What will happen to Stack Overflow now that it has been sold to Prosus for $1.8 Billion?
Source:
What will happen to Stack Overflow now that it has been sold to Prosus for $1.8 Billion?
Source:
Here's my general take (disclaimer: I am not an employee, nor am I a TV actor)
Stack Overflow wants to grow
Nobody has made that a secret. Somehow, you have to make money to keep the lights on. When the new CEO took over he said
It is critically important that we evolve our platform, community infrastructure, and culture to be more useful to our community so we continue to be a core part of a developer’s workflow.
Those things take money. And you don't hire a new CEO to keep the status quo. The best way to do that is to offer stock. The problem is that tech stocks are no longer a sure bet, especially for a company that doesn't seem to have a white-hot product like Slack (sold for $27.7B USD). I really don't know that a Stack Overflow IPO would work well enough, and the risk is the stock tanks and takes the company down too.
In this context, selling is the next best option.
Get a bigger vision
So what does Prosus want with SO? (emphasis mine)
With expertise in scaling communities in high-growth markets globally, Prosus can help accelerate Stack Overflow’s growth ambitions, with a particular focus on reaching a wider international community, while also further scaling the company’s Teams product to position Stack Overflow at the center of product and technology development within major enterprises globally.
Prosus has built a significant presence on the enterprise side with a focus on the future of workplace learning. Prosus will reach 90% of the Fortune 100 across its corporate learning companies including Stack Overflow, Skillsoft, Udemy and Codecademy.
You've probably heard of some of those companies. I know directly that Codecademy has a free tier. How SO fits into that wheelhouse isn't entirely clear, but it's clear there's a theme there. And that theme seems to involve keeping the SO Q&A format as-is in some fashion. That seems to be the recurring message
An exciting day! @spolsky called me and let me know. Today's sale of Stack Overflow, most importantly, lets Stack Overflow continue as an independent site -- and also mints 61 new millionaires.
Today we’re pleased to announce that Stack Overflow is joining Prosus. Prosus is an investment and holding company, which means that the most important part of this announcement is that Stack Overflow will continue to operate independently, with the exact same team in place that has been operating it, according to the exact same plan and the exact same business practices. Don’t expect to see major changes or awkward “synergies”. The business of Stack Overflow will continue to focus on Reach and Relevance, and Stack Overflow for Teams. The entire company is staying in place: we just have different owners now.
This is, in some ways, the best possible outcome. Stack Overflow stays independent. The company has plenty of cash on hand to expand and deliver more features and fix the old broken ones. Right now, the biggest gating factor to how fast we can do this is just how fast we can hire excellent people.
And the CEO of SO
How you use our site and our products will not change in the coming weeks or months, just as our company’s goals and strategic priorities remain the same. As the acquisition is finalized, and we continue to partner with Prosus, I will keep you all posted through my regular quarterly blog posts and Teresa Dietrich, our Chief Product and Technology Officer, will do the same in her quarterly community blog posts.
Lest you think I'm just shooting from the hip here, they're looking for a VP of community management. That was announced weeks ago. If you're not in good shape, and selling from a point of weakness, you don't put out stuff like that.
Yes, it would be easier with some people still here to partake and tell us it will be fine. But I don't think this bodes poorly for the community. Only time can truly tell, though...
Teresa Dietrich (Our Chief Product Officer) answered this on MSE, since it's a pretty similar question I'll quote her directly:
The TL;DR is not much this year. We have our current strategy, roadmaps and plans for this year and continue to be focused on those. It’s business as usual, as it says in our blog post, we would be operating independently. The leadership team is staying, including me. Most of the company just found out about this today and many are in shock and excited about the future. Prosus is very community-focused and excited about what you all have built. As we start to plan for 2022, I think we will see more opportunities to invest in our public platform sites and community. I will be publishing my State of the Stack blog and meta post this month and will go into more detail there.
For now, if you want to know more, we have a bit more detail on our blog post.
Officially, for the time being, nothing.
How you use our site and our products will not change in the coming weeks or months, just as our company’s goals and strategic priorities remain the same. As the acquisition is finalized, and we continue to partner with Prosus, [Prashanth] will keep you all posted through [his] regular quarterly blog posts and Teresa Dietrich, our Chief Product and Technology Officer, will do the same in her quarterly community blog posts.
Note: This post is being updated to show the actual changes associated with the roadmap I described in 2021.
Forward looking statement
Overall, I think what we will see in the near term is no significant changes, perhaps some minor investments (For example, Collectives); in the mid term, an alteration to the way that advertising is served (For example The Future of our Jobs Ad slots, "Reach and Relevance", and Privacy Changes) and some phasing out of underperforming facets of the exchange (For example, Jobs and Dev Story); in the long term a purchase by another firm as profitability here wanes (For example, the Layoffs on May 10 2023 and the Layoffs on October 16 2023), probably a large tech company who would put this to good use somewhere.
Don't worry too much though, this place makes enough money and has a large enough community to survive the process. Just focus on creating good content that stands the test of time. Maybe even have some fun and help someone along the way.
State of SO at the time of sale
What happens to Stack Overflow is no longer up to anyone here; not the CEO, the board, no one, has a say in the future of the business of Stack Overflow.
What happens is purely up to the outlook of whomever decided to purchase the platform. Seeing as how they spent $1.8B it means that there is a serious investment in the success of the site and overall product, so that is good. However, what that also means is that this is now going to be purely governed by monetary milestones from either an oversight board or an investment group.
Everyone cited - Atwood, Spolsky, Prashanth - they all strongly mention money as what is changing. Money always comes with strings attached when it is influenced by such a large group. There will now more than likely be consequences for parts of the exchange failing to perform financially.
Let's all be clear though, Prosus didn't purchase Stack Overflow... Naspers did. The CEO and board are who make large purchases like this, and Naspers (who fully owns Prosus) is the CEO and board for Prosus. Bob van Dijk is the current CEO of both Naspers and Prosus. Naspers was founded as a publication company, with the mission statement "for the free unimpeded expression of public opinion on all major issues". So, while having someone like Bob there who has experience from eBay and Allegro, and a general outlook of having free expression, it would seem a good fit. One would hope this place was left in good hands.
On the other hand, Naspers is so big that it has its hands in both good and bad places. While the "corporate learning companies" segment seems good, there are also a wide variety of other internet segments which may have a conflict of interest with regards to the way we see advertising.