Slack Has Seen 8-10 Acquisition Offers So Far
TechCrunch » Alexia Tsotsis - Staff Archive 2021-11-10
Speaking onstage at the Code conference, Stewart Butterfield, CEO of work collaboration startup Slack which launched two years ago, fielded a question about his company being a prime acquisition target at a time when valuations are high. Slack’s most recent funding valued it at $2.8 billion.
“I’ve already been through an acquisition; that was great,” Butterfield said, referring to the Flickr acquisition by Yahoo. “I learned a lot.”
“That’s like when you put your hand on the stove and get burned, and then you say ‘I learned a lot,'” moderator Kara Swisher rejoined. “Yeah,” Butterfield said.
But then he got serious: “We’re doing well. We have $300 million in the bank and we’ve been growing 5 percent a week for 70 straight weeks. Ninety-eight percent of people who have ever paid for Slack are still paying for it. We’ll never have an opportunity like this again.”
"I love your pride but seriously – if you get a $50B offer you need to take it." @karaswisher advises @slackhq's @stewart #CodeCon
— Jay Neuner (@jayneuner) May 28, 2015
When asked how many people had tried to pick up Slack (#pun), he said, “No one ever says I’d like to acquire you period. They say, ‘Hey let’s catch up,’ not ‘Here’s $50 billion.'”
Swisher, whose company just recently got acquired, then joked that Stewart should take the $50 billion offer, to which Butterfield implied that he wanted to stay independent. “I’m going to make more money than I need in any outcome at this point.” He did concede that a meatier valuation would mean a lot to employees who had joined the company a couple of days ago with smaller equity stakes.
Stewart then said he had entertained 8 or 10 offers from other companies. He did not name which ones, but I can take a completely uninformed guess: Microsoft, Salesforce, Oracle, Google, Facebook.
Stripe co-founder Patrick Collison, who sat on the panel with Houzz founder Adi Tatarko and Butterfield, brought up Salesforce’s rejection of a $55 billion offer from Microsoft. “I don’t think he should take a $50 billion offer,” Collison said. Silicon Valley is littered with anecdotes that support this point of view: Microsoft once offered Facebook $15 billion for an acquisition and, as Swisher brought up, Ted Leonsis once offered the founders of Google $1 million each for the company.
Butterfield, too, is very clearly playing the long game with Slack: “Five or ten years from now, I want people to talk about our employees like, ‘Ooh they worked at Slack.'”