Advertisement

Microsoft adds free editing, iPhone version, and Dropbox to iOS Office apps

Excel for iPhone

The universe of productivity apps on iOS expanded considerably when Microsoft announced its iPad versions of Word, Excel and PowerPoint back in March 2014. Without an Office 365 subscription, however, users were limited to read-only file access; not terribly productive. Even with the addition of a monthly subscription option in September, many of the millions of people who downloaded Office apps on iPad couldn't do much in the way of content creation.

Today the landscape shifts again as Microsoft has enabled basic editing and file creation in the free Office apps, no Office 365 subscription required -- although "advanced" editing features and PowerPoint's presenter view remain reserved to those with an active Office 365 Home or Business subscription. Otherwise, anyone with a free Microsoft login can use the apps at will.

Those apps now also have a new home on iPhone, with optimized UI for the smaller screen devices. The same free/subscribed split applies to the iPhone versions, but basic copy editing and modification are accessible to all. Microsoft has also expanded the cloud storage options for Office iOS by adding Dropbox support -- see the partnership announcement from earlier this week -- alongside MS's OneDrive (which itself got a big boost for paying users with the rollout of unlimited storage). There's also a preview Android release of Office, and a logical commitment to Windows 10 Touch versions down the road.

There's always the risk of some user confusion when freemium apps are feature-limited, and that's especially true of productivity apps; there may be a takeaway of "the iPhone version of Office can't do X" when in fact it can, if you choose to subscribe to Office 365. With some careful UX work and a clear message about what is and isn't enabled for free users, Microsoft may be able to avoid this trap and deliver a great tool for many iOS aficionados.

Update: word from the Office team is that if users try to use the advanced features and go beyond the free core editing/viewing/printing documents and basic PowerPoint presentation tools, they will hit a paywall. When that happens, they will get notified that what they want to do requires an upgrade to an Office 365 subscription -- which they can purchase immediately in-app.