
In a literal sense, it is a process automation heaven. It has the most user-friendly UI and UX, and it is relatively easier to navigate through.Īnd then, to top it all, Slack paid plans enable 1200+ integrations. For many businesses operating virtually, Slack has offered benefits they can’t live without. Slack is a great office collaboration tool, without any doubt.

This brings us to our next question: Should you Pay for Slack? Users hoping to build a 10k+ community through Slack's freemium plan should look for a Slack alternative, or better than Slack.

Quincy Larson added 8462 users to his Slack channel, and after that, the channel stopped accepting new users.Ĩ462 sure is a great number for a medium-sized community - but it’s a limit, which Slack has disguised so far, and done nothing to disclose. We came across a couple of Slack users who have reported that there’s a limit with the Slack free plan, despite what Slack says.įor Example, David Chen, who wanted to build a massive Slack community of 10K+ users, found that the service starts fizzling out at around 5000 users, and poops out completely after onboarding 8,500 users. Is Slack Misleading people about its Free ‘Unlimited Plan’?

