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Comparison · Collab

Zulip vs Asana

Side-by-side trajectory, velocity, and editorial themes.

Zulip logo
Zulip
COLLABCOMMS
5.0

Zulip donates itself to a nonprofit foundation as its founder joins Anthropic.

◆ Current state

Two consequential moves landed inside three weeks. Tim Abbott, Zulip's longtime leader, is stepping back to join Anthropic along with three senior Kandra Labs engineers, and the for-profit company is being donated to a newly formed independent Zulip Foundation. In parallel, Zulip Server 12.0 shipped — roughly 5,500 commits, end-to-end encryption for mobile push notifications, a major Docker upgrade, and configurable image previews — alongside routine 11.x security patches and a self-hosted AI search integration via Atolio.

◆ Where it's heading

Governance is being separated from product velocity: the foundation owns long-term stewardship while the technical roadmap (E2E push, self-hostable AI integrations, hardened install path) keeps targeting security-conscious, self-hosted teams. Losing the founder to a frontier AI lab is the kind of transition that either accelerates community ownership or stalls momentum — the 12.0 commit volume suggests the team built up runway before the announcement.

◆ Prediction

Expect the Zulip Foundation to publish formal governance, a maintainer charter, and a funding model in the next quarter, and for the AI integration story (Atolio-style connectors rather than first-party AI) to harden into Zulip's positioning against Slack and Mattermost's first-party AI bets.

Asana logo
Asana
PMCOLLAB
6.3

Asana doubles down on rules-driven automation while loosening the old project-team coupling.

◆ Current state

Asana is shipping at a high cadence on two parallel tracks. The first is deepening its automation engine — pausable rules, rule duplication across projects, scheduled triggers that now act on tasks already in a project, and rule actions that bind to project-template roles. The second is reshaping enterprise governance and data model, with RBAC view permissions in Release Preview and Teamless Projects loosening a long-standing structural constraint.

◆ Where it's heading

Rules are being built into the automation backbone of the product — closer to a no-code workflow runtime than a notification system. Teamless Projects removes a constraint that made enterprise rollouts awkward, and the Timesheets and Budgets add-on going GA pulls Asana into PSA-adjacent territory. The pattern is consistent: move from a flat, team-scoped task tracker toward a configurable platform that can be sold up-market.

◆ Prediction

Expect future rule actions to look more agentic — AI-driven branching, conditional approvals — and an RBAC-aware automation surface so admins can govern who can trigger what across the workspace.

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