Getting your organization started with Zulip
Use this as a checklist to get your organization off to a great start.
Organization settings
Create streams
Most messages in Zulip are sent to streams. Streams are similar to chat
rooms, email lists, and IRC/Slack channels, in that they determine who
receives a message. A few important notes:
-
It's often better to start with fewer streams, and let the number of
streams grow organically. For small teams, you can start with the default
streams and iterate from there.
-
For very large organizations, we recommend using a consistent naming
scheme, like #marketing/<name> or #mk/<name> for all streams
pertaining to the marketing team, #help/<team name> for
<team name>'s internal support stream, etc.
-
Add clear descriptions to your streams.
Some relevant help articles are
Understand topics
Zulip’s topics are life-changing, but it can take a bit of time for everyone
to learn how to use them effectively. It helps a lot if there are at least a
few people who understand the conversation model at the beginning.
Set up integrations
Zulip integrates directly with dozens of products, and hundreds more through
Zapier and IFTTT.
The integrations page has instructions for integrating with
each product.
Familiarize yourself with Zulip’s featureset
As the administrator of your Zulip organization, you'll be the initial
expert teaching other users how to use Zulip.
Invite users and onboard your community
- Delete any test messages
you want to delete.
- Use the
#zulip stream to answer questions and share tips on how to use
Zulip effectively.
- If you have an existing chat tool, make sure everyone knows that the
team is switching, and why. The team should commit to use Zulip
exclusively for at least a week to make an effective trial;
stragglers will result in everyone having a bad experience.
- If community topic edits are enabled,
encourage a few people to help rename topics for the first few days, while
everyone is still getting used to the new conversation model.
Bonus things to setup