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Salesforce to Acquire Slack?Salesforce to Acquire Slack?

Speculation has it that the company might make another go at workforce messaging.

Beth Schultz

November 25, 2020

2 Min Read
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Just days ahead of Salesforce CEO Marc Benioff’s scheduled Dreamforce keynote, rumors are running rampant among financial industry watchers that the cloud CRM giant is considering buying Slack.

 

Citing “people familiar with the matter,” for example, The Wall Street Journal reported that the two companies have been in talks with one another. Based on Slack’s current market cap of $17 billion, were this deal to take place, it would represent Salesforce’s largest acquisition to date, WSJ reported.

 

In an email exchange, industry watcher Sheila McGee-Smith, of McGee-Smith Analytics and regular contributor to No Jitter, reminded me that “this would not be the company’s first foray into the world of in-company messaging.”

 

In 2009, McGee-Smith noted, the company announced Salesforce Chatter, a social/collaboration tool for organizations using Salesforce. In 2011, Salesforce acquired Dimdim to add presence and instant messaging capabilities to Chatter.

 

“While Chatter never really took off as a ubiquitous collaboration tool — and was retired in 2018 — the need for intra-company collaboration tools persist. Arguably, in a COVID-19 world, those needs are extended — and might benefit from close integration with customer information,” McGee-Smith said.

 

Slack, a Microsoft nemesis, is a leader in team collaboration, having in large part defined the market with its 2013 launch. And, of late, it’s been making strides in fortifying its offering for enterprise deployments. This year it introduced Slack Connect, which allows users at different organizations to work together in a single channel — a “major differentiator against its arch-rival Microsoft Teams,” as Angela Ashenden, lead workplace transformation analyst at CCS Insight, wrote in a No Jitter post.

 

Last month at the Frontiers user conference, Slack announced that it has grown its paying customers almost 20%, to 130 organizations, in the past six months, as Ashenden reported on No Jitter. “The global shift to remote working and the need to connect and enable employees digitally has helped Slack to clarify and better articulate its proposition over the past few months,” she wrote, noting that Slack Connect is at the heart of that offering.

 

The is not the first acquisition rumor involving Slack, either as the target or the suitor (see related post). 

About the Author

Beth Schultz

In her role at Metrigy, Beth Schultz manages research operations, conducts primary research and analysis to provide metrics-based guidance for IT, customer experience, and business decision makers. Additionally, Beth manages the firm’s multimedia thought leadership content.

With more than 30 years in the IT media and events business, Beth is a well-known industry influencer, speaker, and creator of compelling content. She brings to Metrigy a wealth of industry knowledge from her more than three decades of coverage of the rapidly changing areas of digital transformation and the digital workplace.

Most recently, Beth was with Informa Tech, where for seven years she served as program co-chair for Enterprise Connect, the leading independent conference and exhibition for the unified communications and customer experience industries, and editor in chief of the companion No Jitter media site. While with Informa Tech, Beth also oversaw the development and launch of WorkSpace Connect, a multidisciplinary media site providing thought leadership for IT, HR, and facilities/real estate managers responsible for creating collaborative, connected workplaces.

Over the years, Beth has worked at a number of other technology news organizations, including All Analytics, Network World, CommunicationsWeek, and Telephony Magazine. In these positions, she has earned more than a dozen national and regional editorial excellence awards from American Business Media, American Society of Business Press Editors, Folio.net, and others.

Beth has a bachelor’s degree in journalism from the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, and lives in Chicago.