Background

Teams

Microsoft Teams is a cloud-based communication software developed by Microsoft. First made available in March 2017, Microsoft Teams was officially released in July of 2018. Teams is included in a variety of Office 365 packages, but also has a free version available with limited functionality. The emergence of Teams signals the end of Skype for Business as Teams offers far more functionality and is provided with all the Office 365 plans in which Skype currently is. At the Microsoft Ignite conference in September 2018, it was announced that 87 of the Fortune 100 companies and 329,000 organizations worldwide actively use Teams. And by 2021, Teams usage had skyrocketed to over 145 million daily active users.

Slack

Slack is a cloud-based collaboration and chat tool created by Slack Technologies that launched in 2014. There are, according to the Slack website, 8 million daily active users and 500,000 organizations that use Slack. Both free and paid plan types are available, but most users are of the free variety. Slack has 8 offices located around the world.

Microsoft Teams

Slack

  • Licensing: Teams is available for free as a standalone program and comes included in nearly every Office 365 subscription plan, the cheapest of which is Office 365 Business Essentials for $5/user/month. The next step up is Office 365 Business Premium for $12.50/user/month.

    The free version of Teams includes the same functionality of the paid plans with a few noticeable disadvantages. These include file storage limits (10 GB vs 1 terabyte), auditing and reporting capabilities, and several more.

    Billing Frequency: Monthly

  • Common Pros: Simple and easy to use interface, can add extra functions to a channel, 1 TB of file storage per user, SharePoint and other integrations, desktop and browser accessibility

    Common Cons: Notifications are confusing to configure, mobile app can be unstable, 100-channel limit per user, slow to load old conversations

  • Microsoft typically releases several updates for Teams every month that contain a mix of new features and bug fixes.

  • Teams offers hundreds of app, bot, website, and other 3rd party integrations that can be used individually and team-wide to make environments more functional. Nearly every one of these integrations can be placed on a tab in a team to make it immediately accessible. App categories include things like Developer & IT, Productivity, Sales & Support, and several more. Teams also allows users to build and import custom apps to serve any purpose not covered by what’s available.

  • Teams offers many personalization and customization options for all user types including simple options like choosing the default, dark, or high contrast theme and embedding websites, apps, bots, and more into department-specific created teams. Sub-teams can be built within a larger team to organize team communication further. Add tabs in a team or chat conversation area for quick, direct access to apps and business systems such as Excel, SharePoint, Hootsuite, and Adobe Creative Cloud without having to leave the Teams interface.

  • Licensing: Slack, like Teams, has both free and paid options with some significant disparities between them. Slack Standard is available for $8/user/month or $6.67/user/month if paid annually. Slack Plus costs $15/user/month or $12.50/user/month with a year-long commitment. The paid versions offer significant benefits over Slack for free in terms of integrations, storage capacities, and more.

    Billing Frequency: Monthly or annual. Slight decrease in price when paid annually.

  • Common Pros: Ease to use, reduces emails, plenty of integration options, ability to invite external members into channels and chats, fun and simple interface

    Common Cons: Disappearing conversations in Free version, lacks in team-wide video and audio calling, no ability to paste copied images into conversations

  • Slack updates and changes follow a similar pattern to Teams in that there is no real pattern. There are sometimes several features and improvements made in a month, but also stretches of time when nothing is released for 5+ weeks.

  • In the Slack App Directory, users will find a library of 3rd-party apps and bots that are available for integration into a Slack environment. Apps range categories from ‘Social & Fun’ to ‘HR & Team Culture’ with most other business areas also represented. There are just over 25 bots currently listed on the App Directory including SurveyMonkey, Trello, and others covering various business functions. In addition to the apps and bots in the Directory, users can build custom apps & bots for their teams.

  • Slack, like Teams, allows for a high amount of customization to workspaces but only for certain user and plan types. Any user can personalize their interface with options like changing theme colors, creating custom loading messages, and adding emojis. All users except for guests can create and edit public and private Slack channels where most conversations take place. Additionally, all user types on all plans can add apps to their workspace, although Slack Free users are limited to 10 integrations. The options to customize start decreasing from there, as only admins and workspace owners on a paid plan type have the privileges to make custom user groups.