Facebook’s Workplace Chat addresses that issue, letting users create a separate account but keeping the same interface. As a result, most users will already be familiar, and organizations don’t have to employ as much training. It’s been just over a year since Workplace Chat released, and with it comes a Windows release. Users can now communicate across PC, Android, Mac, and iOS, and they don’t need admin privileges to install.
Workplace Chat for Windows Functionality
As well as the usual Messenger functionality, Workplace Chat for Windows gives access to the following:
Live video chat multi-company groups Bots Mentions Organization charts OneDrive, Google Drive, Salesforce and Dropbox sharing Document collaboration
It also gives users quick access to their personalized company news feed on the web, which looks almost the same as regular Facebook. The app’s standard version comes free of charge but forgoes file storage integration, administrative control, and G Suite, Azure AD, and Okta integration. With the Windows release, it could be a competitor to both Slack and Microsoft Teams, despite a reduction integrations. Teams may integrate better with Microsoft’s ecosystem, but Messenger wins on familiarity and is free for all non-profits and educational staff. After a 90-day trial, Workplace Chat costs $3 per user up to 1,000, $2 for the next 9,000, and $1 after that. Comparatively, organizations can get Microsoft Teams, Exchange, SharePoint, Skype for Business, OneDrive and Yammer for $5. Ultimately, Facebook is in an already saturated market, and it’ll be interesting to see how the three compete.