9 easy Slack tips to make remote more bearable for your team

Create an announcements channel

Every office at Slack has an announcements channel – a channel that’s set to read-only for most employees, but which admins, office managers and internal communications can use to post important information. At times like this, these channels become both vital and mandatory; information shifts away from what’s on the shared lunch menu and towards updates about office closures, advisories on travel and services and links to support what we have in place for our employees, plus their extended families and communities.

Learn how tomanage channel posting permissions.

Use custom statuses

We already heavily use custom statuses (and associated emoji) at Slack HQ, to let people know at a glance if we’re on holiday, in transit, in meetings, or, say, working remotely. When everyone is working remotely, of course, that last one becomes moot, and the way that we use the status shifts. Our co-workers can no longer see when we’re away from our desks, so we set a custom status to let everyone know that we’ve stepped away, or that we’re offline or on calls and may be slow to respond. Bonus: you can set these up to automatically expire – ‘at lunch’, for example, is one that you’d probably want to disappear after an hour.

Learn how toset your slack status and availability.

Move meetings to channels

Moving meetings to channels is not only a good practice for remote work, it’s also a great way to discover which meetings you might be able to eliminate altogether. For a weekly status meeting, we set a specific time of day by which everyone should post their status in a channel for that project. Questions can follow in thread (if they’re just for that person) or in channel (if they’re for everyone/most people). Everyone can read up on what everyone else is working on, and to top it all off, we get automatic meeting minutes.

Learn more aboutmeetings that work (and ones that don’t) in Slack.

Don’t forget about direct messages

Direct messages also play an important role. We do most of our work in channels at Slack, but in person, we’ll often swivel our chairs around to say, ‘Hey, can you quickly look at this?’ When we can’t work through a problem in real life, we’ll send each other our unfinished work in a direct message to get feedback and ideas (we did a lot of this while writing this blog post in fact). We do a lot of work in Google Docs, and Slack makes it easy for us to share works in progress: we just paste the link into Slack, which will then prompt us to adjust viewing permissions if the document isn’t one that they have permissions to see.

Sketch your ideas and upload them to Slack

Whiteboarding… with a permanent marker: a terrible idea in real life, but perfect when we’re remote. And using paper. Because for the inveterate visual thinker, it can be a difficult habit to break when working out of the office. We sketch out ideas on a piece of paper, then take a photo with our phones and upload it straight to a channel in Slack from there to keep conversation flowing. Over time, we’ve found that making slides to communicate an idea visually can take too much time – all that fiddling with font sizes, box widths and arrow alignments – and when we just need to get an idea across, pen and paper (and camera) do the job.

Learn more aboutadding files to Slack.

Communicate face to face, wherever you are

Communicating in writing can be difficult, particularly in more delicate or nuanced situations. Sometimes you just need to see each other’s faces and talk out loud. For a quick call, you can use Slack’s built-in voice and video calling feature. We’ve also integrated many of the popular voice and video services – you can set them as the default service to use when clicking the Call icon in Slack. We’re big users of Zoom for larger meetings and rely heavily on the /zoom command to create ad hoc meetings, but you’ll find similar functionality for the other integrated providers as well.

Learn more aboutvoice, video and screen sharing apps in Slack.

Share channels with vendors, partners and customers

When we can’t travel to meet in the same place, we still work together in Slack. A shared channel is exactly what it sounds like – it’s a channel that exists in both our workspace and in theirs, letting us use Slack to communicate across company boundaries. We’re using shared channels heavily right now to keep things moving with partners, customers and vendors in light of our cancelled travel plans.

Take a look at ourguide to shared channels.

Say it with emoji

When we can’t say ‘thank you’, ‘good job’ or ‘nice work’ in person, we’ll use an emoji reaction to do it instead. Shortly after we publish this blog post, one of us will post a message in a channel to let the company know that it’s up. It will be showered with an outpouring of :tada:, :100: and a number of other congratulatory custom emoji – party parrot might make an appearance here. Everyone loves feeling recognized! An emoji reaction, or ‘reacji’, a word that we keep insisting is real, is a quick and tidy way to communicate with your teammates.

Learn more aboutusing emoji reactions in Slack.

Additional resources

Again, you’ll find more tips and suggestions on theSlack for Remote Workpagein our resource library. Some are small and easily implemented, like the ones above. Others are meatier, geared towards helping you think about the foundations you’ need for a distributed workforce. If you have an important remote work tip or strategy that we didn’t cover here, we’d love to hear about it – please get in touch with us at feedback@slack.com.

This article was originally published onSlack’s blogby the Slack team. You can read ithere.

Story bySlack Blog