Steve Dotto here.
How the heck are you doing this fine day?
Me?
I’m a little bit anxious that I’m going
to do a good job on today’s demo because
this is one of those apps that I think if
you really give it its due, it might be life-changing
for you.
But it’s a little bit complex to understand
and a lot of people say it’s just another
thing when really it’s another thing that
eliminates a whole bunch of just another things.
The app that we’re going to be talking about
today is Slack and I’m just going to give
you a quick background of why it’s so relevant
for me.
My team is growing.
I’ve got a virtual team now of three people
in addition to myself spread all over the
world and as my team has grown, I’ve found
that I’m getting stretched to my limit communication-wise
because each one of my team members likes
to use a different tool for communications.
One of them loves to communicate with me on
Facebook messenger.
Another loves to communicate with me in Skype
Messenger, the instant messaging side of Skype.
One uses email.
Actually, they all use email fairly well but
the bottom line was that I was getting stretched
into all of these different places and beginning
to lose cycles, beginning to lose the amount
of time to find something and I was worrying
that I was going to miss something important
because I wasn’t looking in the right place
for something that was relevant.
Along at the perfect time comes Slack in my
life.
It’s been around for a little while and
teams are really discovering that it works
for them.
It’s this new phenomenon of a different
type of information overload which I’m calling,
for lack of a better term, fractured communications,
the fact we’re using all of these different
channels to communicate with and we can get
lost between the channels.
Information can get lost and things can get
off the rails.
Slack gives us a unified communication interface
that allows us to all work in the same space
and they make it worthwhile because they give
us a whole bunch of benefits if we commit
to communicating in Slack itself.
You want to have a quick look?
I think you should stick around because we’re
looking at Slack today on DottoTech.
I have to apologize for the bit of a long
intro but Slack is a tool that takes a little
bit of time to get your head around.
Now I mentioned to you the reason that I really
like Slack and why Slack is working so well
for me.
It allows me to bring together into one place
all of the people who I need to communicate
with on my team and flow all of our communications
into the one space.
There’s a mobile app which I’ll show you
in just a few moments but right now I’m
in the desktop app.
There’s also a web-based app that you can
use so Slack allows you to access your account
from any tool that you happen to be on, be
it your smartphone, your computer or even
using web access from somebody else’s system.
Now Slack divides itself into kind of two
broad areas.
The first area is your teams.
Now teams could be companies, they could be
departments or they could be project-based.
The second thing we have are the channels.
Channels allow us to be more granular with
information so we might have a marketing team
for our company.
Within that marketing team, we might have
an events channel, a promotions channel, channels
set at that level or it could be more granular
and we could have a channel set for a single
event.
We’re going to Social Media Marketing World;
here are all of the details and here’s all
of the conversation around that.
Into each channels comes all of the different
accounts and the individuals can join into
channels, which means they’ll be flagged
in the conversations in the channels.
You can also direct message back and forth
and communicate at any point with all of your
team members, which is the main way that you’re
going to be using Slack for the most part.
It works like another instant messengering
application at that point.
Now people always ask well, how is this different
from email or other instant messengers?
It’s different than email because it’s
very instant and it’s very team-based so
your information is not getting lost in the
big email and there isn’t as big a barrier
to entry as far as opening your email, downloading
your email, opening it and then replying.
It’s much instant messenger-y.
It’s not going to be for everybody.
It doesn’t replace email completely.
It reduces the amount of email you do because
most of your external communication with clients
and prospecting, those sorts of things are
still going to go through email but with your
team, your team should have far fewer emails
and you should have no more of those CYA emails
where people are copying you back and forth
and you’ve got a huge email nested thread
to read through in order to find the relevant
information.
Slack completely eliminates that productivity
vampire.
That alone probably makes it worth it for
some of you to embrace Slack.
But it does more than that.
It also gives us one place to store common
files.
It’ll allow us to integrate with tools like
Google Drive and Dropbox but it also has its
own file management and file storage system.
In the free version, you get up to 5 GB of
space per team so you’ve got quite a bit
of space that you can store files.
But you can also integrate other corporate
tools or other tools like Dropbox if you choose
to so it’s really how you decide to set
up your own system.
Communication happens just as you’d expect.
You can send information back and forth to
people, saying hey, how it’s going all through
the instant messenger app site.
You could have nice communication going back
and forth, all threaded and tagged together.
If you’re communicating in channels, everybody
within that channel will get the notification.
You can also set up private groups.
If you’ve just been working on a small little
thing or you want a private management group
that’s slightly separate, you can set them
up as well.
So it’s very flexible as far as how you
set it up.
The way that you enroll different team members
and enroll people in Slack is you just invite
them in.
Send them an invite, they get it by email
then they sign up and then they’re brought
in.
the App itself is free and most people I know
are still using the free version of the app.
Where you start to have to pay is when your
message archive that you want to be able to
search is larger than 10,000 messages or when
you need more of that 5 GB space per team
for storage.
There are a variety of different entry points
that you can go to the paid version.
I mentioned that 10,000 message limit.
That’s one of the real strengths of Slack,
the ability to be able to search back on messages
at any time.
Far faster and far more efficient than finding
information in email or anything except, the
possible exception in my mind, of Evernote.
The search is lightning fast and very accurate.
So if you decide that it’s a tool you’re
going to use ongoing in your business, then
upgrading to that larger than 10,000 message
bucket that you can search because it’s
very valuable because then you can search
back through your whole historical archive.
Now you don’t have to worry.
That’s not something you have to make a
decision on early on in your Slack career
because it takes a long time to reach that
10,000 messages and even if you wait beyond
that to decide that you’re going to go for
the paid tier, you only see the first 10,000
messages but the others are still stored for
you and available for later.
They use a fairly deep and good level of encryption
as far as security goes so you’re in very
good shape as far as all of that and it’s
very flexible.
You could set it up for multiple teams.
I’ve got it set up for my DottoTech team,
for the four people that I work with.
We also have it set up here to support a course
that we’re teaching on Slack.
I’ll put a notification of that at the end
of this video.
We’re actually using Slack as a delivery
mechanism to teach it.
We just launched this last week but we have
some 40 or 50 students already taking the
course and each of the modules we set up as
a channel.
If you go and look, you see the different
media types.
Here we’ve got a video available, which
is basically the introduction to the whole
course running in YouTube that they can view
right within Slack.
Isn’t that cool?
And the integrations go way beyond that.
I’m going to have to do another demo showing
the video conferencing integrations, how it
works with Dropbox and other tools, Evernote.
It has got integrations with a large variety
of tools.
Pretty much it’s kind of like Evernote in
the fact that everybody wants to get a piece
of Slack so they’re all building their applications
with Slack in mind.
There’s native integration already for tools
like Trello, the task and to-do list manager,
for Wunderlist, Asana.
We’re seeing all of them coming down the
pipe and finding ways to integrate with this
tool to make sure that they take advantage
of Slack’s communications capabilities.
I promised I would show you the mobile app
before we’re done and if I didn’t promise
you, I should have promised you because the
mobile app is just as good as the desktop
app.
Here it is.
I’m launching it on my smartphone.
They do a good job of kind of working your
way through the tools.
Here if I swipe to the left, it brings up
all of the different settings.
I can switch teams.
I can only see one team at a time in the mobile
app but I can switch back and forth between
the different teams just that easily.
If I swipe to the left, I’ve got all of
my channels and I’ve got all of my teams
and I’ve got all of those communication
tools available to me there as well.
So you can see that the mobile app really
is identical to the desktop app in form and
in function so all of your training and all
of your learning on one platform translates
across into the other.
Of course, it’s iOS and Android and everything
in between so it works on pretty much all
of the different mobile platforms as well
except Blackberry.
It doesn’t work on Blackberry.
Sorry.
I could spend hours on Slack and I’m probably
going to do a few more demos on Slack coming
down the pipe, especially if you let me know
in the Comments area if you want to know more
about Slack, if this is a tool that you like
and that you want to know more about.
But it’s one that I’m really excited about.
It’s changing how I work and I can see the
benefit on a daily basis.
I hope you found this video today to be useful.
Now there are three ways to stay in touch
with us here on DottoTech.
The first is subscribe to this channel, the
second subscribe to our newsletter and the
third is DottoTech is a community-funded site
supported through our partners at Patreon.
If you want to know about the different perks
involved in being a patron supporter, I encourage
you to drop by our website.
And as a completely self-serving note before
we’re done, I’m going to put a link in
to this page which is the description of our
Slack Made Easy course.
If you’ve decided you like what you see
of Slack here and you want to learn more about
using it, why not take a look at the course?
You can be a member of the group that I was
just showing you.
We basically use Slack to teach you how to
use Slack.
It’s a $40 investment and you will learn
how to use Slack quickly, effectively and
get you in and productive as quickly as possible.
So we’ll include the link in the description
field.
That’s all the time we have for today’s
show.
I am Steve Dotto.
Until next time, have fun storming the castle.
