One of the first services to provide video and phone calls over the internet, Skype, was shut down by Microsoft Corp. on Friday.
The present users of Skype, a holdover from the digital boom and bust of the early 2000s, will be switched to free accounts on Microsoft Teams, the company’s favorite videoconferencing and workplace communications tool and a fierce competitor to Slack, the CRM software from Salesforce Inc. In May, Skype will formally retire.
In a blog post, Microsoft’s (MSFT) president of collaborative apps and platforms, Jeff Teper, stated that “the way we communicate has evolved significantly over the years.” “From instant messaging to video calls, technology has continuously transformed how we connect with each other.”
Indeed, the tombstones of outdated goods that either failed to evolve or were supplanted by the changing sands of Silicon Valley and beyond are strewn throughout the IT industry’s vast graveyard. Examples include Microsoft’s Internet Explorer, the Apple Newton (AAPL), the Palm Pilot, and the Blackberry (BB).
In an email, Feng Li, associate dean of research and innovation at London’s Bayes Business School, stated, “Some market leaders lose because competitors build something better, but increasingly they lose unexpectedly because they underestimate how quickly user expectations shift.”
He stated that Skype’s “sluggish evolution, clunky interface and failure to keep pace with seamless, app-based experiences (like WhatsApp, Zoom, and FaceTime) made it a relic long before Microsoft pulled the plug.”
The software behemoth’s most recent annual report, submitted to regulators in January, did not even mention Skype, which it had purchased for $8.5 billion in 2011. According to CNBC, Teams was expanding and had almost twice as many users than Skype, which had about 40 million daily active users during the pandemic.
In addition, Skype has not been brought up in any of the company’s analyst earnings calls since mid-2023, when it was said to have “a very loyal fan base.”
The success of Zoom Communications Inc.’s (ZM) product and the capability of making international calls with Meta Platforms Inc.’s (META) WhatsApp, which was also one of the initial draws of the service, also overtook Skype.
According to Teper’s blog post, Microsoft Teams has hundreds of millions of users at the moment, and during the last two years, the number of minutes used by Teams users has increased fourfold.
A request for additional information regarding whether Microsoft anticipates a charge in its earnings following the transfer was not immediately answered by company representatives.
The founders of the now-defunct music-download service Napster popularized peer-to-peer networking, which Skype was an early adopter of. An architecture known as peer-to-peer networking divides the burden evenly among a large number of linked machines.
What can corporations take away from the demise of trailblazing firms like Skype? Above all, it’s about evolution, according to Li.
“Even the strongest brands can be swept aside, especially if they stop listening, stop evolving or assume their dominance will last, but often simply as a collateral damage from wider developments,” he stated.
Microsoft said goodbye to Skype as though it were writing an epitaph itself.
“Skype has been an integral part of shaping modern communications and supporting countless meaningful moments, and we are honored to have been part of the journey,” Teper stated.