Stewart Butterfield’s 8 per cent stake in the workplace communication company would be worth US$1.3 billion if Slack goes public this week at US$16 billion
Sophie Alexander and Tom Metcalf
Bloomberg
Canadian entrepreneur Stewart Butterfield helped found Slack Technologies Inc. after selling his earlier startup, Flickr, to Yahoo for more than US$20 million. The latest venture is bringing a bigger windfall.
His 8 per cent stake in the workplace communication company would be worth US$1.3 billion if Slack goes public this week at US$16 billion, the low end of Wall Street’s expected range. Slack co-founder Cal Henderson, 38, owns 3 per cent worth about US$533 million.
Butterfield, the 46-year-old chairman and chief executive officer, has come a long way from the log cabin where he lived in a remote part of Canada without electricity and running water for the first few years of his life. He was introduced to computers in the second grade but lost interest in the technology as he got older and went on to study philosophy in college.
By the time I finished my master’s degree I really had no idea of what I was going to do except for be an academic because, you know, the big five philosophy firms aren’t always hiring,” Butterfield told Bloomberg last year.
After brief stints in the startup world at Communicate.com and
Gradfinder.com, Butterfield came up with the idea for Flickr, a photo and video hosting service that he sold to Yahoo in 2005. Butterfield worked at Yahoo until 2008 and later founded Glitch, which became the multibillion-dollar company now called Slack.
Slack, an acronym for “Searchable Log of All Conversation and Knowledge,” will begin trading Thursday on the New York Stock Exchange under the ticker symbol WORK.
Bloomberg.com