![]() ![]() The heart of both (though maybe more exclusively so for Slack) is communication. We’ll talk a little more about what they can do in the ‘Integrations’ section but, in terms of layout, all you need to know is that they are like browser tabs within a channel or chat that you use to flick to different integrations. The most significant of Teams’ extras are the “tabs”. Everything is a little more filed and categorised in Teams whereas all of Slack is immediately present - never more than a couple of clicks away (however, an upcoming update plans to make the sidebar more collapsible). Teams’ extra layers are the only real difference. The result is that both applications look very similar, as you can see below (Slack above, Teams below). Microsoft clearly decided, in terms of layout, that the only way to beat them was to join them. Below is all you need to know about the differences that will make a difference - where you can find out whether to tag out of Teams or cut the Slack. So how do they compare? Truthfully, the devil is in the details and it ultimately depends on what you’re planning to get out of your communication/collaboration software. ![]() Since head-on-head conflict is here, direct comparison is unavoidable. Since then, both products have steamed towards a head-on-head conflict now that Teams has outstripped Slack in terms of users, it is looking to directly poach from the communications veteran. Only a last minute turnaround from Bill Gates prevented Microsoft from owning Slack and, from this chaos, Microsoft Teams was born. ![]()
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