Buy Struggling Slack (WORK) Stock Before Earnings Despite Microsoft Competition?

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Slack Technologies, Inc. WORK stock has plummeted since its June IPO, which is not uncommon for young tech firms, and follows alongside similar drops from much splashier names such as Uber UBER. The firm’s revenue growth appears solid, but its digital work-based communication services face stiff competition from giants such as Microsoft MSFT.

Now the question is should investors consider buying Slack stock before it reports its Q3 fiscal 2020 financial results on Wednesday, December 4?

What’s Going On?

Slack is a work communication platform that allows users to send messages, images, documents, and more to groups or individuals without email. The San Francisco-based firm also lives in the broader cloud-computing/customer relationship management space and hopes it is able to attract more paying business clients through its apps and “robust” API. WORK’s business is pretty straight forward, which is also part of the problem.

Wall Street and investors are worried that Slack won’t be able to compete long-term and continue to attract paid subscriptions in a work-place communication industry dominated by Microsoft and Google GOOGL. For instance, Microsoft announced recently that its Teams service, which launched in 2017 and is similar to Slack, now has 20 million daily active users.

Slack last reported in early October that 12 million people actively use its platform every day, up 37% from the year-ago period. The firm has also fought back against MSFT’s growing user figures in a company blog post titled "Not all Daily Active Users are created equal: Work is fueled by true engagement."

It is worth noting that Microsoft can package Teams with its popular Office 365 suite. And Slack Chief Executive Stewart Butterfield has said that more than 70% of his company’s top 50 customers also use Office 365 and seemed to suggest that they prefer Slack over Microsoft’s offering.

On top of that, fellow tech firms such as IBM IBM and Splunk SPLK and retailers like Target TGT all utilize Slack, along with 65 of the Fortune 100. Plus, the Wall Street Journal reported earlier this month that Slack and Microsoft have actually collaborated behind the scenes and that Slack “uses Microsoft’s open-source software to make its collaboration tool work seamlessly with parts of Office 365.”

Q3 Outlook & Beyond

Moving on, our Zacks Consensus Estimates call for Slack’s third quarter fiscal 2020 revenue to come in at $155.12 million. This comes in at the high-end of Slack’s own guidance that called for quarterly sales between $154 million to $156 million, which would mark year-over-year growth of between 46% to 48%.