Casey Newton exposes a quiet but devastating pattern in the tech industry: how giants don't just compete with innovators, they suffocate them by bundling inferior clones into essential software suites. While the story of Microsoft crushing Slack is well-trodden ground, Newton's parallel between that history and the current threat to Notion offers a chilling preview of the future for independent productivity tools. This isn't just about features; it's about the structural inevitability of monopoly power in an era of minimal antitrust enforcement.
The Bundle as a Weapon
Newton begins by revisiting the fall of Slack, a company that was once a generation-defining enterprise. He notes that Microsoft Teams "didn't arrive with a bold new design or fresh set of features," yet it succeeded because of two specific advantages: it was part of the Microsoft 365 bundle, and it was backed by a formidable sales force. The author argues that even a superior product cannot compete when the competitor offers a "pale imitation" for free to an existing customer base.
"Even if it had executed perfectly, though, there's a good chance the outcome here would have looked more or less the same."
This observation is the crux of Newton's argument. He suggests that product excellence is no longer a sufficient defense against a competitor that can leverage its market dominance to offer a "good enough" alternative at no marginal cost. The history of Slack serves as a cautionary tale: the company "welcomed" Teams with a smarmy ad, a mistake that marked its peak before a four-year decline where its user base tripled while Microsoft's exploded to 115 million users.
Critics might argue that enterprise software buyers are sophisticated and would never choose a bundled, inferior product over a best-in-class solution. However, Newton dismantles this by pointing out that the decision is rarely about the individual user's preference, but rather the procurement strategy of the IT department, which prioritizes consolidation over optimization.
Notion's Precarious Position
The commentary then pivots to Notion, a seven-year-old collaboration app with over 20 million users, which now faces the same fate as Slack. Microsoft has launched Loop, a clone of Notion that is now included in the Microsoft 365 bundle. Newton highlights the striking similarity in functionality, noting that Loop allows users to "access a bunch of tools and formatting options by typing the forward slash key," mirroring Notion's interface almost exactly.
"Loop isn't really aimed at Notion users. It's aimed at people who might have used Notion eventually, if their workplaces had ever bought it for them."
This distinction is vital. Newton explains that Loop's strategy is not to steal existing customers, but to preemptively capture the market of potential customers by making the alternative free. With Notion's pricing starting at $8 per user per month and Microsoft's basic plan being $2 cheaper, the economic incentive for businesses to switch is overwhelming. The author warns that if Loop captures tens of millions of users, Notion's path to its $10 billion valuation becomes nearly impossible.
"The company has wisely kept any opinions about Loop to itself, avoiding Slack's mistake of focusing attention on a rival. But the fundamental dynamics that doomed Slack still seem to apply."
Notion is fighting back by investing heavily in artificial intelligence, launching features like "Q&A" that let users query their entire database. Newton admits that while this is the "right focus," the question remains: "how differentiated can a company be in AI when its competition is Microsoft?" The sheer scale of Microsoft's resources in AI, with Copilot available standard in Loop, creates an uneven playing field that product innovation alone may not bridge.
The Regulatory Void
The piece concludes by examining the regulatory landscape, or lack thereof. Newton points out that Slack filed a complaint with the European Commission accusing Microsoft of "abusing and defending its market position" through bundling. Three years later, the Commission has only just opened a formal probe.
"The Commission is concerned that Microsoft may be abusing and defending its market position in productivity software by restricting competition... for the detriment of customers."
Newton's framing suggests that regulatory action is too slow to save companies like Notion. Even if the Commission eventually rules against Microsoft, the damage to the independent software ecosystem may already be done. The author implies that without aggressive antitrust enforcement, the "bundle" will continue to be the most effective weapon for tech giants to neutralize competition.
"In the meantime, Notion's advantage may be that it cares about the product in a way that is existential for the company. But now that a cheaper, bundled alternative is available, history suggests the company will struggle to get others to care nearly that much."
This final thought lands with heavy gravity. It suggests that in a market dominated by bundling, the passion and polish of a standalone product are insufficient to overcome the inertia of a free, integrated alternative.
Bottom Line
Newton's analysis is a sobering reminder that in the current tech landscape, product superiority is often irrelevant against the structural power of bundling. The strongest part of the argument is the historical parallel to Slack, which effectively illustrates that innovation cannot always outpace monopoly leverage. The biggest vulnerability, however, is the lack of a clear solution; the piece identifies a systemic failure but offers no immediate hope for intervention, leaving independent innovators to face a future where the only viable strategy is to hope the giants remain asleep.