<aside> <img src="/icons/info-alternate_yellow.svg" alt="/icons/info-alternate_yellow.svg" width="40px" /> This page is part of The Toolbox by Danny Smith.

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Ideally, everyone in an organisation should be able to create and archive slack channels as they see fit. Limiting this to just admins or IT staff creates far too much friction and sends the message that slack is owned by the It folks. Keeping our communication tools working well should be everyone’s job.

However, unless you want a chaotic free-for-all with duplicate channels and random channel names, you should have some rules and conventions about how to create, manage and archive channels.

Creating a channel


Creating a Slack channel is quick an easy. Before creating a new channel…

  1. Ask yourself if you need a new channel at all – If you only need a brief one-off conversation consider using a group DM instead.
  2. Check that one with the same/similar purpose doesn’t already exist.
  3. Now ask yourself what this channel is for.

Having done that, create the channel and make sure you:

The topic is displayed in the header

The topic is displayed in the header