Is Slack Replacing Your Project Management Tool?

Agentic AI is scaling fast inside enterprise accounts. The disruption thesis has merit - but the functional gap is still real

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Is Slack Replacing Your Project Management Tool
Project ManagementUnified Communications & CollaborationExplainer

Published: June 11, 2026

Thomas Walker

Enterprise buyers are beginning to ask a pointed question: Can the collaboration tool they already pay for quietly become a substitute for their project management platform?

As Salesforce posts record AI numbers and Microsoft consolidates its work management stack, the boundary between chat and project management is visibly shifting. The evidence deserves serious attention, but the answer is more complicated than the headlines suggest…

This piece examines what Slack and Microsoft are actually building, where dedicated PM tools still offer a meaningful advantage, and what enterprise buyers should do before their next renewal.

How Is Slack Incorporating Agentic AI?

The headline metrics from Salesforce’s Q1 FY27 earnings are, by any measure, striking. Slack’s Model Context Protocol, which gives AI agents a standardized way to discover context and execute tasks, surpassed one million active users within six weeks of launch. Across Agentforce and Slack, Salesforce delivered 3.8 billion Agentic Work Units, growing 111% quarter-on-quarter. Agentforce ARR reached $1.2 billion, up 205% year over year.

Marc Benioff, Salesforce’s Chair and CEO, has previously described agentic AI as β€œthe biggest growth opportunity for our customers and for Salesforce” – a statement that, given the underlying numbers, is hard to dismiss as earnings-call hyperbole.

That said, Salesforce does not break out how many of those 3.8 billion work units are tied specifically to project and task management workflows, as opposed to sales, service, or other CRM functions. The one million MCP figure is an adoption number – it says nothing about depth of use, nor whether adoption is displacing existing PM tools or simply sitting alongside them.

The evidence is suggestive of disruption, but the proof is yet to come.

Can Slack Become a Work Management Platform?

To understand why the disruption thesis has traction, it’s important to understand what Slack currently offers. The platform now natively supports Lists, Canvases, and project Templates. Through MCP, it provides AI agents with a unified communication layer that pulls live data from third-party tools – including Asana and Workday – processes it, and reports back, without developers writing custom code for each integration.

Slack’s own platform data claims users save an average of 97 minutes per week by surfacing existing team knowledge intelligently, with decision-making running 37% faster when app data is unified with conversations.

MCP represents a qualitative shift in what a collaboration platform can do: when an AI agent can identify a blocked task, reassign it, and notify the relevant stakeholder (all without a human leaving the chat window), the case for a separate project management interface becomes harder to justify.

Slack outlined its strategy:

β€œThe average enterprise juggles over 1,000 applications. Slack positions itself as the 2% of your IT budget that amplifies the other 98%.”

Is Microsoft Making the Same Bet?

Notably, Salesforce is not alone in this strategic direction. Microsoft’s January 2026 Planner overhaul introduced a Project Manager agent, now available to any Copilot licence holder, regardless of Planner tier. It’s capable of pulling decisions from Teams meeting transcripts, generating task lists from conversational input, and building workback schedules based on project parameters. Microsoft has also consolidated Project, To Do, and Planner into a single unified interface, following the mid-2025 retirement of Project for the web.

Two of the world’s largest enterprise software companies are independently converging on an identical thesis: that the boundary between collaboration and work management is artificial and should be dissolved.

That directional alignment is itself a significant data point for enterprise buyers evaluating their PM stack, even if neither platform has yet delivered a complete substitute for specialist tooling.

Β Where Dedicated Project Management Tools Still Win

At this point, it’s unlikely that most buyers will abandon their project management platform, but the landscape is slowly shifting.

Slack’s native PM capabilities remain relatively shallow. Lists and Canvases are effective for lightweight task tracking; they are not a credible substitute for resource planning, portfolio management, critical path analysis, or cross-project dependency mapping.

For enterprises running complex, multi-team programmes with significant governance requirements, the functional gap between what Slack offers today and what Asana, Jira, or Smartsheet provide remains meaningful.

While smaller companies may be weighing up the value of their PM platforms, the big-money contracts will likely be sticking around.

Dedicated PM vendors are also not standing still. Asana’s AI Studio has been building toward agentic automation, and its deep embeddedness in enterprise workflows carries real switching costs. Monday.com’s AI Blocks and Atlassian’s investments in Rovo and Loom reflect genuine product development, not cosmetic AI labelling.

These platforms have years of workflow architecture and institutional knowledge that a chat interface with project features cannot replicate overnight.

It’s also important to remember that the headline figures from Salesforce’s earnings call were delivered in an investor context, where commercial momentum is the primary message. Independent verification of how MCP users are engaging with work management features specifically, and whether usage patterns are genuinely changing, is not yet available from third-party sources.

What Should Enterprise Buyers Be Doing?

Enterprise buyers would be well-served by three practical moves ahead of their next PM renewal.

1 – Audit the gap between where work is discussed and where it is tracked

If a significant volume of project decisions, blockers, and updates are being resolved in Slack or Teams and only partially reflected in the official PM tool, that workflow inefficiency is real, and it exists regardless of which platform ultimately closes it.

2 – Interrogate vendors on what β€œagentic” means for their product

The distinction between a feature that surfaces a suggestion and one that executes an action end-to-end – without human prompting – is not cosmetic. Buyers should request live demonstrations of closed-loop workflows, not slide decks about roadmap intentions.

3 -Scrutinize licence overlap

With Slack’s Lists, Microsoft’s Planner, and a standalone PM platform potentially covering overlapping ground within the same organization, the total cost of the current stack deserves fresh examination.

One Platform to Run Them All?

The category boundary between collaboration and project management is shifting – that much is not in dispute. What remains genuinely unclear is how far, and how fast. Salesforce’s Q1 numbers establish that agentic AI is scaling inside enterprise accounts at a rate that should command attention.

For most enterprises, the right response is a more rigorous renewal process, better questions put to incumbent PM vendors, and a clearer audit of where workflow overlap already exists. The disruption may be real. The timeline is still being written.

FAQs

Is Slack replacing project management tools like Asana and Jira?

Not yet – while Slack’s MCP and agentic capabilities are expanding into PM territory, dedicated tools still hold a significant functional advantage for complex, multi-team enterprise programmes.

What is Slack’s Model Context Protocol (MCP)?

An open standard that allows AI agents to securely discover context and execute tasks across enterprise systems from within Slack, without requiring custom-coded integrations for each tool.

How does Microsoft Planner compare to Slack for project management in 2026?

Microsoft’s 2026 Planner overhaul introduced a Copilot-powered Project Manager agent that consolidates Project, To Do, and Planner, making it a closer rival to standalone PM tools, particularly for existing Microsoft 365 customers.

Should enterprise buyers switch from dedicated PM tools to Slack?

Buyers should audit their licence overlap and interrogate vendors on genuine agentic capabilities, but specialist PM tools still outperform Slack in terms of functionality depth.

What does Salesforce’s Agentforce growth mean for enterprise project management?

Agentforce ARR growing 205% year-on-year signals that autonomous AI execution is scaling rapidly inside enterprise accounts – a directional signal that all PM vendors, and their customers, should be tracking closely.

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