If you’re considering moving off Slack, the trigger is usually one of two things: a Microsoft 365 enterprise mandate that’s pulling everything into Teams, or a deliberate cultural reset toward async-first work where the synchronous-chat default is the actual problem you’re trying to solve. Slack remains the dominant team chat platform for tech B2B SaaS — but for both ends of that spectrum, the alternatives are real.
Notion
Notion isn’t a chat tool, but it’s a credible alternative for teams that have decided “less chat, more written async” is the goal. Notion’s comments, mentions, and inline discussions inside documents replace a meaningful chunk of channel back-and-forth, and the resulting record is searchable and durable in a way Slack threads never are.
Migrate from Slack to Notion when: your team is small (under 100), your work is genuinely async-friendly (engineering, content, research), and you’re willing to make the cultural commitment to “if it matters, write it down.” This is rarely a tool migration alone — it’s a working-norm change.
Don’t migrate when: your team needs real-time coordination (sales, support, ops) where the synchronous chat is the actual job. Notion comments are too slow for those motions.
Stay on Slack when
Your team is over 100 people and the channel structure is doing real coordination work
You depend on Slack integrations (Salesforce, Jira, GitHub, alerting) wired into channel-based flows
Your culture is genuinely synchronous and “less chat” isn’t the actual problem you have
The complaint is “Slack is noisy” — that’s a channel-hygiene and norms problem, not a platform problem
For these teams, Slack is doing its job and the migration urge is usually a working-norms problem looking for a tool fix.
Verdict
Notion is the right “migration” for ~15% — small async-committed teams making a deliberate cultural shift
Staying on Slack is the right answer for ~85% — most teams have a Slack-norms problem, not a Slack-platform problem
The single mistake to avoid: switching chat tools to fix culture. The notifications will follow you to the new tool. Fix the channel structure and the working agreements first.
If you’re considering moving off Slack, the trigger is usually one of two things: a Microsoft 365 enterprise mandate that’s pulling everything into Teams, or a deliberate cultural reset toward async-first work where the synchronous-chat default is the actual problem you’re trying to solve. Slack remains the dominant team chat platform for tech B2B SaaS — but for both ends of that spectrum, the alternatives are real.
Notion
Notion isn’t a chat tool, but it’s a credible alternative for teams that have decided “less chat, more written async” is the goal. Notion’s comments, mentions, and inline discussions inside documents replace a meaningful chunk of channel back-and-forth, and the resulting record is searchable and durable in a way Slack threads never are.
Migrate from Slack to Notion when: your team is small (under 100), your work is genuinely async-friendly (engineering, content, research), and you’re willing to make the cultural commitment to “if it matters, write it down.” This is rarely a tool migration alone — it’s a working-norm change.
Don’t migrate when: your team needs real-time coordination (sales, support, ops) where the synchronous chat is the actual job. Notion comments are too slow for those motions.
Stay on Slack when
For these teams, Slack is doing its job and the migration urge is usually a working-norms problem looking for a tool fix.
Verdict
The single mistake to avoid: switching chat tools to fix culture. The notifications will follow you to the new tool. Fix the channel structure and the working agreements first.