LandingScore Leaderboard

slack.com

β€œChannels, huddles, clips, CRM, canvas, lists, agents β€” Slack now does everything except tell a newcomer what Slack is.”

What we think it is: Team messaging platform now bundling AI agents and project tools.

47 / 100 Β· Grade F
Clarity50
Copy50
Call to Action44
Pricing33
Trust56
Shareability56

The 3 leaks costing them the most

1 It became the Swiss Army knife it once mocked

Why it hurts: Messaging, CRM, project management, canvas, lists, workflow builder and an agentic platform all live on one page. Principle #11 (does one thing) is the deepest cut β€” the page can't decide what Slack is for.

Fix: Lead with the one job a new team hires Slack for, and let the platform breadth reveal itself after signup.

2 No price, no human, signup-first

Why it hurts: Pricing isn't in the nav, there's no founder voice, and the funnel is freemium signup (#1, #8, #15, #16). For an enterprise giant that's expected, but it's why a viral-products rubric scores it low.

Fix: Add 'Pricing' to the nav and one named-customer proof stat in the hero.

3 The hero assumes you already love Slack

Why it hurts: 'All your people and AI agents working together' only lands if you know what Slack does. Principle #20 wants the hero to stand alone for a stranger.

Fix: Add a plain second line: 'The place your team chats, decides, and ships β€” now with AI in the room.'

All 31 principles, scored

1. No free plan βœ— 0/3

Slack's free plan is central to the funnel β€” read as weak monetization by the rubric.

Fix: Frame paid plans behind a trial, not a free-forever tier.

2. Three colors max βœ“ 3/3

Only 2 distinct colors detected β€” an exceptionally disciplined palette.

3. Numbers over adjectives β–³ 1/3

'Millions of people' aside, the headings carry no concrete numbers.

Fix: Quantify time saved or meetings avoided.

4. Shareable footer β–³ 1/3

Standard enterprise footer with no memorable hook.

Fix: Add a line worth screenshotting.

5. OG image like a thumbnail β—‹ 2/3

Has an og:image and a clear OG title.

Fix: Make the OG description name a job, not 'productivity'.

6. One idea per screen β–³ 1/3

Knowledge, People, Process, Platform plus a dozen features stack competing ideas.

Fix: Cut the homepage to three ideas.

7. Fifth-grader headline βœ“ 3/3

'All your people and AI agents working together' is plain and readable.

8. Hard paywall βœ— 0/3

Signup-first freemium; payment comes much later.

Fix: Anchor an upgrade decision earlier.

9. Copy only you could write β–³ 1/3

The AI-pivot copy could sit on any collaboration tool's page.

Fix: Write the line only Slack's history could earn.

10. Show before explain β—‹ 2/3

Video, demo and 91 images show the product amid heavy telling.

Fix: Lead with one short agent-in-a-channel clip.

11. Does one thing βœ— 0/3

Messaging + CRM + project management + canvas + lists + platform β€” the definitional Swiss Army knife.

Fix: Pick one wedge use case for the homepage.

12. Popcorn pricing β–³ 1/3

Free/Pro/Business+/Enterprise runs past the three-choice popcorn limit.

Fix: Show good/better/best; hide enterprise behind contact sales.

13. Rides a wave βœ“ 3/3

Squarely rides the AI-agents wave.

14. Customer-language copy β—‹ 2/3

'Work together' sounds human; 'AI work platform' slips into corporate.

Fix: Use the words teams actually say about chaos and channels.

15. Visible founder βœ— 0/3

No founder presence β€” fully corporate (Salesforce-owned).

Fix: Add a human voice somewhere on the page.

16. Pricing impossible to miss β–³ 1/3

Pricing wasn't found in the captured nav.

Fix: Add a plain 'Pricing' link.

17. Memorable headline β—‹ 2/3

The headline is recallable but not distinctive.

Fix: Tie it to a sharper, ownable benefit.

18. Emotional headline β–³ 1/3

Mild emotional pull; mostly informational.

Fix: Lead with the relief of fewer meetings.

19. Never seen before β–³ 1/3

Slack was once novel; the page now reads like a standard platform pitch.

Fix: Reclaim a surprising 'only Slack does this' moment.

20. Hero sells alone β—‹ 2/3

The hero broadly conveys collaboration but leans on prior brand knowledge.

Fix: Make it stand alone for a stranger.

21. Empathy before selling β–³ 1/3

Jumps to features before naming a felt pain.

Fix: Open with the pain of scattered work and endless meetings.

22. One call to action β–³ 1/3

Several CTAs compete across the nav and hero.

Fix: Pick one primary action.

23. Memorable name βœ“ 3/3

'Slack' is short, iconic, memorable.

24. Sells a desire, not a feature β—‹ 2/3

Sells 'work together' and 'save time' β€” desire, if abstract.

Fix: Make the desire concrete and quantified.

25. Try before buying β—‹ 2/3

Free product lets you try it; demos exist but no on-page play.

Fix: Embed a live mini-demo.

26. No weak words β—‹ 2/3

Only two weak words detected.

Fix: Tighten the remaining soft phrases.

27. No subscription βœ— 0/3

Subscription model.

Fix: Not realistically one-time for a SaaS.

28. CTA says what happens next β–³ 1/3

Nav CTAs are generic.

Fix: Use an outcome verb for the primary button.

29. Has testimonials β—‹ 2/3

Testimonial markup and 'most innovative companies' provide proof, but quotes are thin.

Fix: Add a named, quantified customer result up top.

30. Ten-word description β—‹ 2/3

'AI work platform for managing projects and connecting teams' is around ten words.

Fix: Put a crisp ten-word line in the hero.

31. Priced above competitors β–³ 1/3

Free-led positioning, not premium.

Fix: Anchor paid value against the tools Slack replaces.

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