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How to Create a Trello Card from a Saved Slack Message

Trello and Slack are like peanut butter and jelly. They’re different, but if you know how to use them right, they can be a powerhouse combo for organizing literally anything.

This guide breaks it all down. We’ll discuss Trello cards, Slack messages, integration, automation, shortcuts, and sanity-saving tips you didn’t know you needed.

Because it can be easier, and dare we say… even kind of fun? Let’s get started.

Real Life Trello + Slack Scenario

Let’s paint a quick picture here…

You’ve got a team project going. Maybe it’s for work, a volunteer group, or that “just for fun” side hustle that turned into another full-time job. You’re juggling messages in Slack: “Where’s that link again?” “Who’s working on the report?” “Did anyone follow up with Chad?”

Meanwhile, someone suggests, “just throw it in Trello” like it’s the easiest thing in the world… and now you’re figuring out what card goes where, which list needs updating, and why someone labeled something “DO NOW” when they could’ve just sent a normal update.

Welcome to modern team life. This is basically how Trello + Slack works.

First Up: What Is Trello?

Alright, let’s start from the top.

Trello is a project management tool that’s built like a digital corkboard. Think of it as one big sticky-note house. You’ve got Boards , Lists , and Cards.

Trello cards are where the action happens. You can assign people, add due dates, checklists, labels, attachments, and even emojis to each card. (Yes, it’s dangerously fun if you’re the “organize everything” type.)

Second: What Is Slack?

Slack is your team’s messaging HQ. It’s like texting meets email meets a group chat that never sleeps. You’ve got:

The problem? Slack is fast. Like, blink-and-you-miss-it fast. And if you don’t catch that message in time… you’re scrolling back through 86 unread messages, trying to remember if it was in #general or #projects or some private thread from 3 weeks ago.

Integrating Trello + Slack

Here’s where things get spicy: Trello and Slack can actually talk to each other if you let them.

This isn’t just about convenience. This is about turning chaos into clarity.

You can:

That “someone please write this down” message? You can zap it into your Trello board in two clicks. No more losing track. No more “where did I see that?” syndrome.

Step-by-Step: How To Connect Trello to Slack

Alright, let’s set the thing up. Don’t worry—it’s not scary.

Step 1: Add the Trello app to Slack

  1. Open Slack
  2. Go to Apps (bottom left)
  3. Search for Trello
  4. Click Add , then authorize your Trello account

This links your accounts, so now Slack can peek inside Trello (in a friendly way).

This is where the real magic happens.

  1. Go into the Slack channel you want to use (like #project-website)
  2. Type: “/trello link [Trello board URL]” (That’s the full link to the board—copy it from Trello)
  3. Boom—Slack now knows which board to talk to

Now when you create a new card or update something, Slack will show it in that channel. No guessing. No digging.

Step 3: Use the Slack/Trello slash commands like a boss

Once Trello is linked, you can use slash commands in Slack. These are little shortcuts that make you look like a productivity wizard.

Some good ones:

And yes, you can assign people, set due dates, and more—without opening Trello at all.

Turning Slack Messages Into Trello Cards

Let’s say someone posts a to-do in Slack, like:

“Can someone take care of uploading the new product shots before Friday?”

Instead of letting that get buried, hover over the message, click the three dots , and choose More actions > Add to Trello.

It’ll pop up a card creation window with the message already inside. You just pick the board/list and hit “Create.” No copy-pasting. No back-and-forth.

Pro-Tips for Using Slack + Trello

Alright, now that you’re connected… here’s how to keep your Trello/Slack setup from becoming its own form of chaos:

Use card labels wisely

Trello labels are super customizable. Use them to tag tasks by:

Color-coded = easier to skim. Your future self will thank you.

Don’t let notifications go wild

When Slack shows every little Trello update, it can get noisy fast. If you’re seeing:

…you’re not alone. In Trello, go to Power-Ups > Slack, and adjust the settings. Choose which actions trigger notifications, and which ones are just… too much.

Automate repetitive stuff

Use Butler , Trello’s built-in automation bot. You can make rules like:

It’s the low-key productivity magic that nobody talks about enough.

Should You Always Use Both Trello And Slack?

Great question. While Trello and Slack work well together, sometimes less is more. Here’s a quick cheat sheet:

Use Slack for… Use Trello for…
Quick check-ins Task tracking
Brainstorms Milestone planning
Real-time questions Assigning deadlines
Sharing updates Collaborating on steps
Reactions/memes Checklists, progress, priorities

If it’s something you’ll forget in 5 minutes? Slack.
If it’s something you need to remember in 5 days? Trello.

Final Thoughts: Trello + Slack = Brain-Saver

Trello and Slack can actually feel like one team managing your corporate stuff. One handles the conversation, the other handles the to-dos.

So create cards from Slack. Use labels. Tweak notifications. Automate the small stuff. And most importantly? Keep things simple. Because at the end of the day, it’s not about the tools. It’s about not forgetting what Chad said two Tuesdays ago at 3:47 PM.