Meetings are the flagship surface and the first line item cut when cash tightens. Techaisle's study of 3,980 SMB and midmarket organizations identifies the real moat in something less glamorous: the phone number, the call history, and the ability to find what was decided.
A standalone meetings subscription is the easiest thing in the software stack to cancel. It is duplicated free inside the productivity bundles most firms already pay for, it carries an obvious monthly price, and nothing breaks when it disappears. In Techaisle's survey of 3,980 small business and midmarket organizations, that fragility is not a small-business quirk. It is the structural weakness sitting at the center of the collaboration category, and most meetings-first roadmaps are aimed in the wrong direction because of it.
Start with what no longer wins. File sharing, messaging, and productivity-suite integration still dominate the list of capabilities buyers rate critical, at 46% to 56%. That is precisely why they no longer close deals. A capability that every competitor ships and every bundle includes is table stakes, not differentiation. The base of the collaboration stack has commoditized, and buyers now assume it the way they assume dial tone.
The instinct, when the base commoditizes, is to pile more features into the flagship. Another AI summary, another whiteboard, another in-meeting widget. The data says that instinct is a treadmill. Voice, video, and chat are universal across every company size. Adding a fourth in-meeting feature to a market that already has three of everything does not move a buyer, because the buyer's pain is no longer inside the meeting. It sits on either side of it.

The two unmet needs: find what was said, and meet less
Two problems rise as firms scale, and neither is solved by a better meeting.

