
I also prefer this approach, but the greatest difficulty lies in integrating GChat, especially after its latest security policies (https://github.com/mautrix/googlechat/issues/115). Do you also face this issue? Any tips/ suggestions for me.

I also prefer this approach, but the greatest difficulty lies in integrating GChat, especially after its latest security policies (https://github.com/mautrix/googlechat/issues/115). Do you also face this issue? Any tips/ suggestions for me.
Not sure if it’s just me, but I’ve been running into this quite a bit.
My client conversations are spread across different messaging platforms, and sometimes important or more detailed discussions just get buried or overlooked.
It’s not even about the number of messages, it’s the fragmentation that makes it hard to keep track of everything in one flow.
Anyone else dealing with this? How are you keeping track of conversations without things slipping through?
Not sure if it’s just me, but I’ve been running into this quite a bit.
My client conversations are spread across different messaging platforms, and sometimes important or more detailed discussions just get buried or overlooked.
It’s not even about the number of messages, it’s the fragmentation that makes it hard to keep track of everything in one flow.
Anyone else dealing with this? How are you keeping track of conversations without things slipping through?

I also prefer this approach but the biggest difficulty lies in integrating Gchat esp after it’s latest security policies (https://github.com/mautrix/googlechat/issues/115). Do you also face this issue? Any tips/ suggestions for me

That’s rare these days. Would be interesting to know how you’re managing it without things slipping through.

Same here. I’ve had moments where I only find something important hours later just because it came through a channel I hadn’t opened yet.

I’ve thought about doing this as well. It feels like the simplest solution, but in practice, I find clients naturally drift to whatever is most convenient for them.

That’s the tricky part, right? Most tools organize tasks, but the actual conversations and context still stay scattered. Have you found anything that even partially reduces that?
Not sure if it’s just me, but I’ve been running into this quite a bit.
My client conversations are spread across different messaging platforms, and sometimes important or more detailed discussions just get buried or overlooked.
It’s not even about the number of messages, it’s the fragmentation that makes it hard to keep track of everything in one flow.
Anyone else dealing with this? How are you keeping track of conversations without things slipping through?
Hey everyone,
Quick question out of curiosity.
I work as a manager in a consulting firm, and a lot of my day goes into communicating across platforms like Slack, WhatsApp, Teams, LinkedIn messages, etc. Switching between all of them sometimes feels a bit messy.
A couple of things I personally struggle with are important tasks getting buried in chats and constantly jumping between apps to keep up with conversations.
Would be great to hear how you handle this in your day-to-day work.

This isn’t just a “technology redistributes value” story; it’s a market design and incentive problem. Platforms didn’t accidentally capture the gains; they were structurally positioned to own demand, data, and distribution.
Also, the “consumption ceiling” feels directionally right for physical goods, but less convincing for digital and AI-native categories, which can expand usage in ways that traditional economics underestimates.
Hey everyone,
Quick question out of curiosity.
I work as a manager in a consulting firm, and a lot of my day goes into communicating across platforms like Slack, WhatsApp, Teams, LinkedIn messages, etc. Switching between all of them sometimes feels a bit messy.
A couple of things I personally struggle with are important tasks getting buried in chats and constantly jumping between apps to keep up with conversations.
Would be great to hear how you handle this in your day-to-day work.
Fair point, but it’s really about simplifying scattered conversations for productivity, not creating a surveillance dashboard.