HomeTechnologySwitching from Microsoft Office to Zoho’s Writer, Sheet and Show: What works, what doesn’t and what the experience is like

Switching from Microsoft Office to Zoho’s Writer, Sheet and Show: What works, what doesn’t and what the experience is like

I decided to move my daily work completely to Zoho’s Writer, Sheet, and Show on a trial basis. The transition wasn’t just about curiosity; it was about seeing whether India’s own productivity suite could actually replace the world’s most entrenched one.

October 09, 2025 / 15:11 IST
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Zoho Office
Zoho Office

Ever since I started working as a journalist, the Microsoft Office suite – Word, Excel and PowerPoint – is my go-to tool so much so that they are my comfort zone now. And why not? After all, it is Microsoft that pioneered the idea of having a word processor, or the entire office suite.

As a tech journalist, Word, Excel, and PowerPoint sat at the centre of everything—drafting, data analysis, and visual storytelling. But somewhere along the way, software that once defined productivity began to feel too rigid, too subscription-heavy, and oddly disconnected from the cloud-native world. That’s what made me test the waters with Zoho Office Suite, a homegrown alternative that’s quietly gaining traction, both in India’s startup ecosystem.

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The timing felt right. With increasing emphasis on data localisation, cost efficiency, and digital sovereignty, Zoho’s momentum in India has grown beyond its SMB roots. Government departments are adopting Zoho Mail and WorkDrive under secure deployments, and the suite’s user base is expanding.

So, I decided to move my daily work completely to Zoho’s Writer, Sheet, and Show on a trial basis. The transition wasn’t just about curiosity; it was about seeing whether India’s own productivity suite could actually replace the world’s most entrenched one.