The Korea Times

Microsoft launches workplace-messaging software Teams

- By Matt Day (Seattle Times/Tribune News)

SEATTLE — Microsoft is taking the bubble wrap off its challenge to startup Slack’s white-hot workplace-messaging software, officially launching Microsoft Teams.

Businesses that use Microsoft’s Office 365 web-based productivi­ty suite will see the new applicatio­n appear, the company says.

The company’s would-be Slack killer, built in the last two years, enters a more crowded market than when it was introduced in a preview version a few months ago.

Google has come calling. Microsoft’s nemesis has redesigned its Hangouts chat app with Slack-like features, unveiling the new concept at a company event last week. Facebook is also in the midst of a push to sell workplace collaborat­ion tools.

At stake is the fast-changing realm of business communicat­ion, which, in addition to staples like email, has come to include digital messaging services and voice and video calls often handled over the internet instead of using telephone infrastruc­ture.

Research firm Gartner estimates that businesses worldwide will spend $5.1 billion on web conferenci­ng, collaborat­ion and social tools in 2017.

Microsoft Teams, like Slack, allows users to set up running chat rooms with individual­s or groups of colleagues, silo conversati­ons in expandable threads, and share files.

Microsoft’s Office, a dominant software brand among informatio­n workers, is under attack from companies like Slack that take aim at a single area of workplace tools, as well as from broad assaults by the likes of Google and Amazon.

Google is working to leverage its dominant position with a generation of internet users to build a brand for its business apps, redou- bling its efforts to sell the G-Suite productivi­ty platform.

Amazon, meanwhile, is trying to expand its reach from developer tools to workplace applicatio­ns, a portfolio that has come to include email, calendars and workplace communicat­ions tools.

Microsoft, headquarte­red outside Seattle, has tried to hold its ground by packing Office 365 with new features, some of which, like Teams, come at no extra charge.

The company says Office 365 has more than 85 million users. And, changing the measuring stick in marketing materials on Tuesday, Microsoft said “more than 50,000 organizati­ons” had plugged into Teams during the service’s five-month preview period. That tally includes Alaska Airlines, ConocoPhil­lips and Expedia, Microsoft says. Bryan Goode, a marketing manager with the Office 365 group, said in an interview that the company was committed to its new product.

Microsoft developers have added about 100 features to Teams during its preview, and plan to add an equal number during the next three to four months, he said, including tighter integratio­n with Outlook and the ability to invite people outside a company to chats.

“We are not slowing down,” he said.

 ?? Korea Times files ?? A Microsoft logo is seen during the Consumer Electronic­s Show in Las Vegas.
Korea Times files A Microsoft logo is seen during the Consumer Electronic­s Show in Las Vegas.

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