical market will face an imposing wall
erected by Microsoft, according to a report by Wedbush
securities.Microsoft Teams, a competing product to Slack, is available
free to business customers of Microsoft Office 365. That will keep many
Microsoft enterprise customers from moving to Slack, according to the
report.Large enterprise customers are especially important to Slack's
future revenue potential.“To get more news about
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The Slack solution is impressive and represents a strong growth
opportunity, however we believe penetrating this next phase of
enterprises will be incrementally more difficult as the Microsoft/Teams
value proposition presents a major competitive hurdle going forward in
sales cycles,” Wedbush analysts Daniel Ives and Strecker Backe
wrote.Microsoft has claimed it has more daily active users than Slack,
at 13 million. While Slack has responded and said it had 12 million and
highlighted user engagement figures which it says show how much people
like using the app. Click here for more BI Prime stories.One out of
every ten Microsoft enterprise customers might switch to Slack, the
upstart office collaboration tool. And that's not good news for Slack.
The San Francisco company is valued at roughly $10 billion by public
market investors who are betting that Slack's passionate “cult” user
base will help it become a standard workplace tool — as common as email
and mobile phones — in the corporate world. But according to a recent
report by Wedbush Securities analysts Dan Ives and Strecker Backe,
Slack's growth prospects might not be as wide open as investors believe.
In particular, Ives reckons, Slack is about to crash into a
Microsoft wall. “Only 10% to 15% of the core Microsoft enterprise
customer base is potentially 'in play' for Slack,” Ives and Backe write
in a recent note to investors initiation coverage of Slack with an
“Underperform” rating.Microsoft has a rival product called Teams that
offers similar capabilities and is available free to existing Microsoft
Office 365 business customers. “We have spoken to many enterprise
customers that have seriously contemplated Slack's enterprise tier
solution, but in the final IT decision was viewed that Teams services
will suffice with no extra charge for Office 365 customers,” the Wedbush
report says.What's more, Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella is putting a lot
of resources behind the Teams product to blunt the threat Slack presents
to “wall-to-wall Microsoft shops,” the analysts say.Earlier this year
Microsoft claimed it had about 13 million daily active users, which it
said put it ahead of Slack. Slack responded last month saying it had 12
million daily active users. That's less than Teams but Slack was careful
to highlight its user engagement figures, which it said showed how much
people like using the app.Slack offers a freemium model where customers
start on a free plan and then can move up to paid offerings ranging
from standard to plus to enterprise. The company has 100,000 paying
customers as of Q2 2020. Slack CEO Stewart Butterfield has said that's
still the way the company acquires most paid customers. “Its individual
work groups, like some one person says we should check this out and they
get 2 to 3 and then 5 or 8 or 15 people using it and that happens over
and over again across the company,” Butterfield said at a conference in
Laguna Beach last month.
Slack is among a string of tech startups focused on corporate
customers to recently enter the public markets. Zoom which provides
video conferencing tools for companies using a similar “freemium” model,
was one of the most successful public offings of the year, with its
stock now trading at roughly double the level of its IPO price.Slack,
which went public in June via an unorthodox direct listing, has seen its
share sink about 47% below the level of its first days on the market.If
not Microsoft customers, then who?If Wedbush's bleak view of Slack's
prospects with Microsoft customers proves true, Slack will need to find
its growth elsewhere. Ives said Slack's challenge will be to get the
roughly 500,000 organizations that use Slack's free platform option to
covert to paid users and drive growth over the next three to five
years.He does think Slack will continue to do well with small business
and startups and mid-market companies. “I think their sweet spot is 500
to 2,000 seat enterprises that tend to be more next generation type
companies,” Ives said. Ives does see Slack's integrations with other
services as an advantage, and that it offers a “sophisticated search and
collaboration software that is embedded within an organization's
workflow with topic, historical data maintenance, and group based
features that are difficult for competitors to replicate.” However, that
may not be enough to take a significant portion of the market and beat
Microsoft. “The next step of growth will be a major uphill battle” for
Slack, says Ives.if you want know more,
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The Wall