What is a Remote Collaboration Stack?
A remote collaboration stack is the curated set of software tools a distributed team uses daily to communicate, coordinate work, share files, and stay aligned. A typical stack covers messaging, video, project management, documentation, and file storage.
In more detail
A lean remote stack usually includes Slack or Microsoft Teams for chat, Zoom or Google Meet for video, Notion or Confluence for documentation, Google Drive or SharePoint for files, and a project tool like Asana, Linear, Jira, or ClickUp. Many teams add Loom for async video, Miro for whiteboarding, and 1Password for secret sharing.
The most effective remote teams treat the stack as a system rather than a tool list. Each tool has a clear job, written norms describe when to use which, and information flows predictably: chat for real-time, docs for durable decisions, project tool for work tracking. Offshore staff onboard faster when these norms are documented and enforced.
How it works
- Messaging: Slack, Microsoft Teams.
- Video: Zoom, Google Meet.
- Documentation: Notion, Confluence, Google Docs.
- Project management: Asana, Linear, Jira, ClickUp.
- File storage: Google Drive, SharePoint, Dropbox.
- Security: 1Password, Okta, VPN.
Related terms
Mini FAQ
Chat tool, video tool, project tool, docs tool, file storage. Five tools, one job each.
Client tools. Offshore workers should live inside the client's stack with appropriate access controls.
Document which tool to use for what, onboard new hires with a tour, and audit monthly for tool sprawl.