

The transaction was made with $360 million in cash and $65 million in shares and options. On January 9, 2017, Atlassian announced its intent to acquire Trello for $425 million. By January 2022 there were a total of 247 power-ups listed in the power-up directory.


Initial integrations included Zendesk, SurveyMonkey and Giphy. In 2016 Trello launched the Power-Up platform, allowing 3rd party developers to build and distribute extensions known as Power-Ups to Trello. In May 2016, Trello claimed it had more than 1.1 million daily active users and 14 million total signups. Prior to its acquisition, Trello had sold 22% of its shares to investors, with the remaining shares held by founders Michael Pryor and Joel Spolsky. In 2014, it raised US$10.3 million in funding from Index Ventures and Spark Capital. Lifehacker said "it makes project collaboration simple and kind of enjoyable". In September 2011 Wired magazine named the application one of "The 7 Coolest Startups You Haven't Heard of Yet". Trello was released at a TechCrunch event by Fog Creek founder Joel Spolsky.
#PRIVATE TRELLO BOARDS IN MICROSOFT TEAMS CODE#
The name Trello is derived from the word "trellis" which had been a code name for the project at its early stages. Created in 2011 by Fog Creek Software, it was spun out to form the basis of a separate company in New York City in 2014 and sold to Atlassian in January 2017. Trello is a web-based, kanban-style, list-making application and is developed by Trello Enterprise, a subsidiary of Atlassian. Productivity software, team collaboration, project management, task management, Czech, Dutch, English, Finnish, French, German, Hungarian, Italian, Japanese, Norwegian, Polish, Portuguese, Russian, Simplified Chinese, Spanish, Swedish, Thai, Traditional Chinese, Turkish, Ukrainian, and Vietnamese
