Facebook at Work will launch soon, built the same but with no Candy Crush

Facebook at Work
Facebook at Work will all look very familiar when it launches

Facebook at Work will be kicking off with an official launch before long, at least according to one Facebook executive.

This isn't too surprising given that the work-focused version of the social network has been in testing for some time now – indeed closed beta testing kicked off right back at the start of the year in January.

Reuters reports that Julien Codorniou, who is director of global platform partnerships and Facebook at Work, said that the new service would launch in the "coming months", so we'd guess at the first quarter of 2016.

He also noted that the core of the system is pretty much identical to standard Facebook, and is built with the same newsfeed, system of likes and so forth.

Codorniou noted: "I would say 95% of what we developed for Facebook is also adopted for Facebook at Work."

Candy crushed

There are differences, naturally enough, and a user's business profile will be kept completely separate from their personal Facebook page. Also, Facebook at Work will have security tools, and frivolous games such as Candy Crush will be stripped away. There's nothing surprising here given the workplace focus, though.

On the monetisation front, companies will have to pay up for premium services on Facebook at Work such as analytics and customer support, which will run to a few quid a month per user apparently.

Facebook at Work has no shortage of competition with the likes of Yammer and Chatter already well entrenched across the enterprise space – but if anyone can drive forward and make an impact in this arena, it's Facebook.

Zuckerberg's product has an obvious advantage in terms of the fact that almost everyone is already familiar with how Facebook works, which is exactly why the workplace-based offering is keeping closely to what the existing social network offers.

Darren is a freelancer writing news and features for TechRadar (and occasionally T3) across a broad range of computing topics including CPUs, GPUs, various other hardware, VPNs, antivirus and more. He has written about tech for the best part of three decades, and writes books in his spare time (his debut novel - 'I Know What You Did Last Supper' - was published by Hachette UK in 2013).