ToolStack
Migration Guide

Migrating from Slack to Basecamp

Basecamp is built for team communication and project tracking at startup and scaleup scale. This guide covers the practical steps to move your workflow from Slack across without losing data or disrupting your team mid-sprint.

At a Glance

Slack
4.5/5 · 33,000 G2 reviews
  • De facto standard for workplace communication — most PMs will use Slack daily, and it appears constantly in job descriptions
  • 2,600+ app integrations make it the central nervous system of the product team's tool stack, pulling notifications from Jira, GitHub, Figma, and more into one place
  • Channels, threads, and Slack Connect enable structured communication across teams, departments, and even external partners/vendors
Basecamp
4.1/5 · 5,600 G2 reviews
  • Flat-rate pricing with unlimited users — dramatically cheaper for large teams compared to per-seat tools like Jira or Asana
  • Extremely easy to learn — most teams are productive within hours, not weeks, with an intentionally simple interface
  • Built-in communication tools (message boards, Campfire chat, automatic check-ins) reduce dependence on Slack or email
Full side-by-side comparison: Slack vs Basecamp

You gain with Basecamp

  • +Kanban boards

You leave behind

  • workflow automations
  • AI features

Migration Steps

1

Audit and export your current workspace

Before touching Basecamp, document what lives in Slack: projects and tasks, custom fields, automations, integrations, and team permissions. Export a full CSV backup — most tools support this from Settings → Export. Pay particular attention to any workflow automations that your team relies on daily.

2

Set up your Basecamp workspace

Create your Basecamp workspace and replicate your project structure using tasks and projects. Run with a single pilot team before migrating everyone.

3

Map your workflow equivalents

Find the closest Basecamp equivalent for each Slack feature your team relies on. projects and tasks in Slack maps to tasks and projects in Basecamp. Prioritise the critical path: task creation, status tracking, and assignment.

4

Import your data

Basecamp supports CSV import for tasks and projects and has 20+ native integrations. For automations that don't have a native equivalent in Basecamp, Zapier or Make can bridge the gap. Start with your most active project rather than importing everything at once.

5

Onboard your team

Run a 30-minute walkthrough covering the daily workflow: how to create tasks and projects, update status, and find your board. Basecamp has a gentle learning curve — most PMs are fully productive within 1–2 days. Focus the session on the UI differences rather than feature training.

6

Run Slack in parallel for two weeks

Keep Slack read-only while your team works primarily in Basecamp. This reduces risk and lets people reference historical context — old decisions, archived tickets, past sprint data — without slowing the migration. After two weeks with no new work going into Slack, archive the workspace and make Basecamp the official home.

Ready to switch?

Read the full Basecamp review for pricing, integrations, and team fit details.

Read Basecamp Review →Compare Slack vs Basecamp