Picture Credit: Slack
It’s not usually you see a longtime firm burn by means of three CEOs in lower than a yr. However by means of circumstances past its management, that’s what has occurred at Slack, the corporate Salesforce acquired in 2020 for $28 billion. In November, Slack launched Denise Dresser as the newest individual to occupy the nook workplace.
Dresser acknowledges it wasn’t straightforward to step into the function beneath these circumstances, however she is settling in. “You recognize, like something, it’s all the time arduous to step into any new firm and do it in a approach that’s sleek, however I feel the staff gave me loads of teaching, and we actually noticed the imaginative and prescient collectively,” Dresser informed TechCrunch.
She grew up within the suburbs exterior of Boston, was educated on the College of Massachusetts at Amherst the place she studied accounting and labored at Salesforce for the final dozen years in numerous govt roles.
Her predecessor, Lidiane Jones, was simply 10 months into the job when she introduced she was leaving to be CEO at Bumble, pushed by the attract of operating a stand-alone public firm. Jones herself had changed firm co-founder Stewart Butterfield when he introduced that he was leaving on the finish of 2022.
It’s troublesome changing a founder-CEO as Jones did. It might be much more difficult to take over simply 10 months later for his successor, however some govt turnover is predicted within the years following an acquisition, says Arjun Bhatia, a William Blair analyst who follows Salesforce. “You need a steady management staff, after all, and also you need somebody who’s specializing in it, however the CEO turnover we’ve seen just isn’t regarding at this level,” Bhatia informed TechCrunch. “If that turns into extra recurring, definitely that view may change, however I feel it’s a pure course after an acquisition like this for a corporation like Slack to seek out its place contained in the Salesforce ecosystem.”
Dresser says that she’s merely constructing on what her predecessors did earlier than she bought there, whereas bringing her personal persona to the job. “I ask a variety of questions, and I positively am an accountant at coronary heart,” she mentioned. “So I wish to be organized and I’ll proceed that on, however it’s not prefer it’s an enormous pull. I feel the muse is already there, and it’s an extremely well-run group.”
How has Slack fared at Huge CRM?
Whenever you take a look at the worth that Salesforce paid to personal Slack, even giving some leeway for 2020 inventory costs and the over-exuberance of the interval, it nonetheless looks like a attain. The idea on the time was that Slack might be the communication layer on high of all of the enterprise software program that Salesforce sells. It’s nonetheless the hope, actually, however income development has slowed dramatically at Slack since its acquisition.
We don’t have precise income numbers as a result of Salesforce stopped reporting them final spring, however it does share the proportion of development from the prior yr. Development has slowed considerably from 46% YoY in Q32023 to only 16% in Q42024. For essentially the most half, the development has been down — and it’s as much as Dresser to show that round.
Slack might change this development by discovering new enterprise alternatives and holding current clients completely satisfied whereas on the identical time not being so intently tied to Salesforce that it loses clients who aren’t Salesforce-centric.
Dresser could also be caught between these seemingly conflicting necessities, says Brent Leary, principal analyst at CRM Necessities. He, too, has been monitoring Salesforce since its earliest days. “She’s bought to have the ability to determine what the proper steadiness is between Slack as a standalone model that continues to draw non-Salesforce clients, whereas enabling Salesforce clients to make use of Slack in all places throughout the platform they should collaborate,” Leary mentioned.
However Dresser doesn’t suppose it’s all that difficult. “I don’t know if I feel it’s that powerful. I feel it was the unique imaginative and prescient when the 2 corporations got here collectively,” she mentioned. “I feel there’s an actual recognition that there’s one thing very particular right here that we need to nurture and proceed. And I feel that’s been a reasonably constant theme from the very starting.”
The potential of generative AI
One huge change she must handle has been the event of generative AI in software program, in Slack and throughout the Salesforce household of merchandise. Dresser says that AI is a pure match for Slack as a result of as a communications platform with plenty of embedded data, it can assist customers harness, perceive and discover data nuggets within the mass of data.
“When you concentrate on it from a higher-level perspective, Slack has a lot of the world’s conversations occurring in unstructured knowledge,” she mentioned. “After which you concentrate on Salesforce having this unimaginable set of buyer knowledge, a number of the world’s most valued knowledge. The chance to convey structured and unstructured knowledge into Slack and combine these actually creates this highly effective platform for the long run.”
All of that relies upon, after all, on execution: You possibly can’t simply sprinkle AI fairy mud on a product and hope it’s going to work. However Dresser claims that AI helped her stand up to hurry in her new place rather more shortly than would have been doable with out with the ability to entry summaries of lengthy product threads. Summarization is an enormous promoting level for generative AI, and utilizing it to save lots of time understanding lengthy conversational threads might be an enormous use case. However once more, it is dependent upon the standard of the summaries.
One other huge difficulty Dresser faces is learn how to compete with Microsoft, which brings Groups to the desk mixed with Workplace 365, Dynamics 365, and AI within the type of Microsoft Copilot rolled out throughout the platform, says J. P. Gownder, an analyst at Forrester Analysis. “It’s logical for Slack to attempt to increase its person base by integrating Salesforce extra intently, however it should be cautious to not alienate current clients, who’re tremendously loyal to what’s supplied right now. Within the meantime, Microsoft Groups is a behemoth that has an opportunity to seize much more minutes through Copilot,” Gownder informed TechCrunch.
However Bhatia factors out that Microsoft nonetheless works finest contained in the Microsoft ecosystem, and Slack might have a bonus in that regard. “Microsoft doesn’t have that interoperability play as a lot. Their benefit by far is distribution. And two huge benefits that Slack has of their market are interoperability and ease of use,” he mentioned.
Another diploma of issue for Dresser is that the remaining Slack co-founder, CTO Cal Henderson, left firstly of March, changed by none aside from Salesforce co-founder and CTO Parker Harris. Regardless that Harris brings an extended historical past of constructing Salesforce, Slack is shedding an individual who has a deep understanding of Slack’s technical underpinnings.
Dresser definitely understands that she faces these challenges forward, that she must win over staff and clients and discover a approach to preserve Slack rising and important contained in the huge Salesforce ecosystem. However she says her function is actually about making human connections, and the remaining will work itself out.
“I attempt to simply assist folks perceive that I’m right here as a result of I’m deeply, deeply keen about what we are able to do for the world, for our customers, and our staff as effectively at Slack and the broader Salesforce — and I wouldn’t be right here if I wasn’t.”