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Teams and Slack By the Numbers

Teams and Slack competitive data
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Teams and Slack

Slack is the biggest and most obvious competitor for Teams. Microsoft’s major advantages over Slack are:

In January 2017, Spiceworks predicted that Teams will be used by more people than Slack by 2019. At that time, it seemed like a stretch goal, but Teams maintained a steady and climbing trajectory from its introduction to arrive at the point where Microsoft could claim leadership in 2018. Measured in terms of customers using Teams, Microsoft reported:

I assume that Microsoft means “tenants” when they say “organizations.”  Some organizations have multiple Office 365 tenants, but this is not the norm.

Teams is now available in 181 markets and in 44 languages, including Hebrew and Arabic (introduced in August 2018). Microsoft says that 87 of the Fortune 100 use Teams. Furthermore, they emphasize the enterprise credentials of Teams by noting that sixty customers have more than 10,000 people using Teams and that the largest customer (Accenture) has over 108,000 users. I assume that the users reported by Microsoft are active Office 365 users with a Teams license who perform some level of activity within the application at least once monthly.

The data for Slack are less clear, but one May 2018 estimate puts it at eight million daily active users (but only three million of which are paid subscriptions). Taking Microsoft’s figure of 329,000 organizations, if 100 people on average actively use Teams in each organization, the total for Teams approaches 33 million.

That figure might seem high, but we can account for six million in the sixty organizations with more than 10,000 users and the overall number should be viewed in the context of 135 million active users of Office 365. Whatever the numbers, the competition between Teams and Slack will drive the development of new functionality, and that’s a good thing.


This is an extract from Chapter 13 of the Office 365 for IT Pros eBook. Read much more about Teams in the 80-page chapter, and then go to to read even more in Chapter 14 (PowerShell and Teams) and Chapter 16 (Teams Meetings). Of course, this text is taken from the book at the date of this post. Because we keep on improving and updating our text, it might be different when you read the book.

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