Hey HN! I am asking out of genuine curiosity, and perhaps doing a little market research.<p>My team uses https://www.donut.com/ and https://officevibe.com/ but I'm pretty sure we're on the free tier for both.<p>Do you work in a team that pays monthly for any cool Slack apps or integrations? Which ones? If you're not the one paying, do you find it useful - or annoying?<p>Cheers!
My guess is that if you could pay for Slack Apps as part of a Slack bill, then the vendors would make a lot more money. Otherwise you get stuck in procurement hell.
Stopped paying for Slack, still use the free version. Had free integrations, don't use any more.<p>The WTF of Huddles and threads, and the complete lack of working notifications mean we can't trust integrations or complicated features to work or stay working.
We (30 ppl startup) use paid Slack, a few paid Slack applications and paid integrations.
Dailybot (paid) for stand-up of engineers and sales. Reminds you to write a stand-up, organizes information. After our questions, they prepared integrations with Shortcut.
HeyTaco (paid) for team engagement. We are remote. Emotions are harder to convey. Those who help can be burdened and underappreciated. We are remote. Emotions are harder to convey. Those who help can be burdened and underappreciated. A small gesture that someone gave you a taco for what you did for them gives a smile.
We also have integration with Slack:
* Zapier (paid) - channel topic based on schedule (who is responsible for something in rotation schedule), various notifications from internal system to Slack go via Zapier (to keep a log of them in Spreadsheet too)
* Google Script (free) - automatic posting of recordings of team meetings to the appropriate Slack channel
Slack is the only chat app that I’ve used professionally that doesn’t show how many messages are unread in a channel I am subscribed to. The channel name gets bold and that’s it. Am I behind by 1 message? By 50? Who knows! Click to find out!<p>Now threads - in Google Chat and Teams - it shows the last, or the couple of last messages, if short, of the thread right under the message that started the thread, collapsing the ones in-between. This way I can see if I am caught up on thread replies without having to open it. But not slack.<p>It’s weird to leave slack for alternatives 5 years ago, just to cross paths again - and realize that all of the annoyances that were there - still are.
We pay for Slack for the screenshare feature but not for any integrations. I like the simplicity and snapiness of Slack's chat and screen share compared to other modern platforms. No lag, minimal stupid animations, and cross platform compatibility. Easy enough to write integrations against too.<p>'Threads' feature is annoying and I hate it when people try to use it. Code formatting is nice.<p>Federation with MS Teams could be nice so I don't have to launch Teams whenever the one off meeting happens but that will never happen.<p><i>Shrugs</i> It's good enough.
No. Part of a major US government organization with a massive overall budget, and we use the free version. The funding channels aren't avail to pay for it; different pots of money etc.
Sorry for stealing part of the conversation, I released a new app just 2 weeks ago, would love to hear feedback if it solves a problem to anyone.<p>App is in Slack marketplace review, but is usable and can be integrated. Also app is free for now.<p><a href="https://slack.com/apps/A04KSRC0606-work" rel="nofollow">https://slack.com/apps/A04KSRC0606-work</a>
No. I see more and more dependencies against Slack (e.g., platform tools to create Jira issues, or request permissions, etc.) I think it's a dangerous path: Slack will die (sooner rather than later I believe) and suddenly we'll face a bunch of workflows that do not work anymore.<p>My team is slowly leaving Slack. We are transitioning to Mattermost. So far so good.