Agent skill
slack-messaging
Guidance for composing well-formatted, effective Slack messages using mrkdwn syntax
Install this agent skill to your Project
npx add-skill https://github.com/anthropics/knowledge-work-plugins/tree/main/partner-built/slack/skills/slack-messaging
SKILL.md
Slack Messaging Best Practices
This skill provides guidance for composing well-formatted, effective Slack messages.
When to Use
Apply this skill whenever composing, drafting, or helping the user write a Slack message — including when using slack_send_message, slack_send_message_draft, or slack_create_canvas.
Slack Formatting (mrkdwn)
Slack uses its own markup syntax called mrkdwn, which differs from standard Markdown. Always use mrkdwn when composing Slack messages:
| Format | Syntax | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Bold | *text* |
Single asterisks, NOT double |
| Italic | _text_ |
Underscores |
| Strikethrough | ~text~ |
Tildes |
| Code (inline) | `code` |
Backticks |
| Code block | ```code``` |
Triple backticks |
| Quote | > text |
Angle bracket |
| Link | <url|display text> |
Pipe-separated in angle brackets |
| User mention | <@U123456> |
User ID in angle brackets |
| Channel mention | <#C123456> |
Channel ID in angle brackets |
| Bulleted list | - item or • item |
Dash or bullet character |
| Numbered list | 1. item |
Number followed by period |
Common Mistakes to Avoid
- Do NOT use
**bold**(double asterisks) — Slack uses*bold*(single asterisks) - Do NOT use
## headers— Slack does not support Markdown headers. Use*bold text*on its own line instead. - Do NOT use
[text](url)for links — Slack uses<url|text>format - Do NOT use
---for horizontal rules — Slack does not render these
Message Structure Guidelines
- Lead with the point. Put the most important information in the first line. Many people read Slack on mobile or in notifications where only the first line shows.
- Keep it short. Aim for 1-3 short paragraphs. If the message is long, consider using a Canvas instead.
- Use line breaks generously. Walls of text are hard to read. Separate distinct thoughts with blank lines.
- Use bullet points for lists. Anything with 3+ items should be a list, not a run-on sentence.
- Bold key information. Use
*bold*for names, dates, deadlines, and action items so they stand out when scanning.
Thread vs. Channel Etiquette
- Reply in threads when responding to a specific message to keep the main channel clean.
- Use
reply_broadcast(also post to channel) only when the reply contains information everyone needs to see. - Post in the channel (not a thread) when starting a new topic, making an announcement, or asking a question to the whole group.
- Don't start a new thread to continue an existing conversation — find and reply to the original message.
Tone and Audience
- Match the tone to the channel —
#generalis usually more formal than#random. - Use emoji reactions instead of reply messages for simple acknowledgments (though note: the MCP tools can't add reactions, so suggest the user do this manually if appropriate).
- When writing announcements, use a clear structure: context, key info, call to action.
Recommended Agent Skills
Expand your agent's capabilities with these related and highly-rated skills.
view-pdf
Interactive PDF viewer. Use when the user wants to open, show, or view a PDF and collaborate on it visually — annotate, highlight, stamp, fill form fields, place signature/initials, or review markup together. Not for summarization or text extraction (use native Read instead).
signature-request
Prepare and route a document for e-signature — run a pre-signature checklist, configure signing order, and send for execution. Use when a contract is finalized and ready to sign, when verifying entity names, exhibits, and signature blocks before sending, or when setting up an envelope with sequential or parallel signers.
brief
Generate contextual briefings for legal work — daily summary, topic research, or incident response. Use when starting your day and need a scan of legal-relevant items across email, calendar, and contracts, when researching a specific legal question across internal sources, or when a developing situation (data breach, litigation threat, regulatory inquiry) needs rapid context.
legal-risk-assessment
Assess and classify legal risks using a severity-by-likelihood framework with escalation criteria. Use when evaluating contract risk, assessing deal exposure, classifying issues by severity, or determining whether a matter needs senior counsel or outside legal review.
triage-nda
Rapidly triage an incoming NDA and classify it as GREEN (standard approval), YELLOW (counsel review), or RED (full legal review). Use when a new NDA arrives from sales or business development, when screening for embedded non-solicits, non-competes, or missing carveouts, or when deciding whether an NDA can be signed under standard delegation.
compliance-check
Run a compliance check on a proposed action, product feature, or business initiative, surfacing applicable regulations, required approvals, and risk areas. Use when launching a feature that touches personal data, when marketing or product proposes something with regulatory implications, or when you need to know which approvals and jurisdictional requirements apply before proceeding.
Didn't find tool you were looking for?