Slack forces app installation over web access for quick tasks
Occasional Slack users are pushed to install the desktop or mobile app even for brief, one-off interactions. The web experience is deliberately degraded to drive app installs. This friction alienates infrequent collaborators and external guests.
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Similar Problems
surfaced semanticallySlack browser version intentionally crippled to force app installs
Slack deliberately limits its browser and mobile web experience to push users toward app downloads, creating friction for corporate environments where app installs are restricted and for users who prefer browser access. The pattern is widely recognized but third-party intervention options are narrow. Score below 5.0 — real frustration, low feasibility for external solutions.
Slack does not auto-create a phone home screen shortcut
A user complains that Slack did not automatically add a home screen button on their phone. The complaint lacks context and represents a trivial UX expectation gap rather than a meaningful product problem.
Slack Mobile App Forced on Employees With No Opt-Out
Enterprise employees required to use Slack have no way to opt out of the mobile app, which they find intrusive or unwanted. The tool is mandated by employers rather than chosen by users. This is a user autonomy gap in enterprise software adoption with no clean third-party remedy.
Vague complaint about Slack Android app quality
A user expresses strong dissatisfaction with the Slack Android app without providing any specific details about what is broken or missing. Not actionable as reported.
Slack Google SSO Reauthentication Creates Confusing Login Failures
Users hitting Slack for the first time via Google SSO encounter opaque authentication errors with no clear recovery path. The account creation and reauth flow is non-intuitive, causing frustration especially for enterprise onboarding. This is a vendor-owned bug rather than an addressable market gap.
Problem descriptions, scores, analysis, and solution blueprints may be updated as new community data becomes available.