And I'd add that inclusion is especially important for a tool that's supposed to connect everybody in the company. Thinking that one can ignore a chunk of the audience because they have no choice but to keep using your product is at best confused, and at worse displaying enormous arrogance. It's the sort of enterprise-grade nonsense that Slack was initially seen as an antidote to.
I get that things that want to be popular quite often shiv the early adopters as they become mainstream, as a) that particular orange has been well juiced, and b) satisfying early-adopter needs really can get in the way of that holy grail, maximizing revenue.
But here I don't think there's a big conflict. There are a bunch of ways this could have been done to make everybody happy. It could have been opt-in for a while and then opt out. Or as others point out, there are apparently good WYSIWYG experiences already out there. With a market cap of $12 billion, Slack could afford to buy one, or at least the team behind it.
The only explanation I see is that it was rushed out the door to meet some executive's goals. Which suggests that Slack is becoming the sort of clueless, sales-driven, user-contemptuous company the initially aimed to overthrow.
I get that things that want to be popular quite often shiv the early adopters as they become mainstream, as a) that particular orange has been well juiced, and b) satisfying early-adopter needs really can get in the way of that holy grail, maximizing revenue.
But here I don't think there's a big conflict. There are a bunch of ways this could have been done to make everybody happy. It could have been opt-in for a while and then opt out. Or as others point out, there are apparently good WYSIWYG experiences already out there. With a market cap of $12 billion, Slack could afford to buy one, or at least the team behind it.
The only explanation I see is that it was rushed out the door to meet some executive's goals. Which suggests that Slack is becoming the sort of clueless, sales-driven, user-contemptuous company the initially aimed to overthrow.